If you follow the liberal garbage of the New York Times at all, you’re probably aware of an individual named George Yancy and the “Dear White People” letters he’s become known for. In his Christmas Eve message he told white people that you are racist no matter what.
Okay, so now that we know the problem of racial equality can’t be solved, we can finally move on . . . or not. Yancy later goes on to say that white people tell themselves lies so they don’t feel the weight of the sins of the white people who came before them.
First of all, what right does he or anybody have to claim offense at something that they weren’t around to be offended by? Second, why should any white person feel “the weight” of sins that they weren’t around to commit. This is, of course, all referring to slavery, which seems to be the only talking point of African American activists, besides the Jim Crow laws of the South.
And, let’s not forget they were equally racist in the Northern parts of the country in those days. That fact aside, you could easily collapse that entire argument by reading any non-agenda setting book about the time period and discover that Africans actually sold their own people into slavery in exchange for weapons and goods.
Read how Yancy defends his claim on the next page.

And all race hustlers are absolutely worthless.
This makes you a racist sir.
So are black folks. Quit fueling the fire
What a douche bag dumbass you are sir
Wow this professor is an idiot. How can professor’s like this even keep a job after a statement like this.
WHAT is a racist? This man obviously has no respect for anyone.
I don’t think so!
You are so wrong sir.
Sounds like he sees a splinter in my eye but ignores the plank in his …
What’s the difference between a “racist” and a “realist”? A realist bases his opinion on the content of someone’s character, not the color of their skin. Hmmm, wonder who said that in the past long ago? A racist judges only by the skin color and they ignore character altogether. Reading what this gentleman wrote makes his character dark. It reflects no light to help illuminate the path of peace between people of every color.