The black case for Obama-skepticism
Posted: 14 May 2008 09:31 AM

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W. Churchill
Total Posts:  3827
Joined  2007-04-07

Maybe We Can’t: The black case for Obama-skepticism.
by Cinque Henderson

The New Republic
Post Date Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Ninety percent of black Democrats support Barack Obama. So that might leave an observer wondering: What the hell is up with that other 10 percent? Are they stupid? Do they hate their own race? Do they not understand the historical import of the moment?

I can shed some insight on this demographic anomaly. In gatherings of black people, I’m invariably the only one for the Dragon Lady. I’ll do my best to explain how those of us in the ever-shrinking minority of a minority came to our position.

...

It is Obama’s biography, we are told, that will govern his behavior. He was raised by a mother who supposedly didn’t see color, so he doesn’t see color. He was born into tolerance and multi-racial understanding, so he will practice tolerance and multi-racial understanding. Except, that is, when it’s not useful to him.

Which brings me to South Carolina, where I was born and raised. I was there before and during the primary. Recall the moment. Obama was gaining on Clinton--but had also just lost New Hampshire and Nevada. A loss in South Carolina, and he would have been done for.

It’s worth remembering that the majority of blacks still think O.J. Simpson is innocent. And, in times like these, when a black man is out front in the public eye, black people feel both proud and vulnerable and, as a result, scour the earth for evidence of racists plotting to bring him down, like an advance team ready to sound an alarm. Barack needed only a gesture, a quick sneer or nod in the direction of the Clintons’ hidden racism to avail himself of the twisted love that rescued O.J. and others like him and to smooth his path to victory, and, therefore, to salvage his candidacy. After Donna Brazile and James Clyburn started to cry racism, Barack was repeatedly asked his thoughts. He declined to answer, allowing the charge to grow for days (in sharp contrast to how he leapt to Joe Biden’s defense a month earlier). But, while he remained silent about the allegations of racism, he gave speeches across South Carolina that warned against being “hoodwinked” and “bamboozled” by the Clintons. His use of the phrase is resonant. It comes from a scene in Malcolm X, where Denzel Washington warns black people about the hidden evils of “the White Man” masquerading as a smiling politician: “Every election year, these politicians are sent up here to pacify us,” he says. “You’ve been hoodwinked. Bamboozled.”

By uttering this famous phrase, Obama told his black audience everything it needed to know. He was helping to convince blacks that the first two-term Democratic president in 50 years, a man referred to as the first black president, is in fact a secret racist. As soon as I heard that Obama had quoted from Malcolm X like this, I knew that Obama would win South Carolina by a massive margin.

...

As the son of a Baptist minister, I can attest that Wright is and was an extreme aberration from how the overwhelming majority of black Christians worship. In church, black people hear about Peter, Paul, Mary, and how to get into heaven. How to forgive. How to love. Not how to vote.

But here was Barack suggesting that Wright’s behavior was commonplace in black churches: “I can no more disown him than I can disown the black community.” He generalized Wright’s ridiculousness to distract from his individual choice to worship under a buffoon for two decades. I have a cousin who attended Wright’s church for three weeks and then left, never to return. She had no interest in hearing his nonsense from the pulpit.

Barack obscured the true nature of black religious life because, to do otherwise, he would have had to answer the question, “Why are you a member of a church that is this racially divisive and such a sharp aberration to how the rest of black people worship?” When Barack beautifully suggested that the beliefs pronounced from the pulpit of Trinity in Chicago are not uncommon, he was feeding us garbage. But Barack needed to protect his reputation as a race-healer and unifier, so he told a lie about black religious life to help keep the glow of his own reputation alive. And now the evidence suggests that Barack didn’t, in the end, break with Wright over his outrageous racial claims, but over his suggestion that Barack is just a politician.

That so many people have a stake in ignoring these real concerns is troubling. At least the Hillary supporters I know seem to be aware of her more unsavory traits: that she carries a knife with her that she could pull out at any minute. Not so with Obama’s fans. It’s nearly impossible to get them to admit any wrong in him. Given the choice, I prefer to side with the group that knows their candidate can be a jerk, rather than the group that believes their candidate is Jesus.

Link:
http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=331c77bb-9591-422c-aa2b-11a741c6ebb9&p=1

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"… a far left candidate in the tradition of George McGovern, albeit without McGovern’s military and political record ... in the tradition of Michael Dukakis, albeit without Dukakis’s executive experience as governor ... in the tradition of John Kerry, albeit without Kerry’s record of years of service in the Senate ... an unvetted candidate in the tradition of Jimmy Carter, albeit without Jimmy Carter’s religious integrity.” --- W. Bennett re Sen. Obama

 
 
Posted: 14 May 2008 12:13 PM   [ Ignore ]  [ # 1 ]

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Leader
Total Posts:  182
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Rush touched on this yesterday and it can be boiled down to the most basic of issues, what do people care about.

The black says: I care that he is a black liberal and I don’t care what he thinks.

I say: I don’t care that he is black, I care what he thinks.

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Never Forgive and Never Forget

 
 
Posted: 14 May 2008 12:14 PM   [ Ignore ]  [ # 2 ]  
The Gipper
Total Posts:  12617
Joined  2007-01-08

While I take issue with some his assertions like:

Wrong Way Wright’s “church” is NOT reflective of the black community,

AND ...

That there is NO politicking from the pulpits of black churches ...

gimme a break - a grievous lie there, “Cinque”

The Hillary supporter redeems himself with a bit of honesty:

“That so many people have a stake in ignoring these real concerns is troubling. At least the Hillary supporters I know seem to be aware of her more unsavory traits: that she carries a knife with her that she could pull out at any minute. Not so with Obama’s fans. It’s nearly impossible to get them to admit any wrong in him. Given the choice, I prefer to side with the group that knows their candidate can be a jerk, rather than the group that believes their candidate is Jesus.”

Can I GET a Hallelujah, Brothers and Sisters!

That Said, What SHOULD ...

Give decent people pause, is why did this guy take the name “Cinque” knowing full well it was that of a murderous, radical, black, kidnapping, rapist thug?

Donald “Cinque” DeFreeze

Birth: Nov. 16, 1943
Death: May 17, 1974

Founder and leader of the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA), a revolutionary group that operated in California during the mid-1970s, he is best remembered for his role in the kidnapping of Patty Hearst. Born in Cleveland, Ohio, he became a career criminal in California. In 1972, he was serving a sentence in Soledad Prison for armed robbery, where he met some radical extremists who were performing volunteer work at the prison, where he was converted to their radical political ideas.  <snip>

22548_1020158566.jpg

.

Ahhhhhhhhhh The America we live in today.

<sigh>

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~(Ä)~ 1st Bn, 87th Inf: Vires Montesque Vincimus!

 
 
Posted: 14 May 2008 12:35 PM   [ Ignore ]  [ # 3 ]  
R. Limbaugh
Total Posts:  6422
Joined  2006-11-16

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-tutu-obamamay14,0,4305030.story

“You are a crazy country,” Tutu, 76, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984, said in an interview with the Tribune. “You’re a country that has I think some of the most generous people I’ve ever come across in the world.”

But he chided Americans for getting “very, very upset” with the pastor of Sen. Barack Obama, noting that Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. “may have said more crudely what, actually, almost every African-American would have wanted to say. I mean that is how they feel in your country, that race ... is a very, very real issue.”

“And I think on the whole you keep trying to pretend it isn’t,” he added, noting the issue will haunt Americans until there is a way to talk honestly about race, such as holding a reconciliation forum.

Tutu, who headed South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission probing human-rights abuses under apartheid, was here to receive the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Foundation’s Lincoln Leadership Prize, presented by Oprah Winfrey.

Unlike in South Africa’s apartheid era, he said, where blacks were treated as “nothing,” in America, “You say to them, ‘You’re equal, and the sky’s the limit.’ And they keep bumping their heads against this thing that’s stopping them from reaching out to the stars.”

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I will offer fair debate to those who wish that, but I will try to not school those who will not learn and I will try not to feed the trolls.

 
 
 

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