2. Ahhh, but Trump is not having much success with this, so far several courts have ruled against him. It's in his best interest to get this through since it was a campaign promise. But the legal rationale is that it's unconstitutional since it violates the "Equal protection Clause" of the 14th amendment. It's discriminatory since you are deciding to broadly (with the stroke a pen) deny entry to largely islamic countries based on the actions of a few Muslims. In his early campaign he's mentioned Muslims in both a sense of Muslim database and bann. In any traditional sense it's considered discrimination. The courts tied the two together!
3. You took my last sentence to concentrate on. Black culture is not "gang banging, drugs etc, unemployment etc..." It is not the behavior I take issue in, it is those who don't like to be considered African American but clearly are. Mainly due to those that have negative concepts about them (as you indicated).
4. We will need more information as to the name of the Museum, what events were going on that day, who was the docent. My suspicion is they had some guest speaker. Also exactly, word from word what was said. What was the reactions of others who were in the audience, etc... Again if the ideology was reversed there would be a double standard.
2. The courts that ruled against him will be overturned if Trump takes it that far. There's nothing in our Constitution that says we have to let anyone at all in, and we can restrict immigration from certain countries as we see fit. Other countries' citizens are not protected by our Constitution - only American citizens are.
3. Not all black people are African. Haitians are not African, and neither are Jamaicans. The proper racial designation is "Negro", which I think sounds majestic, but somehow that became a derogatory word - I asked a group of predominantly black people one time why they don't like the term "Negro" and they went ballistic. I sincerely meant no harm and was simply asking for information purposes, but they acted like I called them a racial slur, which in their mind it is. I never got an answer, just got yelled at.
4. The museum was the Paterson Museum and this wasn't a group tour. They don't get enough visitors for that, so you just go in and look at the exhibits, and the docent is there to answer questions (or berate you for being white). I didn't get his name, nor do I know whether or not he does this to all the visitors. He started off by telling us about Larry Doby, because that's the first exhibit that you see. Then he was telling us about the Negro Leagues, which was very interesting, and the racism that they encountered. Then the racism that Jackie Robinson and Larry Doby encountered because (I'll paraphrase), "The white players were outgunned and knew that if blacks played they'd dominate" (which is probably true). Then he went off the rails and started saying how Donald Trump only got elected because of white racism and everyone knows what he means by "making America great again" and that's to bring back slavery and subjugation of blacks, and that he's getting his comeuppance now and will be impeached soon, and all white people are racists, even if they don't think they are. White people just won't say what they really think in front of him, but he knows that behind his back they're being racists and looking down on him. I mentioned that we didn't have that in Lincoln when I was growing up, and that's when he launched into how black men who come from somewhere like Lincoln, NE aren't even black and real black men don't recognize them as black because they act white, and the real black men can't even hardly understand them when they talk.
I might be leaving something out. But that's about the time his phone rang and he said, "Hang tight, I'll be right back..." and we took that opportunity to see the rest of the museum and avoid him.
Don't tell me to report him because I have no intention of costing that man his job. It's not like people are flocking to the Paterson Museum anyway, or his attitude will cause people to stay away. It's free to visit and paid for by the Great Falls Historical Society.