Bruce Bartlett

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Reviews of Wrong on Race

Progressive Segregation Accuracy in Academia
March 28, 2008
Obama's Blind Spot on Race and Character News Blaze
March 21, 2008
Wrong on Race Review News Blaze
February 27, 2008
A Walk in the Democratic Party’s Racist Graveyard National Black Republican Association
February 24, 2008
Party of Chains City Journal
February 8, 2008
Wrong on Race Review
February 6, 2008
Hillary: Undecided on Platform Apology for Slavery?
January 30, 2008
David Frum's Diary
January 25, 2008
Race and Politics
January 22, 2008
Choosing Sides
January 13, 2008

Democrat's Black Eye

The New York Post
December 30, 2007

Bruce Bartlett brandishes a damning history of the Democratic Party, which for 100 years after the Civil War provided a fertile ground for Jim Crow and white supremacy. Democrats have long acted behind an ethos of racial equality, yet, as Bartlett powerfully illustrates, the reality of their patchy record over the last two centuries in fact lends little credibility to that claim. Compelling and incisive." --Grover G. Norquist, President, Americans for Tax Reform

"Wrong on Race is an important contribution to the study of party politics in America. Bartlett offers a thorough, well documented account of the racial roots of the Democratic party. This book should be a required reading for African-Americans of all ages, and especially for the nation's youth."--Carol Swain, Professor of Political Science and Law, Vanderbilt University, and editor of Debating Immigration

"Wrong on Race powerfully recapitulates a twentieth century journey into racial pettifogging and outright confusion, and in doing so shines a light as clear as the meridian sun on the realities of racial politics…Bruce Bartlett has done what no one before him has done, and it is all the more remarkable, therefore, to say that it will probably never be better done."--Professor William B. Allen, Michigan State University; and former chairman, U.S. Civil Rights Commission

"The Democratic party is widely credited, not least by black writers, as the party that has done the most for civil rights. Yet for most of its history it has been the other way around. As Bruce Bartlett points out in Wrong on Race, Democratic icons like Woodrow Wilson worked to impose segregation on blacks, and even Franklin Roosevelt did little for equal rights."--Michael Barone, syndicated columnist, co-author of The Almanac of American Politics, and author of Our First Revolution

 

Wrong on Race
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Wrong on Race Blog

Blacks are "a subordinate and inferior class of beings who had been subjugated by the dominant race."

--Chief Justice Roger Taney, Dred Scott v. Sandford, 1856
Appointed Attorney General by Andrew Jackson in 1831
Appointed Secretary of the Treasury by Andrew Jackson in 1833