The Party of “Equality” That Built Its Power on Division
It’s time to stop pretending that the Democratic Party is the party of equality. History tells a different story—one filled with slavery, secession, segregation, Jim Crow, the Ku Klux Klan, and opposition to the Civil Rights Act. The Democrats’ claim to be the moral guardians of justice and inclusion is a masterclass in political projection, deception, and rebranding. They’ve simply swapped the plantations and poll taxes for dependency programs and racial pandering.
The Democratic machine thrives on keeping Americans divided. Their version of “racial progress” is a shell game, one that uses minorities as chess pieces to maintain power. Every policy, from welfare dependency to affirmative action quotas, reinforces the same subtle message: you can’t succeed without us. That isn’t empowerment, it’s a modern form of control.
From Slavery to Section 2: The Power Game Evolves
The latest chapter in this long-running manipulation is the Democrats’ use of “majority-minority congressional districts.” These are districts drawn deliberately to pack as many minority voters, mostly Black and Hispanic, into one area as possible. The goal? To guarantee a Democratic seat under the guise of racial fairness.
This strategy has been protected for decades under Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, originally intended to prevent racial discrimination in voting. But over time, that noble intent has been twisted into a partisan weapon. Instead of ensuring fair representation, it’s been used to justify racial gerrymandering, a process that openly subordinates traditional redistricting principles like geography and community integrity to race-based political engineering.
The Supreme Court Challenge: Louisiana v. Callais
Now, that cynical system is facing serious scrutiny in Louisiana v. Callais, a pivotal case before the Supreme Court. At issue is whether Section 2 can be used to require the creation of majority-minority districts, districts that, in practice, benefit Democrats almost exclusively.
During oral arguments, the Justices exposed the absurdity of the current system. Justice Sonia Sotomayor tried to defend the racial map-drawing by framing it as “representation,” but the Court seemed unconvinced. Principal Deputy Solicitor General Hashim Moopan dismantled that logic with a single observation: If these voters were all white Democrats, no one would be demanding an extra district. That’s the definition of race subordinating the rules.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson made headlines for all the wrong reasons when she compared Black voters to disabled individuals needing “special access.” That’s the mindset Democrats depend on, a belief that minority Americans are somehow incapable of participating in democracy on equal footing without government-engineered advantage. It’s not progress; it’s paternalism.
Democrats’ Racial Gerrymandering Hypocrisy
Democrats claim to fight for fairness, yet their entire electoral strategy hinges on separating Americans by color. These “majority-minority” districts don’t empower voters, they isolate them. By concentrating minority populations in a handful of guaranteed blue seats, Democrats effectively dilute minority influence across the rest of the political map. It’s token representation, not true inclusion.
And let’s be honest, many of the politicians produced by these engineered districts have no incentive to serve broad, diverse constituencies. They’re rewarded for radical rhetoric, not results. These are often the loudest voices in Congress, the ones shouting about systemic racism and oppression while doing nothing to foster unity or economic opportunity.
When Democrats defend this system, they’re not defending equality; they’re defending their pipeline of predictable voters. It’s racial politics masquerading as justice.
The Ultimate Irony: Institutional Racism by Design
For decades, Democrats have accused America of harboring “institutional racism.” But they never mention that they built the institutions in question. From the welfare state that traps families in poverty to the education system that prioritizes ideology over literacy, it’s the Left that maintains the very structures that perpetuate inequality. And they cowed the GOP into silence with the threat of being branded “racist.”
Now, through racial gerrymandering, they’ve institutionalized racism in a new way, embedding it into the political geography of America. It’s a cynical, self-serving design meant to preserve Democratic dominance under the false banner of civil rights.
Bottom Line: Time to End the Cycle
The Supreme Court’s ruling in Louisiana v. Callais could mark a turning point. If the Court restores neutrality to redistricting, removing race as the dominant factor, it will strike a blow against one of the most entrenched forms of modern political manipulation.
Real equality doesn’t come from race-based advantages or politically engineered maps. It comes from treating all Americans as individuals, not as demographic pawns. The Democratic Party’s addiction to racial politics has poisoned our discourse, corrupted our elections, and divided our people.
It’s time to call this what it is: institutionalized racism, Democrat-style. And if the Supreme Court has the courage to confront it, perhaps America can finally start dismantling the system that thrives on keeping us apart. I anticipate three solid “no” votes, the progressive communist democrats: Sonia Sotomayor (Obama), Elena Kagan (Obama), and Ketanji Brown Jackson (Biden).
We are being screwed.
— Steve