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Biden’s visit to Warm Springs celebrates Democrat history of racism

<p>For some reason&comma; Democrats insist on honoring their most racist historic figures&period;  It is more than ironic that the progressive wing of the Party operates out of the Woodrow Wilson Center – named after arguably the most racist President since the Civil War&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>They celebrate the founder of the modern Democratic Party&comma; President Andrew Jackson&comma; with dinners in his honor throughout the nation&period;  They are the counterpart of the Republicans traditional Lincoln Day dinners&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When Former First Lady Hillary Clinton launched her 2016 presidential campaign&comma; she chose Roosevelt Park in New York City – named after President Franklin Delano Roosevelt&period;  In this presidential season&comma; former Vice President Joe Biden chose the site of FDR’s death – a spa in Warm Springs&comma; Georgia&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It was an odd choice for a man who wants to reach out for the votes of Black Americans&period; He can get away with it because he knows that very few Americans fully appreciate Roosevelt’s white supremacist history – and the spa in Warm Springs was a major expression of the President&&num;8217&semi;s racism&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I thought I could best explain why Biden’s choice of locations is a testament to how badly the Democratic Party deceives its Black supporters &&num;8212&semi; and the nation &&num;8212&semi; by incorporating this section of my book manuscript that covers the history of Democrat racism&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To wit&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong><em>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Warm Springs for Whites Only”<&sol;em><&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Roosevelt’s association with a health spa in Warm Springs&comma; Georgia was reflective of his deep racist beliefs&period;  In 1926&comma; he purchased a small local mineral water spring&period;  It was alleged that the waters were beneficial for polio victims&period; Roosevelt was diagnosed with poliomyelitis in 1921 at age 39&period; <&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Under his ownership&comma; he expanded it to be a large nationally famous health spa&period;  He created the Warm Springs Foundation as a tax-free charity to operate the spa&period;  He served as president of the Foundation&comma; its most prominent member and the magnet for America’s elite visiting the spa&period; They would welcome the opportunity to patronize Roosevelt’s favorite private charity with personal visits and large financial contributions &&num;8212&semi; and on occasion enjoy his company&period;  He hosted foreign dignitaries there&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>In encouraging donations and the use of the facilities&comma; Roosevelt apparently made false claims about the healing effect the waters had on his body&period;  His medical records indicated no such improvements in his condition&period;  The National Park Service website claimed that Roosevelt experienced at least a partial cure from bathing in the waters of Warm Springs&period;  <&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Roosevelt arrived at the resort on October 3&comma; 1924&comma; hoping to find a cure&period; The next day&comma; he began swimming and immediately felt an improvement&period; For the first time in three years&comma; he was able to move his right leg&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>The American Journal of Public Health featured an article in 2007 by Naomi Rogers entitled &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Race and Politics of Polio&period;”   It stated&colon;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The president was also said to have deceived the American people about the effects of polio on his own body&period;  According to a whispering campaign&comma; polio had left him addicted to drugs&comma; so erratic that he required a straitjacket&comma; and was incontinent&comma; sexually impotent and helplessly crippled&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>While the funds were claimed to create an endowment for the Foundation&comma; the funds were often redirected to other civic and political purposes&comma; and even allegedly to Roosevelt&comma; himself&period;  One of the major fundraising events was the President’s annual birthday celebration&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Rogers writes that&colon;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>At first the funds were intended to create a permanent endowment for Warm Springs&period;  But gradually the Birthday Ball organizers redirected the money to the local communities that had raised it&period;  The significance of this philanthropic policy shift away from Warm Springs was not widely appreciated by the American public …<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Roosevelt’s Foundation was criticized for its fundraising activities&period;  He held an annual Birthday Ball with himself as the star attraction&period;  America’s elite were solicited for contributions – including more than &dollar;100&comma;000 donated by prominent black Americans&period; This was an incredible amount of money during the Depression&period;   <&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>What has been lost in most modern histories of Roosevelt is that his wholly owned and operated spa was for whites only&period;  He even rejected a suggestion for a segregated facility on the grounds for Negro patients&period;  In southern racist tradition&comma; however&comma; the low paid work staff was approximately half Negro&period;  They served as maids&comma; janitors and aides to lift patients in and out of baths&period;  The white staff was housed in the main building or in nearby private cottages&period;  Black workers lived in more distant dormitories&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>His refusal to allow black children to use the spa and revelations of the use of donated funds created a growing embarrassment on the verge of scandal&period;  In 1941&comma; with help the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis&comma; known popularly as the March of Dimes&comma; Tuskegee Institute opened a heath facility for black polio victims&period;  With only 36 beds&comma; the Institute facility was woefully inadequate to the need&period;  Prominent physician W&period; Montague Cobb would later describe the Tuskegee facility as a &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Negro medical ghetto&period;”<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Roosevelt praised the Institute for its establishment of the special health center for black victims of polio&comma; giving him the appearance of concern for the Negro population who voted for him and donated to his Warm Springs all-white facility&period;  In fact&comma; the Tuskegee facility was necessitated because of Roosevelt’s personal decision to ban black children from Warm Springs&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Most civil rights organizations&comma; including the NAACP and the National Urban League&comma; were offended by Roosevelt’s racist policies and made their plea to Mrs&period; Roosevelt&period;  According to Naomi Rogers&colon;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Reverend J&period; S&period; Bookens of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in Mobile&comma; Ala&comma; tried to have his paralyzed 9-year-old son admitted to Warm Springs and was told &OpenCurlyQuote;Negroes &lpar;are&rpar; never admitted to that institution&period;’  This case was widely discussed in the Black press and spurred Walter White&comma; secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People&comma; to remind Eleanor Roosevelt that segregation at Warm Springs was the reason his association refused to sponsor Birthday Ball fundraising&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>The Urban League argued that a change in policy &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;would be heartily welcomed by ten million otherwise socially disinherited American citizens&period;”  Whether Eleanor Roosevelt raised the issue with her husband is unknown&comma; but there was no change in the policy&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>About the same time&comma; the Chicago Tribune printed a letter that noted&colon;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There is a place in Georgia named Warm Springs where the President has endowed&comma; or partially maintains&comma; a sanitarium for the treatment of infantile paralysis&period;  I have no doubt that what the humblest&comma; most ragged&comma; and illiterate little white child in the land would be admitted there for treatment&comma; but the most cultured&comma; refined&comma; and well clothed Negro child would be denied admittance simply because it was a Negro&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>With public outrage mounting&comma; the Chief Surgeon issued a public explanation for Roosevelt’s whites-only policy&period;  His explanation is as damning as the policy&period;  He said&colon; <&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;&lbrack;Warm Springs&rsqb; is not a general orthopedic hospital&period;  It treats and studies nothing but Infantile Paralysis&period;  It maintains no wards&comma; separate clinics or segregated rooms&period;  Aid and pay patients share the same facilities&period;  We cannot take colored people for this reason&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>By 1937&comma; Roosevelt and his fellow trustees were faced with the issue of desegregating Warm Springs&period;  While there was almost universal reluctance to admit Negroes&comma; the trustees recognized the growing public relationship problem and the political problem for Roosevelt&period;  They decided against serving black children but decided to &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;associate” with an all-black medical facility as a means of stemming the growing criticism&period;  After extensive deliberations Trustee James M&period; Hooper summed up the sentiment of his fellow board members in saying &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;our facilities do not lend themselves to the comfortable housing and treatment of resident colored cases … we do not feel that we could make such patients comfortable both physically and psychologically&period;”  <&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>A 1937 decision by Roosevelt and the trustees to drop the Tuskegee Institute and other black medical groups as recipients of that year’s Birthday Ball funds created a firestorm in the black community&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>The Chicago Defender ran an article under the headline &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;We Donated&comma; But They Left Us Out&period;”  The Warm Springs leadership had decided that &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;the Negro should solve his problem … through local medical practitioners&comma; because statistics show that it &lpar;polio&rpar; is most prevalent among white people&period;”  Though untrue&comma; the racist medical community proffered the false argument that Negroes were not afflicted by polio&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Warm Springs remained segregated throughout Roosevelt’s lifetime&period;  After his death at Warm Springs in 1945&comma; Rogers further noted that&colon;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Warm Springs remained segregated for many years&period;  By the end of the 1940s it had set up a few &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;emergency” beds for local Black patients&comma; but there were no Black physicians&comma; nurses&comma; therapists&comma; or administrators&comma; and the Warm Springs movie theater had an indoor picket fence indicating where Black employees could sit&comma; separate from the White patients and staff&comma; in the worst seats&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>For the 19 years that Roosevelt owned the facility&comma; and despite his civil rights rhetoric&comma; the mounting criticism from whites and blacks across the nation and with disregard for the health of black children&comma; Roosevelt maintained his racist policies at Warm Springs to the day he died&period;”  <&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This is only one example of Roosevelt’s deeply seated white supremacy&period;  The entire New Deal was largely crafted by current and former members of the Ku Klux Klan – and designed to take jobs from Blacks to be given to whites&period;  The head of the NAACP label the National Recovery Act &lpar;NRA&rpar; the Negro Riddance Act&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>You can see why Biden was so palsy with his racist Democrat colleagues in the Senate – especially former Ku Klux Klan member and organizer Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia&period;  Biden gave Byrd high praise in a eulogy when the Senator died in 2010&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This followed a long tradition of Democrat leadership refusing to address the racists in the Party’s ranks in favor of &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;working with” them – including generations of big-city political machines that have kept millions of blacks segregated&comma; impoverished uneducated&comma; unemployed and unsafe to this day&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In his recent speech&comma; Biden told his audience that Warm Springs was where FDR learned empathy and how to heal a nation like he healed his body&period;  That is not hyperbole&period;  It is a damn lie&period;  FDR’s ownership of the spa in Warm Springs did not heal his body&comma; the nation – and he most certainly did not have any empathy for Black Americans&period;  Biden is selling the snake oil of disinformation to the Black community&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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