Some of Joe Biden’s Lies for Blacks’ Votes
Eric Zuesse – AUGUST 13, 2020
Joe Biden was one of the U.S. Senate’s leading
segregationists; and he was condemned by the NAACP for it in 1977 hearings
before the Senate Judiciary Committee, but he has claimed
instead to have participated in anti-segregation sit-ins, which were led by
black ministers all of whom were conveniently deceased at the time when he
made those assertions, and so they could not be asked whether he had
participated. He was making those assertions while running against Bernie
Sanders, whom the Chicago Tribune showed in their photo during
the 1960s being arrested as a college student for his peacefully demonstrating
against Chicago’s segregationist policy at the time. Sanders in his
Presidential campaign didn’t brag about it; only Biden bragged about his
anti-segregationist activity, though it was fictitious; and so Biden swamped
Sanders in the South Carolina primary on February 29th — the turning-point in
the 2020 Democratic Presidential primaries — where most of the voters were
Blacks, who had been deceived by Biden’s claims and who didn’t know that Biden
had actually been a leading northern segregationist. (Biden had even backed an
anti-integration bill by North Carolina Republican segregationist Senator Jesse
Helms to prohibit the
federal government from requiring school districts to be or become desegregated
in order to qualify to receive federal funds and to allow instead
‘separate-but-equal’ education of Black and White children.) Notwithstanding Biden’s
having been condemned by the NAACP for his support of ‘natural’ segregation,
Biden appeared on a broadcast to young Blacks, on 22 May 2020, saying "The
NAACP has endorsed me every time I’ve run.” The very next day, the
NAACP quietly said “The NAACP is
a non-partisan organization and does not endorse candidates for political
office at any level.” They did it quietly, because, if Biden becomes
the President, they want to have the President’s support; they don’t want to
antagonize a future President by conspicuously making a point of what a fraud
he is, regarding racism.
The NAACP official, at that
Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, condemned Biden’s legislative proposal, by
saying (among other things) that Biden was trying “to enact an
unconstitutional set of technical obstacles whose sole purpose is to interfere
with and delay the courts in their work in school segregation cases.” Would that
condemnation by the NAACP be consistent with Biden’s currently saying "The
NAACP has endorsed me every time I’ve run” — even if the
fact weren’t that the NAACP refuses to endorse any candidates?
Biden had opened that 1977
Judiciary Committee hearing by attacking the landmark 1954 Brown v.
Board of Education decision, saying against it: “The average citizen,
and finally his representatives in Congress, have come to the conclusion that
the courts have gone too far in education cases.” He was actually referring
there to only one case: Brown v. Board of Education, in 1954 (which
still hasn’t been implemented in law). The NAACP’s lawyer, Thurgood
Marshall, had been the NAACP's advocate arguing before the Court, to come to
that decision. In 1967, Marshall became himself the first Black on the U.S. Supreme
Court. Ten years later, in 1977, Senator Biden was being condemned at the
Senate Judiciary Committee, by Jack Greenberg, Director-Counsel, NAACP Legal
Defense and Educational Fund. In 1940, Thurgood Marshall had founded, and
became the first Director-Counsel of, the NAACP Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, and his title is the one that Marshall had held when he
argued the Brown v. Board of Education case at the Court. Jack
Greenberg was Marshall’s immediate successor; and, so, when he condemned Biden,
Greenberg was doing it as the immediate heir to Marshall. Biden was the NAACP’s
chief enemy on this matter, the enemy of the Supreme Court’s Brown v.
Board of Education decision.
In that same 22 May 2020
broadcast to young black voters, Biden said:
Joe Biden: (09:10)
I opposed that three strikes
and you're out bill. I oppose the position taking that, saying that you're
going to have any mandatory sentences.
But here’s what Biden had
told Katie Couric on NBC’s Today Show on 1 February
1994:
what I support is a three
strikes and you're out, if in fact, they're very violent crimes--arson, rape,
murder, manslaughter. Three strikes in those areas, and you should be out.
He called it there “the
Biden bill” — all of it was. The law’s “Sec. 70001.
Mandatory life imprisonment for persons convicted of certain felonies” spells out its
Three-Strikes-And-You’re-Out provisions, and they apply equally to “each
serious violent felony or serious drug offense.” “Serious drug offense” needn’t
be “violent”; so, non-violent “serious” drug-law violations can and do place
prisoners behind bars permanently. But, regardless, Biden lies when he asserts
that “I opposed that three strikes and you're out bill.” He supported it.
Later in that May 22nd
interview, he said:
The only mandatory was in
there was carjacking, which I opposed and three strikes and you’re out, which
is ridiculous. It only was imposed three times but still even once makes no
sense. The idea of three times three strikes and you’re out, give me a break.
Of course, that’s false (to
the extent that his broken syntax makes any sense).
In that May 22nd broadcast,
Biden diminished the law’s relevancy to federal drug-law violators, by saying “94% of every prisoner
in jail is in a state prison, not a federal prison. No federal law.” However,
the fact is that there are 226,000 federal prisoners, and that
100,000 of them are in prison for federal drug-law violations. So, 44% of inmates in
federal prisons are in for having violated federal drug-crimes. Yet again,
Biden lied, to say “No federal law.” (Furthermore, the numbers he cites — such
as “94%” — are inaccurate.)
A section in the Wikipedia
article on the law notes its “Elimination
of higher education for inmates.” It observes that this
provision “effectively eliminated the ability of lower-income prison inmates to
receive college educations during their term of imprisonment.” Biden’s trashing
of convicts led him to want them to come out of prison as lacking in higher
education as they were when entering prison. That’s an excellent way to
encourage them to stay out of the productive and legal workforce, and to be
hopeless about their futures, and thus inclined to a life of continuing crime.
Biden also said in that May 22nd
interview:
Change the entire prison
system for one, that is punishment to rehabilitation. There's only a couple of
things everybody has in common in jail. One is they were the victims of abuse
or their kids were, or their mother was. Number two, can't read. Number three,
they don't have any job skills. They were in a position where they didn't get a
chance. Why does it make sense? Why did I come along and write the first act
that said, when you get out of prison, you don't just get a DOSA where you get
25 bucks and a bus ticket. You end up under the bridge and just do the same
place.
So every single solitary
person being released from prison should have access to every single government
program. Why does it not make sense to have African Americans who were getting
out of prison, served their time, everybody for that matter, be able to have
public housing? Why didn't it make sense that they can have Pell grants to go
to school? Why did it make sense they can have access to healthcare? What are we nuts? That's what we keep doing.
He doesn’t mention, and wasn’t
asked by his interviewer about, “the Biden bill” (as he called it) having
eliminated any and all higher education in federal prisons. He pretends to be a
different person, and to have done different things, than he actually is, and
did. And thus far, he has gotten away with it.
Those are just a few
examples, but they are typical ones.
—————
Investigative historian Eric
Zuesse is the author, most recently, of They’re Not
Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.
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