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The Black Plague by Eustace Mullins
The Black Plague by Eustace Mullins
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The Black Plague: Destroying America From Within
This is a REPRINT of an exceedingly difficult book to find.
Please allow two weeks for the book to be delivered.
Note: This book is a reproduction of the historical text for academic, historical, or collector purposes.
5.83" x 8.27" / 19 pages in saddle stitch (pamphlet) format
Book description
Eustace Mullins portrays Black Americans as inherently hostile toward white people and repeatedly alleges that Black communities are engaged in widespread violence against whites. Throughout the text, Mullins claims that media, federal institutions, civil rights organizations, and educators conceal or encourage this alleged violence. He argues that federal civil rights laws, school integration, welfare programs, and “Black History” education have intentionally fostered racial conflict.
A major theme of the document is opposition to racial integration and federal authority. Mullins contends that the federal government exceeded its constitutional powers during and after the Civil War and again during the civil rights era. He criticizes Reconstruction, federal courts, and Supreme Court rulings related to school desegregation, arguing that these actions undermined states’ rights and local governance.
Mullins claims enslaved Black Americans were materially better off under plantation life than in post-slavery society or in Africa, asserting that plantation owners treated enslaved people well because they represented valuable property. He cites selected historical anecdotes and writings to support the idea that slavery was comparatively benign and that Black Americans were happier before emancipation.
Another recurring argument concerns Africa and Haiti. Mullins describes post-colonial African nations as violent and dysfunctional after the end of European rule, using examples such as Uganda under Idi Amin and political instability in other African countries. He presents these examples as evidence that Black-majority societies are incapable of maintaining civilization without white governance. He similarly characterizes Haiti’s history after independence as proof of societal collapse following the removal of white rule.
The text references contemporary events from the 1970s and early 1980s—including the “Zebra murders” in San Francisco, crime in Washington, D.C., and the Atlanta child murders—to argue that violence against whites was ignored or misrepresented by the media and government. Mullins also quotes statements from interviews in Black oral-history works and writings by Black activists to support his claim that anti-white sentiment was widespread among Black Americans.
The pamphlet concludes with demographic warnings that whites would become a minority in the United States and claims that this would lead to national decline and racial conflict.
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