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Bet Obama And The DNC Didn’t See THIS Coming

I know, that could be any number of different things when it comes to Obama and Co. But in this case, I am referring to this NY Times article, Black Hopefuls Pick This Year in G.O.P. Races. Holy canoli, I didn’t see it coming, either, though there were some signs.

Take for instance this African American Tea Partier being asked by an NBC reporter (oh, there’s a shocker) if he felt uncomfortable. Here is his answer:

“These are my people.”

That seems to be the refrain running through this article as well:

Among the many reverberations of President Obama’s election, here is one he probably never anticipated: at least 32 African-Americans are running for Congress this year as Republicans, the biggest surge since Reconstruction, according to party officials.

The House has not had a black Republican since 2003, when J. C. Watts of Oklahoma left after eight years.

But now black Republicans are running across the country — from a largely white swath of beach communities in Florida to the suburbs of Phoenix, where an African-American candidate has raised more money than all but two of his nine (white) Republican competitors in the primary.

Let me stop right there to remind people why there would have been more African Americans running during Reconstruction. Lincoln was a Republican. That’s the short answer. But this is not Reconstruction, so what’s the deal? This is:

Party officials and the candidates themselves acknowledge that they still have uphill fights in both the primaries and the general elections, but they say that black Republicans are running with a confidence they have never had before. They credit the marriage of two factors: dissatisfaction with the Obama administration, and the proof, as provided by Mr. Obama, that blacks can get elected.

“I ran in 2008 and raised half a million dollars, and the state party didn’t support me and the national party didn’t support me,” said Allen West, who is running for Congress in Florida and is one of roughly five black candidates the party believes could win. “But we came back and we’re running and things are looking great.” (Photo by Allen West Photostream.)

But interviews with many of the candidates suggest that they felt empowered by Mr. Obama’s election, that it made them realize that what had once seemed impossible — for a black candidate to win election with substantial white support — was not.

“There is no denying that one of the things that came out of the election of Obama was that you have a lot of African-Americans running in both parties now,” said Vernon Parker, who is running for an open seat in Arizona’s Third District. His competition in the Aug. 24 primary includes the son of former Vice President Dan Quayle, Ben Quayle.

Princella Smith, who is running for an open seat in Arkansas, said she viewed the president’s victory through both the lens of history and partisan politics. “Aside from the fact that I disagree fundamentally with all his views, I am proud of my nation for proving that we have the ability to do something like that,” Ms. Smith said.

That sentiment I can appreciate. I imagine it does bring a lot of pride to a number of people that Obama got elected since he is biracial, but that, in my opinion, is not enough reason to vote for someone. Still, I get her point. And good for her, as well as the other GOP hopefuls for stepping up:

State and national party officials say that this year’s cast of black Republicans is far more experienced than the more fringy players of yore, and include elected officials, former military personnel and candidates who have run before.

Mr. Parker is the mayor of Paradise Valley, Ariz. Ryan Frazier is a councilman in Aurora, Colo., one of four at-large members who represent the whole city. And Tim Scott is the only black Republican elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives since Reconstruction.

“These are not just people pulled out of the hole,” said Timothy F. Johnson, chairman of the Frederick Douglass Foundation, a black conservative group. That is “the nice thing about being on this side of history,” he said.

He added that the candidates might be helped by the presence of Michael Steele, the chairman of the Republican National Committee who is black and ran for the Senate himself in 2006.

“Party affiliation is not a barrier to inspiration,” Mr. Steele said in an e-mail message. “Certainly, the president’s election was and remains an inspiration to many.”

But Democrats and other political experts express skepticism about black Republicans’ chances in November. “In 1994 and 2000, there were 24 black G.O.P. nominees,” said Donna Brazile, a Democratic political strategist who ran Al Gore’s presidential campaign and who is black. “And you didn’t see many of them win their elections.”

No, these are not “fringy players” at all. But why Donna Brazile, who ran a flawed and FAILED campaign for a man who should have won in a slam dunk is considered a “strategist,” is beyond me. I have never understood why in the world her opinion matters given her handling of Gore’s campaign.

And I especially do not care what she has to say after the way she acted in 2008. I could write a whole other post on Donna Brazile and her nefarious tactics during the 2008 Primary, but let this term in regards to SC, FL, and MI suffice, “Nuclear Option.” All of that is to say, I have zero respect for her or her opinion.

Though I do have more respect for this man’s opinion:

Tavis Smiley, a prominent black talk show host who has repeatedly criticized Republicans for not doing more to court black voters, said, “It’s worth remembering that the last time it was declared the ‘Year of the Black Republican,’ it fizzled out.”

In many ways, this subset of Republicans is latching on to the basic themes propelling most of their party’s campaigns this year — the call for smaller government, less spending and stronger national security — rather than building platforms around social conservatism.

“Things have evolved,” said Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House, who is heavily involved in recruiting Republican candidates. “I think partly the level of hostility to Obama, Pelosi and Reid makes a lot of people pragmatically more open to a coalition from the standpoint of being a long-term majority party.”

Many of the candidates are trying to align themselves with the Tea Partiers, insisting that the racial dynamics of that movement have been overblown. Videos taken at some Tea Party rallies show some participants holding up signs with racially inflammatory language.

We know EXACTLY who those people were holding up racist signs at the Tea Parties, and they were NOT Tea Party members. It is disturbing to me the lengths people will go to demonize a group like this. I can only think they feel exceedingly threatened, and respond by acting like a bunch of thugs and punks. Nice the way the article slid that one in there, even though there are groups actively trying to infiltrate the Tea Party to discredit it. Not that you’d know that from this (it took me two seconds to get those links, something the writer might have tried). Along those lines, the article continues:

A recent New York Times/CBS News poll found that 25 percent of self-identified Tea Party supporters think that the Obama administration favors blacks over whites, compared with 11 percent of the general public.

The black candidates interviewed overwhelmingly called the racist narrative a news media fiction. “I have been to these rallies, and there are hot dogs and banjos,” said Mr. West, the candidate in Florida, a retired lieutenant colonel in the Army. “There is no violence or racism there.”

Oh, oops. I wonder how the Media and Liberal Elite will deal with this claim? No doubt, they will tell these African Americans that they are wrong, that they just don’t recognize the racism, or some other patronizing, arrogant, dare I say it, racist response, from people who have never been to a Tea Party rally.

But I digress. There is reason for these GOP hopefuls to be hopeful:

There is also some evidence that black voters rally around specific conservative causes. A case in point was a 2008 ballot initiative in California outlawing same-sex marriage that passed in large part because of support from black voters in Southern California.

Still, black Republicans face a double hurdle: black Democrats who are disinclined to back them in a general election, and incongruity with white Republicans, who sometimes do not welcome the blacks whom party officials claim to covet as new members.

This spring, Gov. Robert F. McDonnell of Virginia was roundly attacked for not mentioning slavery in his Confederate History Month proclamation, which he later said was a “major omission.” Black candidates said these types of gaffes posed problems in drawing African-Americans to their party, but also underscored their need to be there.

“I think what the governor failed to do was to recognize the pain and the emotion that was really sparked by the institution of slavery,” said Mr. Frazier of Colorado. “As a Republican, I think I have a responsibility to continue to work within my party to avoid those types of barriers. The key for the Republican Party is to engage every community on the issues they care about and not act as if they don’t exist.”

Yeah, that was stupid of McDonnell in a big way, but it is also a way for the Times to try and paint the Republicans with a broad brush of racism even while they are talking about African Americans running in the RNC. Not that it isn’t an important issue – it is – but for it to be the concluding paragraph in a story about experienced, knowledgeable RNC hopefuls who are African American seems telling.

Is it just me, or has the writing at the Times become sloppier? Innuendo and unsubstantiated claims seem to have taken the place of actual journalism. I dunno – could just be me.

Anyway, it is an interesting element to the upcoming election about which we have heard very little. These are serious candidates running for serious positions. They have experience, they hold political positions now, and they are looking to make change. Just not the kind for which Obama and the DNC were hoping, no doubt. It will be interesting to see how these races play out in November.

  • USAPROUD

    I saw an interview with Allen West and he made Obama look like a young punk. Allen West seemed very smart and dignified and had more class in his one little finger than Obama has in his whole body. Hope there are more Allen West’s out there in the GOP.

  • TeakWoodKite

    Holy canoli. Now if it’s one thing about NYC I miss…

    mmmm.mmmm.

  • TeakWoodKite

     black Republicans are running across the country

    I am wondering if there maybe a rejection or shift away from the politics of the TUCC of black nationalism and this is resonating within the Tea Party spectrum.

    Any insights?

    During the last 3 years white guilt has been used…has there been any thing similar within the black community?

    (I dislike racial “labels”…white string guilt) 

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Perhaps it is that Col. West served his country, has experience, and is a person of character. 

    Just a guess!  :)

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    That is an excellent question, TeakWood – I think the article pointed out that there are some areas in which the AA community are more conservative.  And maybe some of them are seeing that Obama is not who he pretended to be. 

    I hear you abt the labels, too…

  • ~~JustMe~~

    Right, plus he doesn’t carry that look as soon as you turn your back he will call you a bigot or want to raid your wallet (share your wealth) or delve into your background to smear you like a Joe the plumber.

  • oowawa

    What the Obama regime will need to do is plant a derogatory term along the lines of “Uncle Tom” to denigrate these black Republicans.  Hmmmm . . .

  • oowawa

    How about “Negrocons” . . .

  • Jackie

    “We know EXACTLY who those people were holding up racist signs at the Tea Parties, and they were NOT Tea Party members.”

    Tea Party member:

    http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2010/01/teapartyorg_founder_misspells.html

    TeaParty.org, one of the self-proclaimed leaders of the vocal and active conservative Tea Party movement, was founded by a man named Dale Robertson. Robertson lays claim to the original idea for staging Tea Parties, one that was later taken up by much more widely known advocates like Glenn Beck. This week Robertson is getting flak for a photograph of him from back in February in Houston that has just turned up, where he’s carrying a sign that reads: “Congress = Slaveowner, Taxpayer = Niggar.”

  • oowawa

    I think an operative phrase here is “self-proclaimed.”

  • TeakWoodKite

    Donna Brazile …..LOL.There should be a page dedicated to her sayings alone.

     Great read Rev. Amy. I am wondering how the midterm effects of having BO antagonize the racial component is having is manifesting in a way that rejects the symbols of BO and rev. Wright.

    This issue is difficult enough without pouring gas on it as BO has done and being a bozo is not racially specific. I like what the gentleman said. “These are my people….”…and what an disrespectful idiot the teen idol reporter was. She asked the question as a declarative sentence. Both sides of the isle better frakin wake up to the fact that the “Tea Party” is not a party but set of ideals reflected in the Constitution of he nation. Why would such a thing be so denigrated and coveted?

  • oowawa

    Michael Steele can be demonized by posters plastered around urban neighborhoods proclaiming him “Fuhrer of the Negrocons.”

  • Jackie

    While he may or may not be a Tea Party leader, he is certainly a real, active participant in the movement.

  • TeakWoodKite

    Donna Brazile …..LOL.(There should be a page dedicated to her sayings).  
     
     Great read Rev. Amy.
     I am wondering how the midterm effects of having BO antagonize the racial component is having. Me thinks it has manifested in a way that rejects the symbols of BO and rev. Wright within the black community.
     
    This issue is difficult enough without pouring gas on it as BO has done.Being a bozo is not racially specific. I like what the gentleman said, “These are my people….”
    What a disrespectful idiot the teen idol reporter was. She asked the question as a declarative sentenc.
    Both sides of the isle better frakin wake up to the fact that the “Tea Party” is not a party but set of ideals reflected in the Constitution of this nation. Why would such a thing be so denigrated and coveted?

  • TeakWoodKite

    I am wondering what the midterm effects are from BO antagonize the racial component. Me thinks it has manifested in a way that rejects the symbols of BO and rev. Wright within the black community.
    (I wouldn’t pretend to know, so feel free to enlighten me. if you know first hand.) 
       
    This issue is difficult enough without pouring gas on it as BO has done.Being a bozo is not racially specific. I like what the gentleman said, “These are my people….”  
    What a disrespectful idiot the teen idol reporter was. She asked the question as a declarative sentence.  
    Both sides of the isle better frakin wake up to the fact that the “Tea Party” is not a party, but set of ideals as reflected by the Constitution of this nation. Why would such a thing be so denigrated and coveted?

  • ~~JustMe~~

    Get your facts right.
    Plus what does this have to do with RRR Amy link?

    http://lonestartimes.com/?p=1288

  • oowawa

    Exellent, JustMe . . .

  • oowawa

    I intended all of the foregoing as satire of what may happen; but I do think that there will be an intensive campaign to marginalize black Republicans within the black community at large, and this is likely to take the form of branding black Republicans with a catchy new “Uncle Tom” style term. 

  • ~~JustMe~~

    and here
    http://houstontps.org/?p=318
    Sounds like he is nothing more than a con artist.
    So make sure you stop spamming on RRR Amy’s posts.

  • Ani

    Col. Allen West delivered a powerful smackdown to candidate Obama during the primaries when Obama was doing all of the race-baiting (“not the face you are used to see on the dollar bill,” etc. etc.):

    “My advice to Senator Obama is to run as a Man and Leader, and the American people will evaluate you as such, not as a victim. This is a Presidential race, based solely on a capacity to lead the United States of America. It is not about skin tone…however, perhaps we should come to expect these immature statements.

    It also seems rather humorous that the Presidential candidate who was supposed to be such a “uniter” and transcend race is the one talking about it the most. If Senator Obama was confident in his abilities and character, he would not need to create a crutch for failure. Senator Obama has just tipped his hand, any criticism of him and his policies will be directly attributed to racism. I congratulate Senator Obama for taking race relations in America back some 30 years.”

    I think candidate West said it all.  Considering West made this statement two years ago, look at how prescient it was…

  • HARP

    The Democratic National Senatorial Committee today emailed supporters a fundraising plea: “Help President Obama hold BP accountable.”
    Democrats are shamelessly politicizing a tragedy that resulted in the deaths of 11 individuals.

    http://gatewaypundit.firstthings.com/2010/05/awful-dnc-trying-to-make-money-off-of-work-tragedy-that-killed-11-americans/

  • I’m a Linda too

    Unbelievable video.  Alright Darryl!!  And did you hear the reporter laughing when he said “they’re my people, Americans”?  WOW.

    I saw Allen West on I think Hannity a couple weeks ago.  He was very impressive.  Seems like a gOOD candidate.

  • TeakWoodKite

    #3) Spanish verb. “niggar – to be a nigger” Niggar should be pronounced with an accent on the g and can be conjugated to fit any tense or amount of people.I will spare you the examples, although they are funny. Misspelled it eh? 

  • I’m a Linda too

    Oh and YES, the Times has become more like a rag.  I stopped reading it unless I’m directed for a very good reason.  I won’t even give them the click.

  • I’m a Linda too

    Oowawa…they did it to the Hillary supporters!

  • TeakWoodKite

    I thought those that who voted for him did that already. See how much he understands his job, pfffft!

    Never mind seeking to profit from misery, which did as a state senator, he holds the OFffice of the President of the United States!!!

    Harp. We are screwed if he can’t do it.

  • Jackie

    “Misspelled it eh?”

    Yes, Mr. Dale Robertson misspelled it on his sign.  That’s what the article was quoting, his misspelled sign, with the word “Niggar”.

  • Jackie

    “Plus what does this have to do with RRR Amy link?”

    Amy said “We know EXACTLY who those people were holding up racist signs at the Tea Parties, and they were NOT Tea Party members”.  I pointed out an readily available example of a racist Tea Party member holding up a racist sign.  It has everything to do with her post.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Here’s another one of Allen West: 

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Wow, Ani – that is an excellent smackdown – in a mature way, that is.  He is basically telling Obama to act like an adult, and run on his record and integrity. 

    ANd he was absolutely spot on abt Obama.

  • Jackie

    So make sure you stop spamming on RRR Amy’s posts.”

    While I am certainly not “spamming”, considering my comment was directly related to Amy’s post, I will advise you not to bother telling me what to do.  You won’t make any headway trying to boss me around.

  • Docelder

    They are just being belligerent and getting in you face. Just doing their job. I don’t mind these professional astroturfers. It is interesting to see what they are selling, because they usually get the marching orders from the top down. But, actually engaging them isn’t usually so productive.

  • Docelder

    Yep, just be the President. At least act like one while in public. It is embarrassing.

  • ~~JustMe~~

    Yes Doc, however she has posted this repeatedly and it gets old reading the same old stuff time and time again. She has the “N” word in her head like the other one had the “Teab” in his.

  • TeakWoodKite

    Right over your melon…..

  • Docelder

    These astroturf squad guys are just hurting Obama. They think they are helping him. But if they really thought he was capable as a leader, they wouldn’t think he needed this kind of “help”. The thing is, they know he is inept. They think this “card” is all they have. I think they are selling the President short myself. I think while inexperienced, he could learn if he wanted to, and if given the chance. He was nowhere ready on day one. He is nowhere ready now. But he could be learning. These guys won’t give him that chance. They have traded hope and change in for the sleazy “card”.

  • Jackie

    Right over your melon…..”

    If you take the time to make sense, I’ll understand what you’re getting at.

  • Jackie

    “She has the “N” word in her head like the other one had the “Teab” in his.”

    I’m not the one who claimed that Tea Partiers have never behaved in a racist manner at these rallies–Amy did.  If people are going to make unfounded claims, I’m going to point out that they are wrong.

  • Mark

    What an idiot lib reporter.  She is only one feeling uncomfortable because she is not surrounded by a group of moronic libs.   What do these libs do everyday after they get up in the morning, reach for a six pack of race cards before they go out the door?  The idiot covers a tea party rally and the best she can do is seek out a black man and try to make him feel he does not belong in the group.  How dare a black man deviate from the lib reservation.  “No diversity allowed for the black people”, say they libs, “All blacks must report to Sharpton for their orders.” 

  • Jackie

    “Just doing their job.”

    I’m a Systems Administrator at a law firm.  That’s my job, and it pays very well for my very non-political work.  It’s as useful for you guys to assume that I am paid to be here as it would be for me to assume that you are, too.

  • Jackie

    “He was nowhere ready on day one. He is nowhere ready now.”

    Right.  He just passed the most sweeping healthcare legislation in American history, legislation that the Dems had tried and failed to pass for the last 60 years, but sure, go ahead and tell yourself whatever makes you happy.

  • Patience

    LOL oowawa!

  • sowsear

    Jackie has taken over for FF. Do not feed….

  • lorac

    Oooo – you’re so BAD, oowawa!  So BAD that you’re good!  :)

  • Yttik

    Wouldn’t that be wonderful if something good came out of Obama’s election? Ha! A huge and growing black conservative movement. I like that, especially if we increase the number of women, too.

    What’s always struck me as strange is that many, many black people are far more conservative then I am. So why so many black people have allowed themselves to be held hostage to the Dem party is beyond me.

  • lorac

    Well, this went with the negrocons comment…

  • oowawa

    In fact, in honor of Michael Steele, “Uncle Toms” could become “Uncle Michaels.”  I can just see Sharpton and Jackson working this theme . . .

  • lorac

    I fully expect so, too.  They’ll all feel very threatened by a growth in black republicans.  White dems will feel they won’t be able to say “where else you gonna go?” and blacks will feel ripped off that someone is busting the curve (in grading terms), and now they may have to start taking control of their own lives or look bad. 

  • oowawa

    Not to mention Farrakhan . . .

  • oowawa

    And in fact, Reverend Jeremiah Wright may have to come out of retirement . . .

  • candymarl

    What I love is those people that continue to lecture, nay try to educate African Americans,  about  what words mean, how it feels and when we should or should not feel comfortable/uncomfortable in our particular surroundings.

    Considering how ill-equipped and stupid us black folks are to determine those things for ourselves obviuosly we need their guidance.

    Hey! Not much different than the attitude toward the poor stupid slaves that couldn’t think for themselves. My, how times have changed – NOT.

  • Onofre’s arm

    ” black Republicans are running across the country”

    It’s nice to know that they’re running as Republicans for political office, instead of running for their lives from Democrat klansmen.

  • lorac

    Au revoir

  • lorac

    Adios

  • Obama: Dubya 2 Electric Boogaloo

    Hold on! I translate Obotics….

    I’m a Systems Administrator at a law firm.

    Translation: I’m a 30 year old liberal arts major in my 8th year of college who lives in the basement of my lawyer parents house and I spend my allowance money on Cheetos and Kool-Aid…..OH YEAH!!!!

  • Onofre’s arm

    Jackie, as is usually the case, you’re the only one who can’t see the word “Dumbass” written on your forehead. Buy a mirror!

    I’m sure the rest of us understand Teak perfectly well.

  • lorac

    до свидания

  • I’m a Linda too

    Mark, well said.

  • lorac

    Valete

  • lorac

    I’m telling her goodbye in different languages – one might work.  But we need our secret weapon, CandyMarl – she runs away from Candymarl

  • TeakWoodKite

    Not in a million years of human evolution, Jackie, would you understand. 

  • lorac

    Yeah, the dems do nothing for women, figuring we have nowhere else to go.  With blacks, they try to convince them that they need handouts to survive and only dems will give them to them.  No talk about encouraging them to take charge of their own lives and then to succeed.  Dems wants blacks to stay in the welfare group so they’ll stay loyal voters to the dems doling out the tidbits.  It’s all about maintaining the base of the party, and NOTHING about truly helping those in the party they are supposed to represent….

  • Jackie

    “Translation: I’m a 30 year old liberal arts major in my 8th year of college who lives in the basement of my lawyer parents house and I spend my allowance money on Cheetos and Kool-Aid…..OH YEAH!!!!”

    Does the GOP pay you in bondage club outings or Confederate flags?

  • TeakWoodKite

    most sweeping healthcare legislation . (LOL) 
     
    Yup, swept that shit right under the bus.

  • TeakWoodKite

    अलविदा

  • I’m a Linda too

    They just can’t seem to help themselves, can they?  That same elitist, condescending attitude we’ve seen all too much.

  • Jackie

    “I’m sure the rest of us understand Teak perfectly well.”

    Wow, what ringing confidence!  “I’m sure I understood what so-and-so said.  Yep, totally sure.  “What did he mean”, you ask?  Look, I’m sure I understood it, ok?  Just leave me alone!”

  • Yttik

    I wonder what the message is, what sneaks into your brain, when a reporter asks if you feel uncomfortable and practically implies that you’re not with your own kind? I also wonder what sneaks into people’s brains when they are constantly told how racist other people are, basically trying to make sure you know how much you are hated?

    It’s sneaky and kind of subtle, but these kinds of questions and constant harping on racism seem like a very insidious kind of racism all by themselves. I think I’d almost prefer somebody just standing there with a misspelled sign looking like an idiot. Somebody who was actually asked to leave the Tea Party because of his sign.

  • Buzzlatte

    Uncle Tom is actually a hero in the book.

  • Yttik

    Ahh, I think it’s the noun/verb thing that confuses Jackie. I seem to remember we had the same probalem with our wayward Bristish tourist that had a sign offering some “advise” for Sarah Palin.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    I am aware of two races where Black Republicans are running in “safe” Democrat districts. The Dems are still clueless so I won’t spill the beans.

    Republicans are reaching out, and Blacks are starting to reach back.

    One of the two candidates recently switched parties.

    Black voters have been responding to the following 10 questions and finding that they agree or strongly agree with 8 of ten. They then have an epiphany of “By God, I must be a Republican.

    1.  Public education would be improved if parents could choose which school their children attend.
    2.  Government regulations hurt small businesses.

    3.  American citizens have the right to own guns.
    4.  Life begins at conception.
    5.  Taxes should be lowered.

    6.  Prayer should be allowed in public schools and at school programs.

    7.  Judges should not have the right to make up new laws.

    8.  Our rights come from our creator, not from government.

    9.  The Constitution should only be changed by the amendment process.
    10.  Voting for the candidate that represents my values is more important than vote for a political Party.
     
    I find that I strongly agree with 8 of 10, agree under most circumstances with 1, and disagree with 1.

    I was raised as a Kennedy Democrat. But the Kennedy Democratic Party is extinct.

  • Buzzlatte

    Candymarl:  Yeah, I bet you just love the condescending twenty-somethings who tell you how and what it’s all about as much as I do.

    I think:  Come see me in ten years when no one has paid your mortgage but you.   

  • lorac

    уходите!

  • Buzzlatte

    I think the clip is a prime example of how liberals need controversy and victims to function!

    Ewwww, I lived with that pervasive craziness for too many years in unionized WA state.

  • Jackie

    ” I seem to remember we had the same probalem with our wayward Bristish tourist that had a sign offering some “advise” for Sarah Palin”

    I love it when people inadvertently display their difficulties with the English language in the course of attempting to mock someone else’s.

  • lorac

    убегате!

  • Jackie

    “No talk about encouraging them to take charge of their own lives and then to succeed.  Dems wants blacks to stay in the welfare group so they’ll stay loyal voters to the dems doling out the tidbits.”

    I can’t imagine a more patronizing attitude towards African-Americans.  What a great pitch you have: “You all won’t take charge of your own lives by getting out of that welfare group and voting Republican!”

    African-Americans are perfectly capable of thinking for themselves.  And the vast majority of them have decided that the Democratic Party represents their interests better than the Republican Party.  Change their minds if you can, but don’t insult them by lecturing them on their “welfare” mentality. 

  • oowawa

    So is Uncle Remus in Song of the South–a real wise man.  Eventually, it will be recognized by all as the classic it is, and Disney will find the nerve to release it on DVD in the USA!

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Does the GOP pay you in bondage club outings or Confederate flags?

    If I had known about the bondage thing sooner, I’d have become a Republican years ago. Talk about a big tent!

    Not so hot about the Confederate Flag myself, but as many commented on a post way back, many of those keeping Confererate memorabilia had ancestors on that side, and most of them were young and the majority were not slave owners.

    They all had a thing against the Federal Government telling them what to do. That kinda sounds familiar.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Sorry about that Jackie, we all know you don’t spend your chore money on Kool Aid. Obama gives Kool Aid to you for free.

  • ~~JustMe~~

    .

  • lorac

    заткнись!

  • AC

    test

  • Docelder

    The Kennedy Democratic Party is extinct. – Yes they ran the numbers and figured out they don’t need Kennedy democrats. Not only do they not need them, they don’t want them. The thing is, that part of the party hasn’t had a real home for a long, long time. People thought Clinton was a Kennedy democrat, but he isn’t. I think back to what people like Rush Limbaugh and Gordon Liddy were saying about the Clintons in the 90′s and time has proven them more right then wrong.

  • lorac

    это значит, ты глупая…..!

  • Onofre’s arm

    Gosh oowawa, talk about throwing me a hanging curveball. The racist left will more than likely call AA Republicans “Coonservatives”.  :-D

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Misspelled it?

    That’s the way Dave Chapelle spells it!

    The Original on Comedy Central is better quality video.
    http://www.comedycentral.com/videos/index.jhtml?videoId=11906&title=the-niggar-family

  • lorac

    Wow, you’re having that melon problem again.  I was speaking of how dems treat them – even the black leaders.  How many black leaders are out there celebrating the wonderful advances of blacks, and using it to encourage others that the sky is the limit?  How many out there are constantly telling them the world is against them and they’ll never get ahead?  Al Sharpton?  “Rev.” Wright?  Jesse Jackson? 

    Maybe you need to see a melon therapist……?

  • Jackie

    Wow, you’re having that melon problem again.”

    “Maybe you need to see a melon therapist……?”

    These melon jokes are just dynamite.

  • Jackie

    “They all had a thing against the Federal Government telling them what to do. That kinda sounds familiar.”

    Banning your right to own slaves sounds familiar?

  • lorac

    You didn’t address the question of how dems, especially black leaders, treat blacks.  I guess you just want to leave it at your intentionally twisted interpretation of what I said. 

  • Docelder

    If you think letting Harry and Nancy do whatrever they want is “ready from day one” then go ahead. That isn’t being a leader though, it’s being a doormat. He can’t control either of them. They hold more power than he does when he can’t control them… which has been ever since he was sworn in.

  • Onofre’s arm

    And of course oowawa, by logical extension, the nickname would be Neocoons, and I’d better stop before too much controversy needs to be explained away.

    The good thing though, is that when I thought of this,(inspired by you of course) I couldn’t resist calling one of my dearest friends, a conservative AA who I played Rugby with for many years, to tell him of my latest contributions to the English lexicon (or should that be lexicoon?), and he was still laughing his ass off when I said goodbye. 

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    “They all had a thing against the Federal Government telling them what to do. That kinda sounds familiar.”

    Now where exactly do you see the word “Slavery” in “kinda sounds familiar”. You are really stuck in your own stupid little brain pattern.

    I’ve pulled up weeds that had more brains than you.

  • Buzzlatte

    I’m putting money on Al Sharpton using the ‘Coonservative’ word first.

    That man just loves him some controversy. 

  • Onofre’s arm

    Thanks Jackie, you just inspired my new palindrome. “No lemons, no melon”.

  • Obama: Dubya 2 Electric Boogaloo

    :-D

  • Onofre’s arm

    That would be “Coontroversy”, Buzz.

  • Onofre’s arm

    Oh well, WTF! I’m constantly reminded that there’s nothing new under the sun. I guess I should just hang it up. OUTRAGEOUS VIDEO!!! LUV IT!

  • lorac

    Ha!  Just saw this over at Murphy’s place, it’s so good!
       “Between the botched terrorism response in Times Square and the botched oil spill response in the Gulf, this administration should be renamed the OBOTched Regime.”

    http://pumapac.org/

  • AbigailAdams

    TeakWoodKite:  Your comment makes me think of a couple of different aspects to this thread.  First, since you are spot on about the TP being a set of ideals, it makes perfect sense that Americans of all colors would be attracted to the idea of a constitutionally run government–a government that is not above the law and one that seeks to enforce the laws of the land.  Glen Beck often uses the phrase “equal justice”  above “social justice”, social justice being code for giving a pass to some or supporting some based on their skin color.  I like his distinction because it means all Americans are subject to and benefit from equal justice and it’s inherently fair.  Social justice, on the other hand, is inherently packed with favortisim and it erodes our blind justice system.  Further, we may automatically think of social justice as leveler of the playing field, but it isn’t because once you start down the path of favoritism for any group, it means the laws can be bent for any one if they are fortunate enough to be a friend of a friend (of a friend).

    The second thing your comment made me think of is that there has to be a growing resentment by AAs toward the liberal and progressive leaders in this country who are always banging on the “slavery” and “oppression” drum.  I mean to say, if we look around we see AAs in every strata of American life — and have for some while.  That’s got to irk self-directed blacks as much as it irritates any white person.  Is there still racial prejudice?  Of course.  But no matter what the gov’t or any individual does to combat it, we will always have this problem because some human beings are insecure and will use anything against anybody to try to believe they are better.  But I don’t think racial prejudice against AAs, for example, is really any worse or different than the same biases against women, for example.  Has anyone here seen the film “Crash”?

    As has been said, there are more mature people who see the real issues and are tired of the same old saw over race.  I hope we’re seeing what looks to be a turning of the corner.

  • TeakWoodKite

    ROLF

  • Onofre’s arm

    Also, I’m in deep awe and reverence for the person who came up with “Oozy rat in a sanitary zoo.”, because it’s not only a fantastic palindrome, but it’s a wonderful oxymoron as well.

  • TeakWoodKite

    5 by 5 AC

  • Buzzlatte

    LOL!  Of course it would!!!!  Too funny!

  • ~~JustMe~~

    TY TY TY Admin!

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Funny video – thanks Dubya 2

  • candymarl

    lorac,
    I thought Obama was the Second Coming? I’ve actually seen videos where people said that. So I suggest Obama walk on the oil spill and watch it disappear with each step he takes.

    Being the Second Coming  Obama should have known about the plot in NYC and prevented it with a wave of his hand.

    I just heard a sound. Unicorns and Rainbows are dancing together in my backyard! Obama must be here!

  • ~~JustMe~~

    LOL great comment candymarl.

  • FranSC

    “….there are more mature people who see the real issues and are tired of the same old saw over race.” 

    I so wish that were true.  However, the perpetrators of all the race-baiting obviously think this dispicable strategy still works.  And it is indeed a strategy that was used from Iowa to Montana in the 2008 primaries to help nominate B0. 

    According to Geradine Ferraro during the 2008 campaign, this strategy was also used to elect MA governor, Duval Patrick in 2006.  This was pointed out by Geraldine Ferraro when she was as disgusted as most of us at the treatment Hillary was getting.  Interestingly, David Axelrod was Patrick’s Campaign Manager.  Hmmmm. 

    The race strategy was used against Hillary to keep AAs and the far-left angry at the Clintons and in line.   It worked like a charm for these political criminals.   In Gov Patrick’s campaign, it was to arouse the rampant white guilt in that state.  The key was to have others make the racial charges and have the candidate disavow it like B0 did a million times and continues.  The awful truth is the AA candidates who get elected support this strategy 100% or else they would not have a campaign race man or woman like Jesse Jackson Jr who filled that role for the 0bama campaign in 2008.

    No, I’m sorry to tell you these blow-hards do not get this yet.
    Perhaps after the 2010 mid-term elections, they may start to change this destructive strategy. 

  • elaine

    RRRA, For whatever it’s worth Tammy Bruce is backing LTC (ret) Allen West. Are you aware of Tammy’s work?

  • kenoshamarge

    I too am always impressed when I see an interview with Col. West.

    Here’s an article by Victor Davis Hansen about citizen-soldiers who are running for offices you might find interesting. Warning that it is by Victor Davis Hanson because some find him waaaay too far right for their issues and taste.

     Link: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2010/05/06/soldier-citizens_to_the_rescue_105470.html

  • kenoshamarge

    I think the reporters question and the way it was asked is a prime example of liberal racism. The young man’s answer was a superlative smack-down of an elitist pinhead.

    If we all started thinking of ourselves as Americans and Human Beings instead of letting political parties and media define and divide us there would be a lot of unwatched media types and a lot of “elected” officials suddenly looking for new employment in the lobbying industry.

  • Guest

    I looked at the Issues section of his web site for his fiscal platform and this is what I found : Eliminate capital gains, freeze employer and employee payroll taxes for six months to a year, establish a flat tax rate…
    Make the federal government efficient and do an across the board analysis where we can cut unpopular programs and expenditures….(foreign aid to Hamas…etc).

    In short, there’s a lot of empty platitudes, generic statements, and solutions based on ideals, not what actually produces results.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Not until I just read abt her at Wikipedia.  Very interesting indeed.  Thanks, elaine!

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Um, there seems to be some specifics in there, and there is EASILY more substance there than “Hope!” and “Change!”  At least he didn’t steal policy ideas wholecloth from someone else like Barack did with Hillary, and claimt hem for his own.

  • creeper

    “…any criticism of him and his policies will be directly attributed to racism.”

    Wow.  That’s some crystal ball West has. 

  • creeper

    “I’d better stop…”

    NOoooooo!

  • creeper

    Yes, permanently.

  • creeper

    lorac, those are horrible things to say to Jackie. 

  • creeper

    Huh?  Another one bites the dust?  Shoot, I missed it.

  • AbigailAdams

    FransSC: I understand and agree with your comments about past elections, but my comments were in response to RRRA’s post here.  It’s been a long, tough road, particularly since obama arrived on the scene, regarding as Thomas Sowell put it, “mascot politics” and the use of race as leverage for black politicians.  As painful as it’s been to watch and to be involved in, this whole messy situation (race baiting, white guilt, etc) has not been without its upside, namely that it has exposed it for what it is.  My hope is that the “blow hards” who do not get it will be forced into the past along with the many other anachronisms about race.  They will have to at some point because Wright, Farrakan, Jackson, Sharpton and Phleger’s (just to name a few) words do not match reality.  In case they hadn’t noticed, there’s a black man (by his own definition) in the White House.  That, I think, is the most compelling evidence there is that we are not living in 1840 or even 1960.  And when it is discovered by that other bloc, the progressive and liberal blow-hards who insist the Tea Party is the neo-Nazi/neo-KKK, there is nothing to support their claims and nobody actually believes them — they’ll fade away; becoming an oddity like the folks who believe the moon landing was faked.

    It’s not so much the blow-hards my comments address, but the people who see their deceptions.  And that, I think, is being played-out as we write.

  • kenoshamarge

    Yes they are. Say some more.

  • creeper

    That one stumped the translator.  “Ubegate”?

  • creeper

    Ara i’ bali, Jackie

    (HT/felizarte)

  • audacity of hype

    Racism racism racism racism!!!!  I see racists racists racists racists racists!!!!!!!!  Talk to the hand.

  • Noogan

    Payback is a bitch isn’t it?  :-D

    “We’ve got politicians calling each other all sorts of unflattering names. Pundits and talking heads shout at each other. The media tends to play up every hint of conflict, because it makes for a sexier story.” ~ President Obama
    “[T]he unanimous House vote against the Recovery Act set the tenor for the whole year. That helped to create the ’tea-baggers’ …” ~ President Obama

  • Sassy

    I saw video of a speech by Colonel West on another web site and also on C-Span. He is very impressive!
    Although my district is overwhelmingly republican, a conservative, African American democrat was elected to the city council three times and then served two terms as our state representative.
    He committed Obamacide in 2008, for that was a bridge too far here where democrats rallied in record numbers for Hillary!

  • PssttCmere

    My hope is that he doesn’t become a shill later down the road like Colin Powell….I want people to surprise us and stick to their principles and represent their constituents, not their pocketbooks!!

    And, obamadinejad…..don’t try to take the credit for inspiring blacks to run.  I am sure Axlegrease and Gibbs are already loading your teleprompter with that hogwash!

    “Say What You Will…It Feels So Good”

    http://www.saywhatyouwill.proboards.com

  • Guest

    Without Obama as my standard, what I saw was more stale typical right wing spew than viable options that will break through polarized rigidities and get serious about a path to sustainable deficit reduction.

  • candymarl

    Yeah, and poor innocent Obama had nothing at all to do with creating this atmosphere. Tea-baggers? OMG, did the supposed President of the United States actually say that? 

    Obama is a joke and a bad one at that.

  • tango

    Oh really. When was the last time the government did any of the following:

    elminated capital gains
    froze employer and employee payroll taxes for 6 months to a year
    established a flat tax

    Show me specificially with details how they did those things before and how it was such a big failure that it would not produce results now.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Just like with Freedom Fighter, I recommend the above apporach to Jackie as well. 

    Or, as awesome NQ writer LisaB, coined:

    Blah, blah, Obama rulz! Blah, picking on me, blah, blah.Blah, unfair! blah, meanies, blah, blah, blah,Blah, I’m smarter, blah, blah.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Amen, sowsear.  Or, as I wrote upthread, I recommend LisaB’s response whenever Jackie starts in:

    Blah, blah, Obama rulz! Blah, picking on me, blah, blah.Blah, unfair! blah, meanies, blah, blah, blah,Blah, I’m smarter, blah, blah.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    LOVE IT!!!!

  • Docelder

    I still like the “Preciousdent”. These astroturfing bots are just like golems clinging onto a breakfast cereal prize ring. They can’t see it’s just plastic. 8-)

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Yes, he really did.  As if you needed any more evidence as to what kind of person he REALLY is, he shows it left and right.  One thing comes out of his mouth (“Stop the hating, people!”), and you just KNOW something is going to come out abt what a hater he is.  Unbelievable. 

    Though I am not at ALL surprised that he’s a homophobe.  He has made that abundantly clear, too.

  • helenk

    http://www.newser.com/story/87886/joe-the-plumber-gets-elected.html

    This made my day. The man only asked backtrack a question and the press brutalised him. Maybe he was not politically active before but he is now.

    WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE,MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

    PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALISTS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

  • helenk

    Me too. My first presidential vote was for JFK. I was young and really thought we has a chance to make the world a better place. I really grew up the day he was killed and have watched real hope die in this country for a long time. The new so-called democratic party is a farce and really not in the best interest of the country today. By selecting backtrack they have divided the country, pretty much destroyed the party and created a leadership vaccum that will harm this country for generations.

    WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE,MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

    PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALISTS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

  • oowawa

    “Coonservatives”–I’m in awe at your wit, Onofre’s arm . . . I’m sure Sharpton is too; he would be thinking: “Now why didn’t I think of that!”  If black conservatives start becoming a real political threat to disrupting the monolithic black voting block, I would not be surprised to actually see something like “negrocons” or “coonservatives” used as a disparaging epithet by radical left wing black politicians, ministers, and comedians against black Republican politicians . . .

  • felizarte

    My goodness creeper, thanks for the shout out

  • Sassy

    Rev. Amy, I’m surprised. If memory serves me correctly, Tammy Bruce was a rising star in NOW, until she bolted years ago.
    She was interviewed recently on C-Span’s book review. She is smart, sophisticated, and supports gun rights.

  • ~~Justme~~

    Hey OA, Rugby? Is this sport played here in the States?

  • helenk

    http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0510/36863.html

    dnc getting worried about PA. They backed an ex dem – ex republican – now a dem again against a long time democrat and it is not  looking good.

    WOMEN WITH INTELLIGENCE AND EXPERIENCE,MEN WHO SUPPORT THEM AND COUNTRY BEFORE PARTY ALWAYS

    PUMAS,BUBBAS,EQUALITS AND THOSE PEOPLE RULE

  • trixta

    For example, Docelder? What Limbaugh and Liddy claims are you referring to? Don’t you think the historical times (early 1960s vs 1990s)  from which JFK and WJC arose might have shaped them diffently as politicians?  Yes, JFK was tragically assassinated in the end by who knows who, but on a day-to-day basis, I don’t recall the relentlessly vicious right wing push back against JFK as we saw against WJC.  Indeed, this push back was the reason WJC reinvented himself as the “third-way” president during his first four years in office.  (Yes, I do believe there was a right-wing conspiracy to take down WJC.)   I think most Presidents — especially on the Dem side — must have that specter of the JFK assassination in the back of their minds, which ultimately keeps them from stepping out of line.

  • honestlawyermostly

    Rev. Amy, another interesting post.  I am a white lawyer in a liberal, democrat Texas city.  Our city manager is black; our police chief is Hispanic, and we have more female district judges than male, and all are democrats.  Most of the lawyers are liberal democrats as well.  A few years ago, a black, Yale educated lawyer asked me to second chair him in a lawsuit.  When we met our opposing counsel at docket call for the first time, neither of us knew him and he did not know us.  (We later learned that he was active in local politics and something of a “typical” liberal democrat).  As our opposing counsel walked over to where we stood, he introduced himself and then turned to me to ask questions about the case.  It was subtle; it was polite, but his assumption that I was lead counsel was bigotry, pure and simple.  My friend maintained his composure until we were outside and alone, and then he exploded.  He could handle the racist comments and actions of rednecks—he had done so all of his life.  What he could not handle was the bigotry of those who pretended to be otherwise.
     
    Now that the usefulness of the democratic party in removing the legal barriers to equal opportunity essentially has run its course, perhaps AAs are acting on what they have known all along:  the anti-racist sentiments proclaimed by so many liberal democrats are no more sincere than the pro-feminist slogans we thought were actual beliefs—until Hillary. 

  • starburst

    Actually, now we know how BO can walk on water — it’s the oily slime that props him up!!! 

  • starburst

    “Without Obama as my standard”  

    This says it all!!!

  • Buzzlatte

    Obama as your “standard”?  Is that supposed to be a step up from having no standards?

  • Docelder

    It could also be fallout from affirmative action. The assumption that the best and the brightest are promoted based on competency and merit alone… well to be diplomatic about it, the perception of that is different. I think affirmative action actually is hurrting a lot more than it helps. It goes all the way up to the President. Look how many of the network news anchors think that he needs their “help” to govern.

  • Buzzlatte

    Bravo!  You’ve captured the reality of the liberal dems that operates behind their mask.

  • Guest

    I’m saying he’s not a benchmark for me in terms of producing ideas…”Better than Obama” doesn’t cut it.

    No joke. Get it ?

  • bamaLV

    what did you expect from our “brilliant” president who thinks there are 57 states in the usa, thinks corpsmen are corpse men, and (as he said at the Wh correspondence dinner), scott brown comes from  MASSATUSITS?  i also wish the msm would stop referring to him as a “constitutional professor”he was NOT a professor. he was only a lecturer but he has never bothered to correct that. just like he has never bothered to correct most of the other lies he and the msm have perpetrated about his “brilliance”.

  • surfered

    Alert the media…you found the one person of color in a Tea Party haystack .  This does not obscure the fact there is not one single Republican African American currently serving in the House or the Senate because they can’t get elected in Republican districts.  Your favorite comedian, Bill Maher, said it best: “Republicans may not all be racist; however, every racist is probably a Republican.”

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Her name sounded familiar, but I didn’t know much abt her.  Acutally, come to think of it, I think some folks here mentioned her before. 

    I don’t listen to talk radio anymore since I learned how to quit Stephanie Miller (she drank copious amts of Kool Aide for Obama VERY early on).  Maybe I should start again?

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Not only was he not a professor, bamaLV, he only got his job because a board member got it for him.  He was turned down for it on his credentials (or lack thereof), so it was a political appointment.  Apparently, the law profs hated him, thought he was lazy, didn’t bother to show up for meetings, and crap like that.  Kinda like what he did as a US Senator!

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Amended from above: Blah, blah, Obama rulz! Blah, picking on me, blah, blah.Blah, unfair! blah, meanies, blah, blah, blah,Blah, I’m smarter, blah, blah, Your’re all racists, blah, blah blah…

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Honest Lawyer, that is a telling story indeed.  Thank you for sharing it with us.  I wish I could say I am surprised, but sadly, I am not…

  • Onofre’s arm

    Well Just Me, we call it rugby, but I suspect someone from New Zealand or South Africa would call it something else.  :)

  • ~~Justme~~

    New Zealand or South Africa? lol. I was intrigued as I’d never heard of anyone playing Rugby in the States so went off to Wikipedia and was surprised to read :-  
    There is also a possibility that Rugby Sevens will also be a demonstration sport at the 2012 London Olympics. The fifteen-a-side version of Rugby Union was last played at the Olympic Games in Paris 1924, with the United States winning the gold medal, defeating France in the final 17-3. As always, we live and learn something every day!

  • Carlaforhillary

    Every racist is probably a republican? Well, you (and Bill Mahr) must have not campaigned for Hillary Clinton and have no idea what you are talking about.

  • lorac

    ….stop referring to him as a “constitutional professor”he was NOT a professor….

    Also, it makes it sound like what he taught was constitutional law.  I’d like to know exactly what that one class he taught was called, because we’ve all seen that “famous” picture of him at the blackboard – and the schematics on the board represent community organizing principles, not constitutional law. 

    So I think they’re screwing up both words when they say “constitutional professor” – he wasn’t a professor, and I think his only relation to the constitution was that he took some constitutional classes in school (to learn the loopholes, no doubt)….

  • lorac

    creeper, yes!  I was running out of ways to say “goodbye”, so this one means “run away!”   :)

  • lorac

    PS, aren’t you from Iowa?  Score one for the Hawkeye!

    - unless you’re from that OTHER school in the cornfield!  :)   ;)

    (oops are my UI biases showing?)  ;)  

  • Pandora beads wholesale

    Allen West seemed very smart and dignified and had more class in his one little finger than Obama has in his whole body. Hope there are more Allen West’s out there in the GOP.

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  • lorac

    On the news they just said that PA is putting together a law like Arizona has passed for illegal immigration control…  I guess they better be worried!

  • andysf

    She can’t. Truth is that the Dem and the so call Minority Leaders are just a bunch of USERS. Someone with Jackie’s gray matter will have a hard time understanding it.