A Virginia Republican who on Saturday secured the nomination to run for Lt. Governor said in an online video published last year that he believes "black civil rights leaders" are responsible for a "genocide" of African-American children by supporting Democrats and reproductive choice.
E.W. Jackson, a pastor and Harvard graduate who previous sought Virginia's senate seat, is the party's first African-American candidate for statewide office since the 1980s. He's also part of a trio of fringe conservatives leading the Virginia Republican Party's statewide ticket, joined by state Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli running for governor and state Sen. Mark Obenshain running for attorney general.
"The Democrat Party has created an unholy alliance between certain so-called civil rights leaders and Planned Parenthood, which has killed unborn black babies by the tens of millions," he said in a video published to his official YouTube page. "Planned Parenthood has been far more lethal to black lives than the KKK ever was."
During his last run for public office, Jackson insisted that the so-called 3/5ths clause in the Constitution, which counted slaves as 3/5ths of a man, was "an anti-slavery amendment" designed to reduce the voting power of slave-owning states. That woefully wrong theory was originally floated by Republican conspiracy theorist Glenn Beck and apparently repeated by Jackson without examination.
In the video published last year, Jackson adds that Democrats "and their black civil rights allies are partners in this genocide," going on to insist the persecution of LGBT people is nothing like the persecution of African-Americans throughout U.S. history.
"They can keep their homosexuality private," he said. "You and I cannot hide being black. I need not recount to you the painful history of slavery, Jim Crow, lynchings and sterilizations, all because of skin color. Anyone who dares equate the so-called gay rights movement to the history of black Americans is exploiting the black community."
Interestingly, as he made these comments, a photo of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. hung on a wall just over his right shoulder. Dr. King's wife Coretta, before her death, spoke out passionately in favor of LGBT marriage equality despite a coalition of black pastors who urged that she recognize the civil rights movement and the LGBT movement are fundamentally different.
"I still hear people say that I should not be talking about the rights of lesbian and gay people and I should stick to the issue of racial justice," King said in 1998. "But I hasten to remind them that Martin Luther King Jr. said, 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.'"
This video is from YouTube, published Sept. 18, 2012.
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(H/T: Politico)




