EXCLUSIVE: Jack Posobiec says Civil Rights Movement led by 60s radicals led to 'racial discrimination' being 'enshrined into the federal bureaucracy'

It is why "you have to mark your race every time you apply for anything in this country for a job for a scholarship for school."

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On Monday's episode of Human Events Daily, Jack Posobiec revealed he "launched a blistering criticism of Martin Luther King Jr." along with Charlie Kirk in light of MLK day. The two discussed this on the ThoughtCrime podcast on Thursday.

The Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, with King at the helm, he explained, was the starting point for much of the Critical Race Theory and Diversity, Equity and Inclusion madness America faces today.

"The legacy of the CRM [Civil Rights Movement]," he stated, "enshrining in a mandatory system at the federal level, race consciousness and racial discrimination, which has been executed as anti-white racism."

It is also why "you have to mark your race every time you apply for anything in this country for a job for a scholarship for school."

Lyndon B. Johnson was the Democrat president at the time who signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 into law.

LBJ himself said "the reason that he signed all of these laws was not to bring about equality," Posobiec reported. "It was to get black people to vote Democrat for the next 200 years."

In his direct quote, Johnson used much more explicit language. 

"Look, at the end of the day, we have to understand where these CRT radicals come from," Posobiec said. "The legal institutions, the illegal enshrinement in law."

"And at the end of the day," he added, "if we were going to make the 60s sacred ... then they need the saint, and the saint of the 60s is Martin Luther King."

"We don't talk about his personal life. We don't talk about his academic plagiarism where he stole the entire work of another student when he put it in for his doctorate. And at the end of the day, they'll say, 'Oh, well, it was it was a non-violent movement,'" Posobiec stated.

The Civil Rights Movement in the 60s was in fact a violent time. Posobiec reported that "there were snipers up on the roof for an entire week in Newark, shooting white people and saying that we have to get them out."

The true legacy of the 60s, he said, is that racial discrimination and race consciousness were "enshrined" into the federal bureaucracy.


Image: Title: Poso MLK

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