Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Diana Natalicio

Diana Natalicio


Diana Natalicio was the President of the University of Texas at El Paso. Natalicio was able to increase the number of students enrolled from thousands of students to more than 21,000 students. Diana Natalicio was able to make the University of Texas at El Paso into a top school without the elitism. Natalicio would allow students to get a quality education at an affordable price. 

Diana Natalicio provided scholarships for students and also nurtured a positive environment in the University. Natalicio described that she wanted students from El Paso and the nation to get a quality education. This was noted by the manner that the university accepted 100% of all students who applied. 

Diana Natalicio wanted students of all races and ethnicities to get a quality education demonstrating the importance of equality and genuine empathy. Natalicio saw that students could receive a quality education and improve upon their circumstances. 

Diana Natalicio described that she worked at an assembly line working with electronics and  circuits where she mastered her work skill set in two weeks and knew that she could accomplish greater things. Natalicio would return to school and get a Doctorate's Degree in Portuguese while she was fluent in English and Spanish. Diana Natalicio would keep working hard and became the President of UTEP. She believed in providing a quality education that could improve the life of students. Natalicio cared about her profession and cared about students. She never married and dedicated herself to being a positive individual. Diana Natalacio was of a pleasant demeanor and encouraging to others.


Don Haskins

Don Haskins 


Don Haskins was the head coach of the University of Texas at El Paso basketball team in the 1960s. Don Haskins would lead the basketball team to the finals and win the NCAA national tournament in a specific year. Haskins would decide to start the best five basketball players the team had and not choose based on skin color like the other teams had done. 

In the 1960s there was still racism and Haskins decided to start the best players based on their technical acumen and not based on the color of their skin. It was noted that while desegregation laws existed since 1963 because of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, there was still racism in sports because teams started basketball players based on the color of their skin and not necessarily based on their talent. 

Despite the racism that existed in the 1960s, Haskins decided to be just and play with the best players instead of going along with racism. Because Haskins started the best basketball players, the team won the National Championship. This describes the importance of being egalitarian and just. Haskins was able to be independant and distinct and did not go along with the crowd in the 1960s.

Despite living 65 years later, there is still racism in the sports world seen since the 2010s. There were talented athletes who were benched because of their skin color (seen in different examples in soccer most notably and also other sports). This was noted in different sports and allows us to know that the 2010s described that talented athletes were envied by socialists. Even in the sports world where talent and discipline should be appreciated and recognized, there was envy. Despite the times that we live in, we can remind ourselves of amazing individuals who fought against racism.





Sunday, August 3, 2025

Dr. Martin Luther King

 Dr. Martin Luther King 

Interpretacion a otros lenguajes

"Judge not a man by the color of his skin but by the content of his character."


The story of Dr. Martin Luther King describes the importance of fighting the injustices of the world with pacifism and non-violence. We learn that Dr. Martin Luther King was a preacher that was able to fight for equal rights for minorities knowing that there was racism that existed. We learn that in the 1960's there was inequality that existed because of racism, and Dr. Martin Luther King fought against racism. We learn that while other movements attempted to incorporate hate and violence, Dr. Martin Luther King preached the importance of civil disobedience against measures that were racist and designed to prevent individuals from improving themselves.

"Man must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression, and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love."

We learn about the examples that existed in the past of Jim Crowe laws that attempted to prevent individuals from improving themselves. There were also unjust discriminatory laws that called for separate bathrooms, separate water fountains, and even different seatings in buses for people that were African-American or minorities. This describes the manner that sometimes there is racism that exists and there is the need to combat the temporary lies and negative emotions that attempt to lead to hate and envy without reason. We learn that while there were movements calling the need to fight hate with hate seen in false philosophies of hate and lust, Dr. Martin Luther King called on the need to preach filial love, genuine empathy, and civil disobedience describing that racism does not allow for true equality.

"Yes, if you want to say that I was a drum major, say that I was a drum major for justice; say I was a drum major for peace; say I was a drum major for righteousness. And all the other shallow things will not matter."

We learn that Dr. Martin Luther King was able to preach and describe the importance of not fighting hate with hate and instead instructed the need to fight against hate by preaching unity, equality, and wisdom. We learn that Dr. Martin Luther King was able to help African-Americans and minorities fight against the injustices of racism that had existed in the past. We learn that because of the preaching and determination of Dr. Martin Luther King, the unjust and unequal Jim Crowe laws were removed and instead the importance of equality, empathy, and filial love was seen. We are able to see the importance of how filial love and genuine empathy can conquer hate when fighting against hate.

We learn that Dr. Martin Luther King's example allows us to know that we can not have negative emotions describing hate, anger, and envy because they attempt to lead to a negative road. We learn that instead we are supposed to persevere preaching truth and learn that there is no need for hate. We learn that the other movements that were non-peaceful describing militant groups were not helpful. Dr. Martin Luther King's example allows us to know that we can persevere preaching truth and not be a part of the inequalities and injustices that false philosophies attempt to lead to. We learn that the elimination of Jim Crowe laws and improvements of equality, equity, and justice for minorities occurred because of Dr. Martin Luther King and individuals that decided to fight against hate with genuine empathy, filial love, and not participating with the injustices of an unequal system.

Martin Luther King Fought Against Racism With Pacifism

"In 1956, Martin Luther King preaching a philosophy of Christian non-violence that he said would conquer evil and save America, led the people of Montgomery, Alabama, in a successful boycott of the city's segregated buses."- The Unraveling of America: A History of Liberalism in the 1960s by Allen J. Matusow (page 62)

Martin Luther King fought against racism by using peaceful resistance and similar strategies that Ghandi and Henry David Thoreau used. Martin Luther King boycotted department stores that did not want to employ African-Americans due to racism. We learned that there were also peaceful demonstrations and protests against racism and racist institutions. This was while the FBI had decided to stand down and not help the African-American community fight against racism in the 1960s. This describes that citizens fought for their civil rights and did not allow racism to dictate their lives. While racist socialists were opposing Martin Luther King, individuals decided to resist hate and envy from socialists and communists with pacifism, empathy, and removing negative emotions. Despite revilings and intimidation, peaceful resistance fought against racism. Individuals demonstrated without violence to show they disagreed with racist Jim Crowe laws and envy from idolators. The department stores that were being boycotted decided to no longer use racist standards to give employment. Department stores decided to employ African-Americans and minorities.

John F. Kennedy would fight for civil rights by working with Martin Luther King. When racist socialists in the 1960s attempted to prevent students from going to university in Mississippi, Kennedy ordered the military to allow the students to go to university similar to Dwight D. Eisenhower who allowed an African-American student in Little Rock to go to school. It was noted that the racist socialists who opposed the students in the 1960s were idolators. It was noted that the idolatrous socialists threw empty bottles and shot rifles attempting to intimidate the marshals restoring order and African-Americans from going to university. To this, Kennedy ordered the army to guard the marshals when the racist idolators attacked the marshals. The troops were sent to restore order and the envious socialists dispersed. It was noted that once the troops arrived, the coward socialists ran from the troops and dispersed. JFK was also impressive choosing to fight for equality. JFK was also fighting against poverty, socialism in Cuba, organized crime, and wanted to send a man to the moon while working with MLK to end racism. Obviously both JFK and MLK were hated for being impressive and fighting for true equality and civil rights

"Finally around midnight, with the situation worsening by the minute, Kennedy moved to save the marshals. Taking one action he must hoped to avoid, he ordered the army to Oxford. Troops arrived on the campus at 5:00 A.M. The mob set a fire in their path, but as one Justice Department man in the building remembered it, 'the troops came in to the flame, and they marched right through without breaking a step. And there was a kind of visceral, almost physical impact on the mob. They fell back a couple of steps, and there was a kind of exhalation of breath, as if they had been punched by the troops marching through the flames, and that was really the end right there... The mob just melted away.' The toll of the battle included two persons killed (one a foreign newsman), and 375 others, including 166 marshals, wounded. But Meredith was in the university to stay, and the federal court orders had been upheld."- (page 85)

"Kennedy issued an executive order in March 1961- the only civil rights order he issued that year- creating the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity."- (page 64)

Martin Luther King Fought For Minorities and Was Slandered by the FBI Being Called a Communist

"FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had no sympathy with the civil rights movement and used his every resource to limit his responsibility in this area." (page 80)

"Not terminated until June 1966, the FBI's phone taps on King yielded no evidence of Communist subversion, but they did generate political intelligence on the civil rights movement useful to both the Justice Department and the White House."

"Hoover was not content merely to wiretap King."

William Sullivan, Assistant Diretor of the FBI, called Martin Luther King a "clerical fraud and Marxist."- (page 81)

"Sullivan authorized the first microphone surveillance of King's rooms. Bugging was not illegal, but the necessary trespass to plant a bug was."

Martin Luther King fought for the rights of African-Americans and minorities. MLK fought for improved wages of minorities in the 1960s when racism and envy attempted to prevent improved wages for minorities. The FBI slandered MLK calling him a communist being that MLK was a Christian preacher. We learn communism and socialism actually projects its deficits and attempts to oppose Christianity. We learn that the communists are racists and project their deficits unto others. We learn that the FBI started slandering MLK because he was helping individuals who were discriminated based on race. MLK was slandered by the FBI being called a communist and also had the hotelrooms at the locations that he was staying bugged. The FBI wiretapped the hotelrooms at the locations that MLK was staying in different cities. MLK kept fighting despite the opposition from racists in the 1960s.

"[FBI] agents investigated SNCC's complaints of civil rights violations, but nothing ever seemed to happen."

"Martin Luther King said in 1962, 'Every time I saw FBI men in Albany, they were with the local police force."

MLK fought against racism and preached the importance of genuine empathy while fighting against hate. We know that there was slander because MLK was helping individuals fight for improved wages for the working class instead of having decreased wages based on racism. MLK also fought for the civil rights of minorities that was attempted to be prevented by racism. There are history books that described how the FBI did not actually attempt to help the civil rights movement and actually stood aside while citizens fought against racism. There are history books that state that the FBI tried to not help the civil rights movement in the 1960s and that the FBI even opposed MLK calling him a communist and wiretapping his rooms. (There are some good things that the FBI has done in the past, yet there are actually a large number of negative things they have done including slandering MLK and also wiretapping also seen against the Democrats in the 1970s. There is also the story of David Koresh who was attacked by the FBI for "supposedly" owning a hand-gun silencer that most likely could have been planted. I do not know all the details yet the FBI invaded the David Koresh compound due to envy looking for a silencer yet illegally entered the compound trespassing, used explosives, and shot at the people living inside when there were innocent children. David Koresh was married and had children and lived in Waco, TX. The response from the FBI was rather questionable seeing how the silencer was most likely planted and the FBI was envious of David Koresh for living in a manner that was different from the system in the 1990s. These examples help us be far apart from negative people and have healthy skepticism against bureaucracies that have attempted to usurp authority. We can have gratitude being far apart from negative and deceitful people who do not look to help others.)

MLK Fought For Civil Rights in Birmingham, Alabama

"In response to an invitation from African American leaders, Martin Luther King initiated a carefully prepared campaign on April 3, 1963, to smash segregation in that grim, raw industrial city. King was aware of the stakes."

"We believed that while a campaign in Birmingham would be the toughest fight in our civil rights careers, it could, if successful, break the back of segregation all over the nation,' he wrote."- (page 86)

MLK persisted despite discouragements and persecution from the FBI. MLK was able to make non-violent protests in Birmingham where individuals fought for their civil rights despite opposition from racist socialists and the FBI. It was noted that after MLK and individuals marched peacefully in Birmingham, the socialist racists attempted to stop the non-violent marches. MLK had opposition who told him to cease the marches, and MLK kept protesting. MLK was arrested for keeping the protests going. MLK spent eight days in jail for choosing to keep protesting peacefully.

"Demonstrations grew daiy in size and intensity, until on April 10 a local judge issued an injunction banning further protests. King, who had never defied a court order, decided to take his Ghandian philosophy to its logical conclusion and keep on marching. On Good Friday, April 12, he was arrested and jailed. One consequence was his famous "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" an eloquent defense of demonstrations, civil disobedience, and non-violent protests."

MLK would write Letter from a Birmingham Jail that described the importance of peaceful protests and civil disobedience. MLK was able to keep marching and enlisted children to march in the protests. To this, the Commissioner of Public Safety (not governor), Bull Connor, flew into a fit of rage seeing the civil rights movement persevere despite envy and opposition. In the next protest, Bull Connor told police to use dogs, fire hoses, clubs, and their batons to beat on protesters. Pictures of the protest appeared on newspapers showing obvious racism from socialists against peaceful protesters. The Civil Rights Movement kept persisting and both the North and South saw the need to resist racism and violence. Despite hate and envy from Bull Connor, individuals kept marching and protesting segregation and racism.

"After eight days King departed from his cell and resumed leadership of the demonstrations. When secret talks between white and African American leaders broke down, he dramatically escalated tactics on May 2 by recruiting thousands of schoolchildren to join the protests and fill up the jails. The appearance of the children threw Bull Connor, Birmingham's Commissioner of Public Safety, into a rage. So far, Connor had handled the demonstrations with relative restraint. But on May 3 he set upon the marchers with dogs, clubs, and fire hoses, making martyrs of his victims and assuring their triumph." -(page 86 and 87)

Martin Luther King Persevered Despite Persecution From Socialist Idolators

"Early in January 1962 the FBI made the startling discovery that one of King's closest advisors was a New York lawyer, Stanley Levison, key administrator in the early 1950s of the secret funds of the American Communist party. Though Levison had become alienated from the party sometime in 1955 and ceased thereafter to participate in its activities, the FBI reflexively concluded that he was now exploiting his considerable influence on King to advance the world Communist conspiracy. ...Evidence in the FBI's possession casting serious doubts on these characterizations was ignored.

MLK was being wiretapped in his phone conversations for nearly three years without legality based on slander and false accusations of being a communist. After the phone wiretapping produced no evidence of MLK being a socialist, the FBI proceeded to wiretap his hotel rooms. The FBI was also illegally surveilling and wiretapping the conversations of Levison, an African American lawyer, who advised MLK and had ceased to be a part of the socialists since 1955. Hoover wiretapped Levison's conversations which also proved that he was no longer an active member of the communist party. Despite conclusive evidence that MLK was not a socialist, the FBI kept illegally surveilling MLK. This describes how the FBI was obstructing and opposing the civil rights movement and not about MLK being a socialist

"Martin Luther King described it in his book, Why We Can't Wait: On that day several thousand African Americans marched on the town, the jails were so full that the police could only arrest a handful. There were African Americans on the sidewalks, in the streets, standing, sitting in the isles of downtown stores. There were square blocks of African Americans, a veritable sea of black faces. They were committing no violence; they were just present and singing. Downtown Birmingham echoed to the strains of the freedom songs.' That afternoon business leaders sent word to King that they were ready to negotiate. Three days later, truce terms were announced: the big department stores agreed to desegregate within 90 days and promote and hire African Americans; African American leaders canceled demonstrations and called off the boycotts of stores.'"- (pages 87-88)

MLK would go to Birmingham, Alabama and organized protests against department stores that did not want to hire African Americans. There were mass boycotts and protests that were peaceful in nature and looked to fight against racist segregation laws. MLK was able to persevere despite persecution and harrassment from socialist idolators and the FBI. Instead of being discouraged, MLK organized one of the biggest boycotts that caused big chain department stores to reconsider giving employment to African Americans. Business leaders initially refused to hire African Americans and minorities, but reconsidered because they saw that the protests and boycotts were peaceful. Business leaders of department stores began to hire African Americans and minorities within three months of the boycotts. MLK was able to help African Americans and minorities break the barrier of workplace discrimination that attempted to prevent equality in employment in civil society in the United States in the 1960s. This was after also helping desegregate bus transportation in the 1950s. (In these times that are not the best of times, we can persevere boycotting anything that has to do with idol worship (for example, propaganda from the media, movies, series, music, and negative information) and avoiding false prophets and socialists who have envy and do not like competition seen in multiple fields since the 2010s and most notable with the experimental covid "vaccines".

Martin Luther King Was a Christian Preacher and Not a Socialist

"Those who heard Martin Luther King's speech learned, if they did not already know, why this African American man had become the unrivaled leader of his people."

"When the architects of our great republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir. This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the inalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."

MLK helped the civil rights movement by fighting against racism seen in segregation laws. For his commitment and determination to fight racism with pacifism, MLK was slandered, illegally surveilled, intimidated, reviled, placed in jail, and hated. Despite the persecution, MLK was able to keep fighting back against racism and the injustices of an imperfect United States in the 1960s. MLK did not falter in his fight against racism and inequality, fighting hate with filial love and genuine empathy. MLK was able to persist in Birmingham and also provide hope in the March in Washington where 250,000 individuals arrived to describe how the civil rights movement seeked to remove racism from the United States in the 1960s.

JFK was able to pass legislation that prevented racism in employment and the workforce in 1963. JFK decided to stand with the civil rights movement. The bill described that segregation in civil society was removed in restaurants, theaters, public places, buses, and schools. This was after a few racist governors had attempted to prevent African American students from going to university in Mississippi and Alabama. We learn that JFK sent the marshals and army to allow students to go to school while the FBI stood down. MLK was vital and indispensible to the success of the civil rights movement. Choosing to preach pacifism instead of violence, the civil rights movement abounded and gave African Americans and minorities the opportunity to obtain employment, an education, use public transport, play sports in school, college, and professionally, and leave racism in the past in the United States in the 1960s. (We know that sadly there is still racism in the US by idolatrous socialists who hate Christianity, multiracial individuals, different ethnicities, and industrious individuals. Idolatrous socialists also hate impressive individuals who actually worked hard to improve instead of trusting in trust funds, corruption, and non-compete clauses.) 






Friday, August 1, 2025

John Fitzgerald Kennedy

 John F. Kennedy


"There is nothing to fear, but fear itself."

John F. Kennedy was the youngest president to be elected in the United States. We learn that he was able to defeat Richard Nixon and was able to fight for conservative values while being a democrat. We learn that he was able to fight against socialism and communism, have the vision to send a man to space, and described the importance of conservatism. 

We learn that John F. Kennedy was an individual that was a devout Catholic. We learn that John F. Kennedy had chosen to fight against tyranny in his presidency being able to fight against the socialists and communists. We learn that socialism and communism attempted to stifle and prevent individuals from understanding the importance of practicing responsibility along with autonomy, liberty, and freedom. We know that John F. Kennedy had decided to fight against Cuba and against communism in the 1960s. While John F. Kennedy was fighting against tyranny, he was also fighting against poverty and helped the civil rights movement. 

We learn that along with Martin Luther King, strides were made to fight against racism. John F. Kennedy was an individual that had decided to fight for the civil rights movement. We learn that there was racism that was still happening in the 1960s. John F. Kennedy had decided to stand and help individuals fight for their civil rights. 

We learn that John F. Kennedy did not have an easy presidency knowing that there was opposition from communism and the Cold War. Yet, John F. Kennedy allowed individuals to know that there is the need to fight for ideals and values. We learn that John F. Kennedy did not falter and kept fighting against communism, poverty, and racism. John F. Kennedy allows us to know that individuals can make a difference being able to embolden the civil rights movement that gave individuals rights to fight against racism and envy that was apparent in the 1960s. We learn that the Soviet Union collapsed in the 1990s with the efforts of Pope John Paul II, Aleksandr Solsenitsyn, and Ronald Reagan who were individuals that fought against the temporary lies of communism and socialism.

JFK Increased the Minimum Wage of Workers and Allowed African Americans and Minorities to Have Jobs

"The president elect determined to give legislative priority in the coming session to five "must" welfare bills: increased minimum wages, aid to depressed areas, housing legislation, federal assistance to public schools, and hospital insurance for the aged."- (page 97)

"Kennedy's proposal to raise the minimum wage from $1 to $1.25 over three years and extend coverage to four million new workers."- (page 98)

JFK was not only fighting against racism from socialists in the 1960s, but he was also fighting against poverty. JFK made a law to employ African Americans and minorities and also increased the minimum wage to $1.25 from $1. This was when laundry workers were making $0.65 in a 48 hour work week. JFK was told to remove laundry workers from the bill or have the legislation removed. JFK had opposition from business people and yet proceeded to increase the minimum wage while removing laundry workers. JFK was opposed by big business due to his stance to fight poverty. JFK had a large amount of opposition not only in fighting poverty, communism in Cuba, going to space, but also while fighting for civil rights. Despite the opposition, JFK was unique and distinct choosing to fight for the working class. MLK was also fighting for improved wages for the working class. JFK also fought for desegregation in the housing market and also for health insurance for senior citizens and the aged. 

"Its report on November 1963 buried the information that after two years African American employment in the middle grades had risen 4.9% to only 6%, and in upper grades 0.7% to 1 percent."- (page 64)

JFK attempted to increase the number of African Americans and minorities working in the government and the private sector in the 1960s. JFK made Lyndon Baines Johnson the organizer of the committee and yet there was still opposition. In regards to work in the government it was noted that middle grade paying positions had increased 1.9% yet for high grade positions it only increased 0.3%. This describes that there was still opposition to African Americans and minorities improving themselves in better paying jobs. 

JFK Created Jobs in the United States in Regions That Had Bad Economies

JFK not only fought against poverty in the United States by raising the minimum wage but also created jobs. JFK created a committee to create jobs in areas that had been affected by negative economies. There were economies that were stagnated, and JFK created close to more than 34,000 jobs (JFK would create additional jobs training and employing workers who were displaced due to automation from assembly line machines creating 600,000 jobs). JFK wanted to add jobs to areas that did not have a stable economy in the Great Lakes, Alaska and Appalachia. JFK was able to create jobs in various areas and was slandered by bureaucrats who said that it was only half of those jobs that were actually created. While fighting racism and poverty, there were still bureaucrats who slandered JFK saying that he only created half the number of jobs reported.

JFK created the committee to create jobs in different regions including regions that were affected from depleted natural resources described in coal mining and fishing. Despite actually creating more than 34,000 jobs the committee did not receive funding, was disbanded, and removed in 1963. In 1965, a bureaucrat committee was created that did exactly the same attempting to create jobs in regions with stagnated economies. While citing JFK's committee a failure and disbanding the committee, bureaucrats in 1965 copied his committee.

JFK Wanted to Go to Space in 1960

JFK wanted to go to the moon in 1960. JFK wanted to inspire younger generations to know that the United States had talent and inspiration to go to space and discover a new frontier. JFK wanted to send a man to the moon while fighting poverty, racism, and socialism. JFK actually attempted to send a man to the moon, and again he was opposed by bureaucrats. I do not know all the details but there were bureaucrats that prevented JFK from sending a man to the moon.

After denying JFK a space mission to send an astronaut to the moon, it was noted that in 1969 an astronaut was sent to the moon. There are theories that state that the US went to the moon in 1969, and there are also theories that state that the US did not go to the moon in 1969. Regardless of if a man went to the moon or not, it was JFK who took initiative in the year 1960. The Soviets had sent a satellite to space in the 1950s, but had not sent a man to the moon. Socialist bureaucrats in the US may have impeded JFK's efforts out of envy. JFK was quite impressive.

The Cuban Missile Crisis

The Soviet Union began to be hostile to the US after the Second World War and increased hostilities in the 1960s. After Stalin was no longer Soviet leader, the Soviet socialists placed nuclear warhead missiles in Cuba aimed at the United States. Once JFK was notified, JFK organized the FBI to fight against Cuba. The operation was known as the Bay of Pigs invasion that looked to remove the missiles. JFK looked to remove the missiles from being a threat, yet did not have the full cooperation of the FBI.

The Bay of Pigs invasion was described as a failure and blamed on JFK's young age and supposed inexperience. The reality was that the FBI also decided to stand down and not fight against the socialists in Cuba. Similar to the times JFK had to use the marshals and national guard instead of the FBI against racist socialists when fighting for civil rights, the FBI had decided to stand down against socialism in Cuba. Despite being blamed for the Bay of Pigs invasion, JFK kept fighting tyranny and never gave up. While being opposed by bureaucrats at different times concerning legislation, fighting poverty, fighting racism, fighting communism, and even getting the FBI to fight organized crime (prior to going after organized crime the FBI only went after bootlegged movies and clandestine boxing fights), JFK did not falter. JFK was appreciated by the working class but despised by envious socialist bureaucrats.

JFK Fought Against Segregation

"There seemed no escape from crisis in the spring of 1963. George Wallace had won election as governor of Alabama the previous year, vowing to defend segregation by standing "in the schoolhouse door". When two African American students arrived on the University of Alabama campus on June 11 with a federal court order requiring their admittance, there he stood, blocking the entrance. He yielded to superior force later in the day after the president nationalized the Alabama national guard."- (page 89)

The civil rights movement was opposed by racist socialists who did not want African Americans and minorities to obtain basic rights guaranteed by the Constitution and Bill of Rights. We learn that African Americans and minorities were seen as individuals who were not supposed to receive an education being kept semiliterate so that they would remain working in jobs where pay was cheap in labor fields and also not work at white collar jobs. JFK fought against segregation and racism in the United States allowing students to go to university when racist governors attempted to prevent them from entering into the classroom. JFK allowed a student in Mississippi to be enrolled and attend classes when the racist governor attempted to place obstacles and opposition based on envy and hate. Idolatrous socialists are envious and racist regardless of what race or ethnicity they are (there are racist idolators/socialists that are White, African American, Asian, and Latin American including Mexican American. This is because they practice idolatry and not because of the race and ethnicity. There are also righteous individuals from all races and ethnicities.)  JFK mobilized the marshals and army to allow the student to go to school. The student was able to go to school and attain a university education.

"On June 19, 1963, Kennedy sent Congress a civil rights bill embodying most of the movement's urgent demands. The best efforts of the Justice Department having failed to enfranchise African Americans in the Deep South, Kennedy's bill further strengthened voting rights laws. African Americans in Birmingham had marched by the thousands to petition for equal treatment in public places; the president's bill outlawed discrimination in such places of public accomodation as hotels, motels, movie theaters, sports arenas, retail stores, gas stations, restaurants, and lunch counters."

In another instance, the governor from Alabama attempted to prevent two African American students from going to school. JFK again sent the Alabama national guard, and the students were able to go to school. JFK decided to stand with the civil rights movement instead of being a part of racism and envy. JFK would be able to make a bill that desegregated public places while also fighting against segregation in the universities. It was noted that JFK had won eleven million Republican voters from Nixon and only lost six and a half million Democrats of which four million Democrats left because of his civil rights stance. JFK was going to win the 1964 presidential re-election (page 93). JFK began to tour Texas to prepare to campaign for re-election in 1963.

"But 63 percent of the American people backed his civil rights bill and 60 percent continued to approve his conduct of the presidency."- (page 63)

The Assassination of JFK

JFK was assassinated because he was going to win the 1964 re-election while fighting poverty, corruption, socialism, racism, and wanting to go to space. It was noted by pollsters that JFK was going to win re-election in 1964 after passing his Equal Opportunity in Employment Law that also ended segregation. JFK was able to lead the United States by choosing to fight racism. JFK was a devout Catholic who was righteous and fought against tyranny and evil. While probably being intimidated by Hoover and his FBI associates, JFK was able to lead the country far from racism into desegregation, justice, and equality. JFK decided to fight against evil despite the intimidation and envy. 

JFK was going to visit Texas in a motorcade when he was shot by an idolatrous socialist using a sniper rifle. JFK was told days before, that there may be threats against him, and JFK did not fear. JFK was shot by Lee Harvey Oswald who was a known socialist. A day after Lee Harvey Oswald had killed JFK, Lee Harvey Oswald was also shot and killed describing how socialism does not help anyone. Instead of being given a vacation or a reward, Lee Harvey Oswald was shot by, most likely, another idolatrous socialist. This was to prevent Lee Harvey Oswald from speaking the truth and telling others who sent him to murder JFK. JFK probably had a lot of enemies since he chose to be distinct and different by fighting for civil rights instead of standing down. JFK similar to MLK may have been hated and envied by Hoover, Sullivan, and the FBI, socialists, communists, idolators, monopoly "capitalists", and racists who opposed the civil rights movement in the 1960s. Racism was business as usual for the socialists also seen in the Soviet Union where a caste system benefits the few at the expense of the majority. JFK gave us hope to know that despite opposition, being righteous is preferred. The civil rights movement would be a success and the Soviet Union would collapse in the 1990s with Reagen, Pope John Paul II, and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn speaking truth and fighting for righteousness. (Despite the times that we live, we can keep persevering obeying the commandments of Moses and preaching King Jesus Christ. We can persevere preaching truth and not believe the temporary lies of the snake that wants individuals to fight with each other over ethnicity, social class, age, gender, and even over sports teams.)



Diana Natalicio

Diana Natalicio Diana Natalicio was the President of the University of Texas at El Paso. Natalicio was able to increase the number of studen...