The Parties Didn't Switch: The Tactics Did
Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on (D).
There’s a story you’ve probably heard a dozen times. It gets repeated in classrooms, campaign speeches, and cable news debates as if it were a proven fact. The idea is that sometime in the 1960s, the Democrat Party and the Republican Party magically swapped sides. The party of slavery, segregation, and the KKK supposedly became the party of civil rights and racial justice. And the Republican Party, founded to oppose slavery, somehow became the home of racism overnight.
Like most convenient political myths, this one falls apart the moment you start asking basic questions. If the parties really switched, why didn’t the old segregationists leave the Democrat Party in droves? Why did most of them stay put for decades, voting the same way and passing the same policies? And if the Republican Party suddenly became a haven for racists, why did it take thirty years for the South to start electing Republicans?
The answer is simple, though not comfortable. The Democrat Party didn’t give up its old tactics. It just repackaged them. The chains came off, but the control remained. What changed was not the heart of the party, but its branding.
This essay isn’t built on slogans or wishful thinking. It’s built on pattern-recognition: patterns of legislation, voting blocs, political incentives, and outcomes. Not what people claim, but what they actually did. Because when you line up the facts, it’s not hard to see. The parties didn’t switch. One party just figured out how to sell the same poison under a different label.
Let’s take this one layer at a time.
Slavery Never Ended, It Just Changed Forms
It’s a convenient myth to say slavery ended in 1865. That’s what the textbooks say. The chains came off, the war was over, and Black Americans were free. But freedom is more than a legal status. The deeper truth is that slavery morphed. It evolved. And the same Democrat politicians who had owned the slaves found new ways to control them.
They didn’t need to buy and sell bodies anymore. They just needed to trap them in poverty, criminalize their existence, and lock them into systems where dependence replaced whips.
Start with sharecropping. After emancipation, most freed slaves had no land, no money, and no protection. Nearly one-third of Black families in the South were forced into sharecropping by the early 1900s. On paper, it sounded like a business arrangement; they’d work a plot of land and share the profits. In reality, it was legalized peonage. The same white landowners who used to own slaves now used contracts, debt, and threats to keep Black workers trapped. They controlled the tools, the seeds, the markets, and the prices. And when the harvest came up short, the sharecropper was always to blame. Debt piled up year after year. There was no leaving.
Then came the Black Codes. These weren’t just laws about segregation. They were laws about control. States like Mississippi and South Carolina passed vagrancy laws, loitering laws, and apprenticeship laws, all designed to arrest Black men for doing things that weren’t crimes when white men did them. If you were unemployed, you could be jailed. If you walked on the wrong side of town, you could be fined. And if you couldn’t pay, they would lease you out. Literally. Chain gangs, prison farms, road crews. In Alabama, over 70 percent of the state’s total revenue in the 1890s came from convict leasing. Slavery by another name.
Democrat-run statehouses upheld these systems. The Ku Klux Klan, formed by Democrat veterans of the Confederacy, served as the enforcement arm. They didn’t just burn crosses. They burned Black schools, Black churches, Black-owned businesses. They murdered teachers, organizers, and voters. And all of it was designed to send a clear message: your life belongs to us, just like it always did.
And let’s not pretend this was brief. In 1901, Mississippi’s entire state constitution was rewritten to exclude Black citizens from political participation. By 1910, only 730 Black men were registered to vote in Louisiana, out of over 130,000 eligible. The chains were now paper. The whip was the law.
People will tell you this is ancient history. But ask yourself this: who created the systems that replaced slavery with debt? Who wrote the laws that put Black men back in shackles, this time with a judge’s signature? Who kept Black Americans landless, powerless, and voiceless for nearly a century after the Civil War?
It wasn’t a switch. It was a strategy.
Jim Crow Wasn’t About Race; It Was About Power
It’s easy to look back on Jim Crow laws and see them strictly through the lens of racial animus. And yes, race was central to the system. But it wasn’t the whole story. What gets lost in the modern retelling is that Jim Crow was as much about control as it was about color. It wasn’t just a way to demean Black Americans. It was a way to keep them predictable. Contained. Dependent.
The Democrat Party, which wrote and enforced those laws, wasn’t simply trying to express racial hatred. They were trying to preserve their political machine. Black people, newly freed and newly empowered, were a threat to that machine. So segregation wasn’t just personal prejudice playing out in public policy. It was a strategy to neuter Black political and economic potential before it could disrupt the established order.
Think about it. Literacy tests weren’t just about who could read. They were about who could vote, and more importantly, who couldn’t. Poll taxes weren’t just fees. They were financial walls designed to keep Black citizens out of the voting booth and out of public life. And if that wasn’t enough, the threat of violence, from mobs, from police, from the Klan, was there to make sure the message stuck.
Now fast forward to today. Does the Democrat Party still use poll taxes or white-only primaries? No. But the strategy of control hasn’t disappeared. It’s just been modernized.
Instead of laws, they use narratives. Instead of poll taxes, they use fear. Instead of the Klan, they rely on media, activists, and bureaucrats to keep people in line. The method has changed, but the motive hasn’t. Keep Black Americans emotionally dependent, politically loyal, and economically insecure, and you’ve secured a permanent voter base.
Take education. In city after city, Democrat-run school systems are failing generations of Black children. We’re not talking about minor differences in outcomes. In Baltimore, 23 schools had zero students proficient in math. In Chicago, dozens of schools can’t get even a handful of kids reading at grade level. This is not an accident. It's the soft segregation of lowered expectations. And they defend it with the same paternalistic tone they used a hundred years ago: “These communities need us. Without us, they’d fall apart.”
Or look at crime. The loudest voices screaming “defund the police” aren’t coming from the neighborhoods most affected by crime. They’re coming from academics and activists who treat poor Black communities like political laboratories. They push policies that make the streets more dangerous, then act shocked when those same neighborhoods suffer. And just like during Jim Crow, the people living under these conditions are told they should be grateful, because the people imposing them “care.”
During segregation, you had physical boundaries. Today, you have ideological ones. Step off the Democrat plantation, speak against the narrative, and you’ll find yourself smeared, discredited, or labeled a traitor to your race. That’s not progress. That’s just the same whip, with a new handle.
Jim Crow didn’t survive because it was morally sound. It survived because it worked for those in power. And if you think the Democrat Party ever forgot how useful that kind of system can be, then you haven’t been paying attention.
The Southern Shift Wasn’t About Race, It Was About Class
There’s a popular myth that gets passed around in classrooms and media documentaries like it’s settled science. Sometime in the 1960s, the racist Southern Democrats all fled to the Republican Party, and that’s how the South turned red.
It’s neat. It’s convenient. It’s also false.
Let’s start with the most obvious counterpoint, the elections themselves. In 1968, Richard Nixon didn’t dominate the South. He lost most of it. George Wallace, a pro-segregation Democrat running as an independent, won five Southern states and even beat Nixon in places like Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and Louisiana. In three of those states, Nixon came in third behind Wallace and the Democrat nominee, Hubert Humphrey. So much for the "Southern Strategy."
Fast forward to 1976. By then, if the South had supposedly flipped Republican because of racism, you wouldn’t expect a Democrat to win it back, but Jimmy Carter, a born-and-bred Georgian, swept the entire region. He carried every former Confederate state except Virginia. So the big switch supposedly happened in 1964, but 12 years later, the South still voted blue?
Clearly, something else was going on. And it wasn’t racism.
The real shift happened gradually over decades. And it wasn’t because the South got more extreme. It’s because the Democrat Party did. While Southern voters were going to church, raising families, and building small businesses, the Democrats were drifting further into socialism, secularism, and cultural radicalism.
They became the party that celebrated abortion, pushed anti-family policies, undermined faith in public life, and cozied up to Soviet-style central planning. It wasn’t just the so-called “hillbillies” who noticed. It was veterans, immigrants, working-class parents, and people across the country who felt like the Democratic Party no longer stood for common sense or even common decency.
It didn’t happen overnight. Republicans didn’t magically gain control of the South after the Civil Rights Act. The realignment took over 30 years. Southern state legislatures remained solidly Democrat into the 1990s. Mississippi didn’t elect a Republican governor until 1991. Georgia waited until 2002. Republicans didn’t take the majority of Southern congressional seats until 1994, three full decades after the supposed “flip.”
So if race was the issue, why the long delay?
The truth is, this shift wasn’t about racial backlash. It was about class, culture, and control. The Democrat Party traded in the language of civil rights for the politics of resentment and government dependency. They built coalitions not around values, but around grievances. They stopped appealing to your better nature and started trying to manage your life.
And many Americans, including plenty of Southern ones, had had enough.
They didn’t leave the Democrat Party because they suddenly became racist. They left because the party left them, morally, culturally, and economically. What drove the shift wasn’t hatred. It was disillusionment.
And that’s the part the myth-makers never want to talk about.
Democrat Racism Wasn’t a Bug, It Was the System
It’s easy to claim racism was just a “feature of the times,” as if every party and every institution were equally guilty. That’s the excuse modern liberals use to distance themselves from the Democrat Party’s brutal history. But it doesn’t hold up. Racism wasn’t a background feature in the Democrat operating system. It was the system.
Start with the basics: the Democrat Party was the party of slavery. Of the 300+ votes cast against the 13th Amendment to abolish slavery, 77% came from Democrats. Every major secessionist leader was a Democrat. It was Democrats who pushed the Dred Scott decision. And when slavery ended, it was Democrats who created the Black Codes, laws specifically designed to trap freed slaves in a new cycle of legal bondage. “Vagrancy” laws made it a crime to be unemployed, and just like that, thousands of newly freed Black men were re-enslaved through convict leasing, a system operated under Democrat sheriffs, Democrat judges, and Democrat governors.
The Ku Klux Klan? It didn’t rise up randomly. Confederate veterans, all Democrats, founded it and quickly became a tool of political enforcement. It wasn’t just a hate group. It was a Democrat militia. Its goal wasn’t just racial terror. It was voter suppression. And it worked.
By the mid-1870s, Democrats used Klan violence and intimidation to flip entire state legislatures, especially in places like Mississippi and South Carolina. Republican rallies were attacked. Black politicians were assassinated. White Republicans who dared to ally with them were driven out. In 1875 alone, the Mississippi Plan, a systematic Democrat campaign of intimidation, succeeded in flipping the state from Republican to Democrat control, not by winning hearts and minds, but by wielding fear and bloodshed. Sound familiar?
And this wasn’t some rogue wing of the party. This was the party.
Look at the leadership. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, a key FDR appointee, was a card-carrying member of the Klan. He once defended Klansmen in court. Senator Robert Byrd, a Democrat from West Virginia, wasn’t just a member; he was a recruiter. He rose to the rank of Exalted Cyclops, the local Klan leadership title. Byrd later claimed to regret it, but he remained a powerful Democrat Senator for over 50 years, until he died in 2010, a man Hillary Clinton called a “mentor,” and Barack Obama eulogized fondly.
And no, Byrd didn’t just have a distant past. In 2001, well into his twilight years as a Democrat senator, Robert Byrd used the N-word on live television, warning Americans about “white n*ggers” in a Fox News interview. Kind of a weird slip-up for an anti-racist, right? Did Democrats disavow him? Did they strip his titles or shame his legacy? Not at all. They named roads, bridges, and federal buildings after him. They bent over backward to call his career a story of “redemption.”
That’s the system. The same one that lynched 3,446 Black Americans between 1882 and 1968, nearly all of it in Democrat-controlled counties and cities. The same system that sent Bull Connor, a Democrat public safety commissioner, to unleash police dogs and fire hoses on peaceful protesters. The same system where Democrat governors like Orval Faubus (Arkansas), George Wallace (Alabama), and Ross Barnett (Mississippi) defied court orders to desegregate schools and openly declared their support for “segregation forever.”
What did the Republican Party do during this time?
Passed the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, over almost unanimous Democrat opposition.
Enforced Reconstruction policies that installed hundreds of Black legislators across the South.
President Eisenhower sent federal troops to Little Rock to protect Black students when Democrat officials blocked school integration.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 only passed because of overwhelming Republican support. In the House, 80% of Republicans voted for the Civil Rights Act, compared to just 61% of Democrats.
But the media doesn’t talk about that. Schools don’t teach it. And Democrat politicians sure don’t acknowledge it. Instead, they push a fantasy that sometime in the 1960s, they switched places with Republicans, and now they're the moral saviors of America.
What really happened? The same party kept its power. It just shifted tactics. From outright violence to soft coercion. From burning crosses to branding slogans. From the KKK to DEI. From whips to welfare. Same party, same strategy, different packaging.
The truth is uncomfortable, which is why so many pretend it doesn’t exist. But the record is clear. This wasn’t a bug in the system.
This was the system.
The Ideological Plantation
Once upon a time, Black people were forced to pick cotton. Now, many are expected to pick their masters, and do it willingly.
The Democrat Party doesn’t need overseers anymore. It doesn’t need whips or chains. It just needs loyalty. And over the years, it’s learned exactly how to keep it.
In the past, loyalty was enforced with violence. Today, it’s enforced with guilt, fear, and identity manipulation. Step off the Democrat script, and suddenly your intelligence is questioned, your character is attacked, and your very Blackness is up for debate.
Just ask Clarence Thomas, Tim Scott, Candace Owens, or any other Black conservative who speaks out. They’re not debated on policy. They’re smeared as traitors. Sellouts. “Uncle Toms.” Even Joe Biden, the supposed “friend of the Black community,” once told Charlamagne tha God:
“If you have a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t Black.”
He didn’t stutter. And no, it wasn’t a gaffe. It was the quiet part said out loud.
Because if you’re Black and vote Republican, you’re a threat. If you’re Black and think independently, you’re dangerous. If you’re Black and don’t need the government, you’re disobedient.
That’s not respect. That’s plantation logic, with better branding.
The Democrat Party decides who counts. Who gets promoted. Who becomes the “voice of the community.” And if those voices parrot the right talking points, they’re elevated. If not, they’re erased.
They’ll paint “Black Lives Matter” on a street, but ignore failing schools in Black neighborhoods. They’ll kneel in kente cloth for a photo op, but stay silent while Black businesses are looted and burned. They’ll pass Juneteenth as a federal holiday, but won’t lift a finger to address crime, broken homes, or educational collapse in the very cities they run.
Because actual progress is dangerous. Progress creates independence. And independent people don’t vote out of fear.
But there’s more at work than just psychology. The numbers are shifting, and the party knows it. As Black Americans slowly wake up and slip the leash, the Democrats aren’t trying to win them back. They’re already moving on.
Enter mass immigration. Sanctuary cities. Ballots in Spanish. Flyers handed out to non-citizens. In New York City alone, over 800,000 non-citizens were approved to vote in local elections. That’s not outreach. That’s voter replacement.
In 1980, Hispanics made up 6.5% of the U.S. population. By 2024, it’s over 19%. In California, they now outnumber Whites, and California hasn’t gone red in a presidential race since 1988. Those aren’t natural shifts. They’re the result of deliberate policy, policies designed to reshape districts, lock in power, and replace voters who are no longer obedient.
And while the new crops are being planted, the old ones are quietly pushed aside.
The Black community, once the crown jewel of Democrat grievance politics, is now downgraded. Less attention. Fewer promises. More competition for jobs, housing, and government programs from the very immigrants they’re told to welcome.
And the cycle begins again.
The truth is, the Democrat Party doesn’t empower its voters. It cycles through them. One generation gets used. The next gets replaced. When the loyalty fades, the favors fade with it. The plantation stays. Only the workers change.
So no, they’re not picking cotton anymore. But they’re still working for their masters. And too many are still lining up to choose them.
This Was Never About Compassion; It Was About Control
If you think the Democrat Party suddenly grew a conscience in the 1960s, you haven’t been paying attention. They didn’t have a change of heart. They had a change of strategy. After centuries of owning the plantation, they realized they could run it without the overhead. There is no need to house, feed, and clothe the labor. Just keep them politically dependent, emotionally manipulated, and economically trapped. That’s not compassion. That’s a business model.
It didn’t start with empathy. It started with Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society in 1964. He didn’t build it to empower. He built it to ensure a reliable voting bloc. Lyndon B. Johnson’s own words, as widely reported from his private conversations, paint the picture clearly: “I’ll have those n*ggers voting Democratic for the next 200 years.” That’s not the language of a liberator. That’s the language of a plantation manager who figured out how to upgrade from physical chains to political ones.
Let’s look at the results.
Before the Great Society, the Black family was in far better shape than it is now. In 1960, 78 percent of Black children were born to married parents. Today, more than 70 percent are born to single mothers, with some urban areas seeing rates above 80 percent. That collapse didn’t happen because of racism or oppression. It happened because welfare benefits began to reward women for not marrying the father of their children. Government checks flowed more easily when the man was out of the picture. Fatherhood became a liability.
As Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a moderate Democrat, warned in 1965, the destruction of the Black family would lead to social dysfunction. He was ignored. Worse, he was ridiculed. But he was right.
And this wasn't just a Black issue. As the welfare state expanded, the same patterns emerged in poor White communities, too. Family breakdown, drug dependency, and multi-generational poverty didn’t follow race. They followed incentives. When you subsidize failure, you get more of it.
But the Democrat Party wasn’t interested in reversing course. These programs weren’t designed to be temporary or transitional. They were designed to build loyalty. To keep recipients afraid of losing benefits and suspicious of anyone who promised to take them away.
That’s why every election season, Democrats warn that Republicans will “cut Social Security,” “end Medicare,” or “take away your food stamps.” Never mind that those programs are bloated, bankrupting the country, or failing the very people they claim to help. The point isn’t to solve the problem. The point is to control the narrative.
They still use the same emotional tactics. “They’re coming for your rights”, “They don’t want you to vote”, “They want to take you back to the 1950s.” And the media plays along, because it sells fear. Fear keeps people compliant. Fear makes them cling to the very party that’s holding them down.
Let’s also be clear: the education system is part of this same machinery. Public schools in Democrat-run cities are not failing because of racism. They’re failing because of unions, lowered standards, and bureaucratic control that punishes excellence and protects incompetence. In Baltimore, for example, 23 schools had zero students proficient in math in 2023. Zero. That’s not a fluke. That’s the product of a system that rewards failure because it guarantees future votes from people who were never taught to think critically.
And then there’s crime. The soft-on-crime policies promoted by Democrats under the banner of “equity” have destroyed neighborhoods, demoralized police, and put repeat offenders back on the street. In cities like Chicago, St. Louis, and Philadelphia, violent crime is rampant, and the victims are overwhelmingly Black. But instead of addressing the real issues, the Democrat Party blames “systemic racism” and “White supremacy,” even as their own policies gut communities from within.
It’s a sleight of hand. A diversion. While they claim to fight injustice, they hand out just enough scraps to keep the illusion alive. Meanwhile, they consolidate power, expand bureaucracy, and silence dissent.
This was never about compassion. If it were, they’d be lifting people up, not keeping them down. They’d be demanding excellence in schools, safety in neighborhoods, dignity in work, and pride in family. But those things create independent people. And independent people don’t vote out of fear.
So no, it was never about helping the poor. It was about manufacturing a permanent underclass that votes reliably. It was never about uplifting minorities. It was about keeping them on the leash of dependency.
They don’t want Black America to rise. They want it to obey.
This Is Not Sustainable
Systems built on dependency don’t collapse suddenly. They rot from within first. And the Democrat Party has spent decades building a machine that looks stable on the surface, but underneath, it’s falling apart. Because you can only lie to people so long before reality catches up.
Let’s start with the numbers. The welfare state is broke. Social Security and Medicare are projected to run out of funds within a decade. The national debt has passed 34 trillion dollars. Forty-two million people are on food stamps. Over 12 million are receiving disability payments. Tens of millions more are on Medicaid, Section 8, or some other alphabet program. That’s not compassion. That’s a slow-motion collapse.
Now ask yourself this: what happens when the money runs out? What happens when the promises can’t be kept? When the EBT cards stop working and the rent subsidies dry up? You think people get angry now over tweets and slogans? Wait until the handouts stop. Then you’ll see real rage. And it won’t be directed at conservatives.
Or look at crime. In city after city, Democrat policies have produced lawlessness. Not just petty theft, but carjackings, assaults, and murders in broad daylight. In places like Chicago, Philadelphia, and Oakland, entire retail corridors are shutting down. Major chains are pulling out. Walgreens. CVS. Target. Gone. Because you can’t run a business when stealing is basically legal and police are told to stand down.
What do you think that does to a neighborhood? What kind of message does it send to the next generation when there are no jobs, no consequences, and no order?
But Democrats can’t fix it. They designed it this way. They told the public that policing was oppression, that jail time was racist, that consequences were cruelty. So now they’re stuck. Because to admit the truth would be to admit they were wrong. And more importantly, to admit that the whole narrative they’ve built, the one that says government saves and private effort oppresses, was a lie.
Education? Same story. Test scores are falling. Truancy is up. Graduation means less and less. In New York City, they eliminated the gifted programs because too many Asian and White kids were getting in. In Los Angeles, they lowered the math standards so more students could “succeed.” But success doesn’t come from grading on a curve. It comes from facing reality. And that’s the one thing this system avoids at all costs.
Even race politics is unraveling. The Black vote is slowly slipping away. Not because Republicans suddenly got better, but because Democrats can’t keep pretending to deliver. You can’t keep running on “Vote for us or else they’ll bring back slavery” when the people you claim to protect are living in cities you already run, and those cities are broken.
Worse, the new coalition isn’t as loyal. Many of the immigrant groups the Democrats imported for votes aren’t buying what they’re selling. Latino men are swinging right. Muslim communities are pushing back on LGBTQ ideology in schools. Asians are rejecting affirmative action that punishes their kids. The Frankenstein coalition isn’t marching in sync anymore. It’s starting to crack.
This was never sustainable. You can’t base a party on fear, lies, and dependence forever. Sooner or later, the bill comes due. And when it does, the same party that promised salvation will do what it always does: find someone else to blame.
They’ll point the finger at capitalism, at racism, at Republicans, at “misinformation,” at anything but themselves. But the pattern is clear. They didn’t build a community. They built a trap. And the trap is falling apart.
Because control may buy you loyalty for a while, but it never lasts forever. Not in politics. Not in families. Not in life.
The only question is: will people wake up before it collapses completely?
Democrats, Still the Same Party
If you’ve made it this far, you already understand more than most. Not because the facts are hidden, but because they’re buried under repetition. The lie of the party switch isn’t convincing because it’s true. It’s convincing because it’s told a thousand times in a thousand ways, by teachers, by journalists, by politicians, and by people who never bothered to check the facts for themselves.
They need you to believe the Democrat Party changed. Because if they didn’t, then everything built on that illusion starts to crumble. The Civil Rights halo, the moral superiority, the unquestioned loyalty of Black voters, all of it becomes exposed for what it is: a branding exercise. Not a transformation.
The Democrat Party didn’t stop trying to control Black Americans. They just stopped doing it with chains and started doing it with checks. With slogans. With fear. With dependence. They figured out how to trade plantations for programs. Whips for welfare. Overseers for activists. And they called it “progress.”
They want you to believe that the people who passed the Civil Rights Act were all Democrats, when the truth is, it only passed because of overwhelming Republican support.
They want you to forget that the KKK was the militant wing of their party, and that many of its members stayed in power for decades, honored and celebrated.
They want you to believe that the South turned red because of racism, not because the Democrat Party drifted so far left that working-class voters, including Black voters, couldn’t recognize it anymore.
They need you to forget the history. They need you to ignore the results. They need you to believe that what they’re doing now, crippling schools, rewarding fatherlessness, importing new voters, and pushing racial division, is somehow noble.
But if you step back and look at the full picture, it becomes obvious.
They didn’t set Black people free.
They flipped the script and wrote a new role.
Still obedient. Still predictable. Still controlled.
Only now, the leash is invisible.
That’s the part they don’t want you to see.
Because if enough people saw it, the whole game would end.
History doesn’t just repeat when people forget it. It repeats when the same people stay in power, and just find a smarter way to lie.
Time to Step Up
Don’t Just Scroll. Don’t Hit Snooze.
They didn’t change; they rebranded. And they’re counting on you to never read past the headline.
They replaced whips with welfare. Chains with checks. Overseers with activists. They traded one plantation for another, and called it “progress.”
Now they use guilt, fear, and lies to keep entire communities locked into a system that’s collapsing under its own weight.
I don’t have a network. I don’t have a sugar daddy on K Street.
I have this platform, my convictions, and readers like you, people who see through the illusion and are brave enough to say so.
If you believe the truth still matters, even when it’s uncomfortable, help me keep telling it.
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They didn’t switch. They evolved. And I won’t stay silent.
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