Oh, no, I'm going to have to extend my criticisms to enlightened individuals like Allen West and Alan Keys? Heaven forbid. Do you also want to take this time to point out you have black friends?

Nice dodge. Still spry after all these years (Dr. Keys is, intellectually, to you, what Godzilla is to Bambi. You know not of what you speak).
So, I guess we can add to your views that it is impossible for a member of a class to harbor attitudes or views that are in effect prejudicial towards that class?
Who on earth ever claimed this? Not me.
Nothing bigoted about that.
No, that would be the very essence of bigotry.
I know you want to mash up the John McWhorters of the world and Stormfront-esque rants against "hip-hop culture"
You've lost the battle, E. You've descended to the level of Rosie 'O Donnel or Michael Moore and I don't even think you're aware of it. Its just who you are, I'm afraid. Making an intellectual joke of yourself and name calling to mask the fact that you have no coherent, intellectually substantive, rational argument to bring to this table is no fun to watch, I assure you.
Stormfront? I feel the same way about Stormfront as I feel about the Bolsheviks, the Veit Cong, the Sandinistas, and the Khmer Rouge. I feel the same way about them, as a matter of fact, as I feel about the the Western utopian/collectivist Left generally speaking. They're all very much the same kinds of people (totalitarian collectivists harboring murderous bigotries against various classes of human beings because of the identity group in which they are pigeonholed) who have somewhat different doctrinal emphasis and de-emphasis, but who's enemies (classical liberalism and the Judeo-Christain framework underlying it) are the same at the core of each.
You cannot be this dense and smugly ignorant of the conservative intellectual movement and its core ideas, or of mine, as you've been reading them for many years.
Or could you...
but it's even worse when you attempt to suggest that if a black person says something then it's immune from the charge of anti-black racism.
That's the overarching attitude and taboo among virtually the entire academic/media/Hollywood iron triangle and its multiculturalist white guilt/victimology cultus. I'm only an observer. I was not complicit in the creation of these ideological dungeons.
[/quote]If you were as well-read on cultural issues from the late 60's period as you falsely claim to be, yes it would've crossed your path.
Your desperation to score debating points on an emotional/psychological level has now become a bit overheated, E. Maybe you should try again another day after you've decided that critical thinking is actually a virtue to be nourished and cultivated, and not a threat to be avoided.
Let me get this straight: because I've never heard of one, obscure country-western song by an artist in whom I never had the slightest interest in a genre in which I never had the slightest interest reflects on my knowledge and educational background of the era in which the song appears strikes me as a bit, well, odd. Very desperately odd.
Also, I was 9 years old when this came out. Why should I remember it when I never listened to this kind of music. I wasn't even listening to rock 'n roll at that time.
E, loosen up the wad a bit.
Hey, you've become slightly more literate. Nice to see you anxious to show off your newfound ability to use a word correctly.
I always use words correctly, unless I inadvertently insert a typo due to a mental oversight on my part. everyone does that, including you. In most cases I've found that most people on the web consider people who pick out a careless typo in a sea of correct word usage and use it to question and insult other's intelligence as, uh...a sanctimonious boor.
Other terms come to mind as well, but I'll leave it at that.
Shame it comes in a thread where you attacked others for being semi-literate, though.
Actually, the word I'm now thinking of begins with 'A' and ends with 'E'
That pretty well sums it up.