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Race, Class, and Baloney in the Big Easy
The American Thinker ^ | Rick Moran

Posted on 09/02/2005 9:51:11 AM PDT by Millee

It certainly didn’t take long for the race baiters, class warriors, and economic determinists to heave themselves up from the flood waters that have inundated New Orleans to inform us all of the real tragedy being played out in that tortured city. Most of us think it bad enough that tens of thousands of human beings are suffering untold hardships and indignities as a result of being stranded in the nightmare of barbarism and perditious mayhem to which a once beautiful city has descended.

But for the professional victimhood groups, opportunity has come knocking. Why let an unimaginable tragedy like Katrina spoil a chance to link the tried and true canards of race and class with both the evocation of white guilt and a little Bush bashing for good measure?

This quotation from the Reverend Jesse Jackson manages the trifecta – race, class, and Bush bashing – quite nicely:

“Many black people feel that their race, their property conditions and their voting patterns have been a factor in the response,” Mr. Jackson said, after meeting with Louisiana officials yesterday. “I’m not saying that myself, but what’s self-evident is that you have many poor people without a way out.”

If he’s not saying that himself, why say it in the first place except to plant the seeds of distrust and racism in the minds of his constituency?

Representative Charles Rangel tried to add a little humor to his critique. He also gets an “A+” for combining race, class, and anti-war digs at the President in the space of one sentence:

That disparity has been criticized as a “disgrace” by Charles B. Rangel, the senior Democratic congressman from New York City, who said it was made all the worse by the failure of government officials to have planned.

“I assume the president’s going to say he got bad intelligence, Mr. Rangel said, adding that the danger to the levees was clear.

“I think that wherever you see poverty, whether it’s in the white rural community or the black urban community, you see that the resources have been sucked up into the war and tax cuts for the rich,” he said.

Rangel and Jackson are by no means alone in piggybacking criticism of rich white people on their overheated critique of the Bush Administration. The tragedy in New Orleans is unlike any other disaster in American history, in that not only have we witnessed the almost complete and utter destruction of a major industrialized city but also political attacks on the party in power carried out with a ferocity perhaps unprecedented in its speed and bitterness following a major cataclysm.

This tactic is largely being given a free pass by the press and the American people because by invoking the race and class cards in a situation where the race and class of the people suffering the worst of the disaster is obvious, it becomes easier to posit the notion of an “essential truth” being divined from the tragedy. In short, since poor black people are suffering, ergo they must be “targeted” by white people because of their color and, given the economic determinists worldview, by the very fact that they are poor as well.

It does no good to point out that the Mayor of New Orleans, Ray Nagin, is black himself. Not does it help to dispel this impression by saying that the city has a black Police Superintendent Edwin Compass III. And I imagine numerous questions will be put to both the Mayor and Police Superintendent at an appropriate time about their initial responses to the hurricane and its aftermath.

But the real questions are does it make any difference that those who are experiencing the worst of the devastation are poor and black and is their ordeal the result of the indifference and outright racisim of white people and, by extension, conservative white people in the Bush Administration?

To even ask the questions presupposes a monstrous evil at large in America. Do white people not care if black people live or die? Anyone who suggests that the overwhelming majority of white people – conservative or not – would have such a pernicious attitude toward human life is being disengenuous. They are not being serious. Similarly, to say that the overwhelming majority of Americans could give a fig that poor people are fighting for their lives as I write this is demonstrably false, based on the fact that more than $100 million has been raised in a little more than 72 hours for the relief of these same poor black people in New Orleans and along the Gulf Coast.

Then why this over the top rhetoric? Why the wild claims by African American leaders and the anti-poverty industry that the race and class of the victims of Katrina has a direct bearing on the level of suffering being experienced by those who, through no fault of their own, were forced to stay behind in the doomed city?

Race, and to a lesser extent class, has been called the elephant in the living room in American politics and for good reason; the only people who can speak about it and not get skewered in a political sense are the self-appointed black leaders who, for better or for worse, have become the inheritors of Martin Luther King’s legacy. Over the years, the Jesse Jacksons and Charlie Rangels have developed an entirely new vocabulary replete with apocalyptic rhetoric and dark, conspiratorial imagery that feeds the frustration and anger that many blacks experience by living and working in America. What makes their critiques resonate with the black community is that there is usually just enough truth about the real and palpable racism that blacks see and experience in their everyday lives to make the more outrageous claims regarding white mischeif seem plausible.

The attacks by the anit-poverty crusaders take a similar tack when it comes to blaming “society” for the meager circumstances of the poor. These economic determinsts have learned to temper their language since the 1960’s so that they don’t quite sound like the Marxists they really are:

“We tend to think of natural disasters as somehow even-handed, as somehow random,” said Martín Espada, an English professor at the University of Massachusetts and poet of a decidedly leftist political bent who is Puerto Rican. “Yet it has always been thus: poor people are in danger. That is what it means to be poor. It’s dangerous to be poor. It’s dangerous to be black. It’s dangerous to be Latino.”

It’s also dangerous to make assumptions based on broad generalities. Of course the storm didn’t deliberately target the poor. Therefore, the gentleman Marxist must be saying that relief efforts are inadequate, not because of the overwhelming nature of the catastrophe, but because of indifference by “the ruling class.” Again, what a horrible wickedness that must be abroad in America if government actually bases relief decisions on someone’s socio-economic status.

The bottom line of all of this nonsense is Bush bashing. For the past 72 hours, liberal websites have been filled with with the most vile, partisan attacks on the President to date, many of them making the same claims as Mssrs. Jackson and Rangel. The left has sensed an opening and his firing broadsides at the Administration before the bodies floating in the flood waters have been buried. At a time when it is vitally important that Americans pull together to face up to this unprecedented disaster, the left has chosen open partisan warfare.

Bringing race and class into the national conversation about the aftermath of the hurricane is a sham. It’s real purpose is to open another avenue of attack on the President using the tried and true grounds of racism to advance a political agenda. All done at the expense of the very people the professional racialists claim to be speaking for.


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1 posted on 09/02/2005 9:51:11 AM PDT by Millee
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To: Millee

Pimp my peoples!


2 posted on 09/02/2005 9:53:02 AM PDT by aworldtrader
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To: Millee
Somebody needs to ask Mayor Gumbo didn't use these buses to evacuate the poor before the storm, or even just move the buses to high ground so they could have been used this week.

The mayor needs to look in the mirror when assigning blame for this disaster.


3 posted on 09/02/2005 9:55:48 AM PDT by Travis McGee (--- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com ---)
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To: Millee
This has gone too far. Left and Right are arguing the scenery. What's most important in this entire debacle is to point out where the problems were and then fixing them.

Everything else is a sideshow.


4 posted on 09/02/2005 9:56:49 AM PDT by rdb3 (I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me. --Philippians 4:13)
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To: Millee
I called Jackson's congressional office and let the man have it......BIG TIME!

Suggested Jackson ought to have gotten on is knees and thanked all the hardworking people who donated millions of dollars for relief.

That Jackson ought to have demanded those shooting at rescuers STOP IMMEDIATELY.

I let the aide know just how outraged I was by racism talk.

5 posted on 09/02/2005 9:57:03 AM PDT by OldFriend (MAJ. TAMMY DUCKWORTH ~ A NATIONAL TREASURE)
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To: Millee
I notice they never talk about the incompetence of democrat mayor of New Orleans and the democrat governor of Louisiana
6 posted on 09/02/2005 9:57:18 AM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - They want to die for Islam, and we want to kill them.)
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To: rdb3
Clemenza sings: "Let the Sideshow begin...

This is becoming pathetic.

7 posted on 09/02/2005 9:59:44 AM PDT by Clemenza (Proud "Free Traitor" & Capitalist Pig)
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To: 2banana

In America today there is a lot of money to be made race baiting.


8 posted on 09/02/2005 10:00:08 AM PDT by edcoil (Reality doesn't say much - doesn't need too)
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To: Millee

Friday, Sept. 2, 2005 10:12 a.m. EDT
Mayor Ray Nagin Curses Gov. Blanco, Pres. Bush
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/9/2/101419.shtml

Before launching into his radio tirade, Nagin explained: "You know, I'm not one of those drug addicts. I am thinking very clearly."


Rep. Peter King: Gangs Blocking Relief Efforts
Friday, Sept. 2, 2005 11:15 a.m. EDT
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/9/2/111601.shtml


MSNBC's Olbermann Rationalizes Looting,
"What Would You Do?"
http://www.mrc.org/cyberalerts/2005/cyb20050901.asp#1


9 posted on 09/02/2005 10:00:42 AM PDT by Maria S
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To: Millee

And what they decidedly leave out is this;
The NO Mayor is Black...and waited until Saturday.. AFTER President Bush urged them to...to evacuate the city. The locals KNOW the city and had info from National Weather Center on FRIDAY that they were going to be hit hard.
He said there was a plan in place yet he either didn't follow it or it was inadequate to the extreme. My guess is, he didn't follow it since it called for THREE days (with an infastructure IN place) to evacuate everyone. So they are blaming FEMA for not doing enough when communication and roads are non-existant.

The LA governor also did not call up enough National Guard troops, though she had MANY more, to help evacuate BEFORE the storm. Or at LEAST she should have called them ALL up right after the storm hit. That way they would have been in NO when the levees broke.

Believe me, there's plenty of "blame" to go around....and it's not just White REpublicans that are at fault. The fact that they ignore the fact that people of NO looting are shooting at rescuers shows their true colors too.


10 posted on 09/02/2005 10:01:26 AM PDT by t2buckeye
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To: rdb3
Please point out where the problems are - in your opinion.
11 posted on 09/02/2005 10:02:18 AM PDT by Mulch (tm)
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To: OldFriend

"I called Jackson's congressional office and let the man have it......BIG TIME!"

Thank you thank you thank you!


12 posted on 09/02/2005 10:02:56 AM PDT by jenbuff
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To: Millee
I assume the president’s going to say he got bad intelligence, Mr. Rangel said, adding that the danger to the levees was clear.

At least W has intelligence, Mr. Rangel

Yes, the danger to the levees was clear. Ragin put everyone into the Superdome. Blanco did nothing.

W declared a state of emergency BEFORE the hurricane hit.

But it's Bush's fault.

13 posted on 09/02/2005 10:03:19 AM PDT by FatherofFive (Choose life!)
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To: OldFriend

Was this Jr. or Sr.?????


14 posted on 09/02/2005 10:08:53 AM PDT by Coldwater Creek ("Over there, Over there, we will be there until it is Over there.")
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To: Millee

My tagline says it all.


15 posted on 09/02/2005 10:09:38 AM PDT by kevkrom ("Political looters" should be shot on sight)
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To: OldFriend

Good for you!


16 posted on 09/02/2005 10:12:57 AM PDT by Frank_2001
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To: mariabush
Jr. made the comments on FNC as part of a CBC presser.

I did not see it, I heard some of it on the radio while I was in the car.

My anger has barely subsided.

17 posted on 09/02/2005 10:13:13 AM PDT by OldFriend (MAJ. TAMMY DUCKWORTH ~ A NATIONAL TREASURE)
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To: rdb3

That would be ideal and is the way most of us play... unfortunately the hucksters and shills started the blame game and unless it is answered and answered strongly they will make their accusations true in the minds of the majority as they hear the same story over and over...

An earlier post lamented that regular people were already picking up and using the hyperbole of the left that we are spending money in Iraq that we should be spending in Louisana... not a clue of how the government works but a good bumper sticker


18 posted on 09/02/2005 10:14:04 AM PDT by RedEyeJack
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To: Mulch
Please point out where the problems are - in your opinion.

The problems here are strictly local in nature. The powers that be in Louisiana and the city of New Orleans have a lot to answer for in their pathetic handling of this event. Here is where the problems lie.

President Bush, racism, the media, the Congressional Black Caucus and Jesse Jackson are nothing more than scenery, and they are all irrelevant to the actual point.

This "argument" has gone too far, and can only portend even more trouble later. Much more trouble. And all of this is highly unnecessary.


19 posted on 09/02/2005 10:15:21 AM PDT by rdb3 (I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me. --Philippians 4:13)
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To: RedEyeJack
...not a clue of how the government works but a good bumper sticker

Well put.


20 posted on 09/02/2005 10:16:54 AM PDT by rdb3 (I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me. --Philippians 4:13)
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