Undercover White Man posing as a Victim of White Supremacy Deceives Black Voters (TX) into Voting him into Office

Isn't this what many non-white politicians do to get elected? Get the grassroots' attention and then pretend to be Black and down for Black politics? Promise after promise . . . pretending to be something or stand for something is the game of politricks, especially so in a white supremacy system. The operating system (OS) of White supremacy is carried out through deception and/or violence. [MORE]

The media has focused on the fact that Black voters voted for a white man. This is silly distraction. In actual reality Black voters have always voted for white people, think Congress, the Presidency, the entire Democratic Party or Detroit. It is white voters who find voting for non-whites repugnant. [MORE]   

At any rate, many Black & Latino incumbents nationwide at all levels of representation are simply sitting targets to racist suspects like Wilson or anyone else  -  having no campaign financial war chests (for instance, most members of the CBC have no cash on hand), no wherewithal to raise money and no real grassroots organization to fall back on. These folks could be and perhaps should be beaten during any cycle. --BW

From [HERE] A white Texas man won a political campaign Tuesday in a heavily black area using an unconventional tactic — according to a local media outlet, he pretended to be black.

Dave Wilson was tired of “all the shenanigans” plaguing the Houston Community College System and decided to run for office, KHOU-TV reported Friday. However, Wilson reportedly thought the odds of a white conservative Republican winning in an overwhelmingly black Democratic district were low, so he turned to a tactic his opponent said was “disgusting.” 

“I’d always said it was a long shot,” Wilson said. “No, I didn’t expect to win.”

According to KHOU-TV, Wilson’s campaign “printed direct mail pieces strongly implying that he’s black.” The materials reportedly featured his campaign slogan emblazoned next to the faces of smiling black individuals.

One of his mailers even said, “Endorsed by Ron Wilson,” implying he had attained support from a famous former black state representative. In fact, in fine print below the endorsement, the campaign clarified that “Ron Wilson and Dave Wilson are cousins.” “He’s a nice cousin,” Wilson told KHOU-TV. “We played baseball in high school together. And he’s endorsed me.”

The tactics apparently worked, guiding Wilson to victory by a thin margin of 26 votes. Now [that the election is over], his former opponent is speaking out. “I don’t think it’s good,” Bruce Austin said. “I don’t think it’s good for both democracy and the whole concept of fair play. But that was not his intent, apparently.”