Manning Johnson

Manning Johnson was first black, secondly communist, then finally disillusioned. That was why he wrote Color, Communism And Common Sense, which is out of print but happily it is on line at http://manningjohnson.org/. Mr. Johnson tells us that the communists were using Negros to Subvert America just as Jews used Martin Luther King in America. Jews also used Nelson Mandela in South Africa.

 Manning Johnson ex Wiki
QUOTE
Manning R. Johnson (died 1964)[1] was the Communist candidate for U.S. Representative from New York 22nd District, 1935; he subsequently left the party, wrote Color, Communism And Common Sense, and was an government witness in the perjury trial of Harry Bridges and before the Committee on Un-American Activities.

Biography
In the perjury trial of Labor Leader Harry Bridges in 1949, he was a government witness.[4] In a Time magazine article dated Dec. 26, 1949 and entitled "You'd Be Thin, Too", he was described as "husky, big-jawed ... A smooth, deep-voiced Negro." His testimony that he saw Bridges address a Communist National Committee meeting in 1936, and how he recalled voting to "re-elect" Bridges to the national committee two years later under the alias of "Rossi" was instrumental in Bridges' conviction.[5]

In 1953 he testified before the Committee on Un-American Activities of the U.S. House of Representatives, 83rd Congress. Robert L. Kunzig, chief counsel for the committee, asked "Was deceit a major policy of Communist propaganda and activity?" Manning R. Johnson answered, "Yes, it was. They made fine gestures and honeyed words to the church people which could be well likened unto the song of the fabled sea nymphs luring millions to moral decay, spiritual death, and spiritual slavery.....".[6][7] He also testified in 1949.,[8][9]

His book, Color Communism and Common Sense, was quoted by G. Edward Griffin in his 1969 motion picture lecture More Deadly than War ... the Communist Revolution in America.

 

http://manningjohnson.org/

 

He recorded a speech, known as "Manning Johnson's Farewell Address", with his views on equality, respect and vision for the future, criticizing the practices of the NAACP and of Negro radicals. It was available on a recording from KEY records[10] believed to be made in the 1950s.
UNQUOTE
Being poor can lead to views about us and them, the downtrodden versus Capitalist Swine. Mr. Johnson realized he was being used.