CNN Says Georgia Runoff Races Are ‘Like Slavery’? GIVE ME A BREAK!

They’re out of their heads at CNN. Now they’re claiming that the runoff races in Georgia, between two successful black men, are racist. Because nothing sounds more like oppression than running for political office and positions of substantial power, right?

Do you remember when cigarette companies would pay for movies and commercials to feature someone smoking on film? I feel like there is some dark money organization tossing money at these networks every time they link race to nonracial issues. Maybe the more outrageous the claim, the more money they get. Honestly, at this point, that’s the only thing that makes sense to me.

Republican Hershal Walker or Democrat Ralph Warnock will face off in a second run for Senate. This is the second time Warnock’s radical agendas has been sidelined into a runoff race so how does CNN explain that? Simple… They make it about his skin color and not his policies.

CNN’s Nadia Romero began by mocking Georgia’s Christian base saying, “runoff elections happening in the south in the Bible Belt, and states that were formerly slave-owning states. And that is why so many people, including the Georgia NAACP says that there is a racist element to why we have runoff elections as a total. ”

Here is her argument to back that silliness up:

“If you have one black candidate, and then you had three or four other white candidates. Now all those white candidates can throw their power behind that white person, the white population can now throw their power behind that candidate and ensure that a black person could never win.”

They are both black, what the heck is she talking about?

Oh wait, there’s more: “How could that be knowing that at times in the state the black population was up to some 40 percent, there’s always been black people in this state always voting, always a prominent force. But still, it took to 2021 before Raphael Warnock was able to make that achievement, that accomplishment, so here we are with this system that is in place.”

Warnock is the first black man to win a seat in Georgia’s senate, no lies there. However, that’s where the truth ends. Georgia has elected people of various skin tones into positions of power all around the state. The fact that Warnock is the first black man in the Senate has more to do with politics than skin color.

Until recent years, Georgia was a Republican stronghold and a politician’s policies matter to voters with strong beliefs and values. For instance, during the Carter days, I have no doubt that Georgia would have voted for a purple-pigmented human so long they ran on conservative values and came with a promise to save the state from the liberal agenda.

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Maybe it’s time someone looks into CNN’s money streams to look for correlations between windfalls and outrageous racist claims.

 

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