Posted on 10/08/2008 8:36:25 AM PDT by connell
By Ted Hayes
Hello, everybody.
The iron is hot, and we must strike now.
We are at the optimum time to deal the Democratic Party a devastating, if not lethal, political blow, thanks to the ever growing real possibility that the “Ted Hayes brand” can defeat what U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters has presented to America for the last 14 years.
First, the Honorable Congresswoman steps up as the “would-be” queen of socialism when she inadvertently exposed the Democratic agenda to have government take over the free market place by socializing the oil industries.
Now she has positioned herself as the would-be socialistic Empress of Doom to the American economy via her blatant support of the criminal Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae institutions.
Ms. Waters, leading the U.S. Congressional Black Caucus along with the active support of Sen. Barack Hussein Obama used the threat of racism against Republicans and the banking establishments to illegally cover up the financial failures, the crimes of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae in recent years.
Look at Inflammatory Shrubbery
Clearly, this economic crisis that is threatening to destroy the American economy, along with economies of the world, is couched in the racist, socialist agenda that is typical of Maxine Waters and the Congressional Black Caucus
Yet, it appears that the Republican leadership and the McCain campaign are too timid to call that which they see by name — black folks messing up black folks and all of America.
Republicans fear being called racist.
This goes back to that fateful hearing in which the black Congressional members accused the regulator of lynching Franklin Raines, the black former head of Freddie Mac, a onetime Clinton Administration official who has been living under a legal cloud since his ouster.
Pushing the Hottest Buttons
Pimping that buzzword onto the minds of guilt-ridden white Republicans connotes “lynching,” which connotes “noose” (shades of Jena, LA). Ironically, the noose is the Democratic-sponsored KKK symbol of murder and subjugation of the emancipated slaves, a period of terror that blocked them from benefiting from the 14th Amendment, which guaranteed blacks full and equal citizenship with whites in the United States.
Consequently, Mr. McCain and the Republicans backed off back then, even as they are doing now standing far off when victory is theirs for the taking.
How ironic that the leading rebel on Capitol Hill is Maxine Waters, the very person that I plan to defeat on Nov. 4.
The Congresswoman’s leadership has made her more vulnerable than any of us would have imagined just a month ago. Her gaffe about socializing the oil industry was bad enough. Now this.
Now is the time to strike.
I am calling on Republicans and conservative-minded blacks to join with me in making joint public statements of what our white brethren can’t do at this time.
In order for President Abraham Lincoln to turn the tide of the Civil War in favor of the Republicans, blacks, including former slaves, were inducted into the U.S. military to fight the rebel Confederacy as well as whites.
It is up to us blacks to marshal ourselves and now enter the fight where whites cannot.
Let us organize ourselves while we still have the time and take on Maxine Waters, the Black Congressional Caucus, and Obama on this very hot historical issue. The Republicans need us now the way Abe Lincoln needed us during the Civil War.
It is my belief that if we take the lead, the Republican leadership, including McCain, will join and back us with the necessary resources to fight this fight.
What do you think? Will you join me?
Mr. Hayes, a Republican and well-known advocate for the homeless, is running against the incumbent Ms. Waters in the 35th Congressional District. He may be contacted at ted@tedhayes.us
I believe he's alluding to the loss of "moral authority" to honestly deal with racial issues that has existed in our society since the 60's. The author Shelby Steele describes it very well in his excellent book White Guilt. It's the reason the left can call anybody who opposes them a racist and get away with it (like Barney Frank recently did). You can easily observe it in the way people always say "I'm not a racist but......." before they give an opinion on any issue involoving race.
> There are black racists too. Which party do they predominatly belong to? I got no answer.
Gee, I wonder why...
One of the great scandals of our time.
Lol, makes you want to laugh - and then cry at the audacity of it all. Audacity and Obama have been used over and over.
Based on your example it sounds like you are agreeing with me. LOL
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.