Posted on 01/10/2010 8:49:23 PM PST by Federalist Patriot
Seems to me that Barack has a “Negra” dialect.
Sharpton is jerk, but I must say this entire segment makes my mind go numb.
When will people tire of this stupidity?
Ann was not as fast on her feet as I would have liked her to be. She forgot “Macaca” and the heat George Allen took over it.
How about the stupid "Maccaca" thing from a few years ago? How about Kanye West and "George Bush hates black people"? How about Clarence Thomas not being a real black person? How about the cartoon of Condoleeza Rice as a parrot with enormous lips?
Democrats use race as a weapon against Republicans, be they black or white.
But Reid gets a pass.
Reid is wrong on facts. Note when BO discusses anyone that disagrees with him, and states a “straw man” of their position, then scratches just below his eye with his “traffic finger” thus dismissing.
The Demonrats also called Rice "Congoleezza."
Good grief! ..And of course there was Trent Lott praising Strom Thurmond at a birthday party, and Danny Glover’s cab stunt in NYC to try to smear Giuliani in his race against Dinkins, and the Democrats’ disgusting anti-Bush TV ads showing a pickup truck dragging chains and a narrator proclaiming, “black churches will burn”...
Those examples are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the rats pulling race cards out of their sleeves to use against Republicans.
apropos to nothing..what is Condoleeza doing these days?
I don’t know offhand.
She’s back at Stanford now. She’s an academic.
Coulter may have done better, but she got to Sharpton and made him very, very nervous. You could tell because of the way he felt compelled to to keep trying to touch her hands etc... To me this was an unconscious showing his anxiety.
According to Al racism is just great. As long as you are supporting a black for elected office. Hmm. OK. I get it.
The man is certifiable.
On July 6, 2008 Jesse Jackson said that Barack Obama was “talking down to black people ... telling n—rs how to behave, but relatively little has been said by his peers.
In April 2007 Al Sharpton and other Civil Rights activists led a campaign to have radio talk show personality Don Imus fired after he did a parody of gangsta rappers, referring to the Rutgers Women’s basketball team as some “nappy headed hoes.”
One only needs to read the comments of Snoop Doggy Dawg, who said he and his friends rap about ho’s that’s in the ‘hood that ain’t doing sh—, that’s trying to get a n-—a for his money, to reason that Imus was poking fun at the disrespectful terms that many black rappers use to describe women and not at all incinuating that he himself felt that way.
Don Imus clearly made his controversial remarks in jest. Jesse Jackson did not. Yet Al Sharpton and former head of the NAACP, Bruce Gordon, who both vehemently called for the firing of Don Imus in April 2007, have not demanded a boycott of Jesse Jackson.
Affect(ing) a black accent to recount San Francisco mayor Willie Brown asking) “Who is this “Emily List? She’s supportin’ all these people. She’s supportin’ Sen. Dianne Feinstein. She’s supported Sen. Barbara Boxer....She supported everybody. Why won’t she support me?” — Hillary Clinton. Source: John Broder of the LA Times
“You’d find these potentates from down in Africa, you know, rather than eating each other, they’d just come up and get a good square meal in Geneva.” — Fritz Hollings (D, S.C.)
“Is you their black-haired answer-mammy who be smart? Does they like how you shine their shoes, Condoleezza? Or the way you wash and park the whitey’s cars?” — Song from the show of left-wing radio host Neil Rogers
“Republicans bring out Colin Powell and J.C. Watts because they have no program, no policy. They have no love and no joy. They’d rather take pictures with black children than feed them.” — Donna Brazile, Al Gore’s Campaign Manager for the 2000 election
(On Clarence Thomas) “A handkerchief-head, chicken-and-biscuit-eating Uncle Tom.” — Spike Lee
“Rather I should die a thousand times, and see Old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen from the wilds.” — Former Klansman and current US Senator Robert Byrd, a man who is referred to by many Democrats as the “conscience of the Senate”, in a letter written in 1944, after he quit the KKK.
“These laws [segregation] are still constitutional and I promise you that until they are removed from the ordinance books of Birmingham and the statute books of Alabama, they will be enforced in Birmingham to the utmost of my ability and by all lawful means.” — Democrat Bull Connor (1957), Commissioner of Public Safety for Birmingham, Alabama
“I’ll have those n*ggers voting Democratic for the next 200 years.” — Lyndon B. Johnson to two governors on Air Force One according Ronald Kessler’s Book, “Inside The White House”
“I think one man is just as good as another so long as he’s not a n*gger or a Chinaman. Uncle Will says that the Lord made a White man from dust, a nigger from mud, then He threw up what was left and it came down a Chinaman. He does hate Chinese and Japs. So do I. It is race prejudice, I guess. But I am strongly of the opinion Negroes ought to be in Africa, Yellow men in Asia and White men in Europe and America.” Harry Truman (1911) in a letter to his future wife Bess
“Theres some people whove gone over the state and said, Well, George Wallace has talked too strong about segregation. Now let me ask you this: how in the name of common sense can you be too strong about it? Youre either for it or youre against it. Theres not any middle ground as I know of.” — Democratic Alabama Governor George Wallace (1959)
“I want to go up to the closest white person and say: ‘You can’t understand this, it’s a black thing’ and then slap him, just for my mental health.” — Charles Barron, a New York city councilman at a reparations rally, 2002
“Civil rights laws were not passed to protect the rights of white men and do not apply to them.” — Mary Frances Berry, Chairwoman, US Commission on Civil Rights
(I) “will not let the white boys win in this election.” — Donna Brazile, Al Gore’s Campaign Manager on the 2000 election
“There are white n*ggers. I’ve seen a lot of white n*ggers in my time.” — Former Klansman and Current US Senator Robert Byrd, a man who is referred to by many Democrats as the “conscience of the Senate” in March of 2001
“The Medicaid system must have been developed by a white male slave owner. It pays for you to be pregnant and have a baby, but it won’t pay for much family planning.” — Jocelyn Elders
The white man is our mortal enemy, and we cannot accept him. I will fight to see that vicious beast go down into the lake of fire prepared for him from the beginning, that he never rise again to give any innocent black man, woman or child the hell that he has delighted in pouring on us for 400 years.” — Louis Farrakhan who campaigned for congresswoman Cynthia McKinney in 2002, City College audience in New York
“There’s no great, white bigot; there’s just about 200 million little white bigots out there.” — USA Today columnist Julienne Malveaux
“We have lost to the white racist press and to the racist reactionary Jewish misleaders.” — Former Rep. Gus Savage (D-Illinois) after his defeat 1992
“White folks was in caves while we was building empires... We taught philosophy and astrology and mathematics before Socrates and them Greek homos ever got around to it.” — Rev. Al Sharpton in a 1994 speech at Kean College, NJ, cited in “Democrats Do the Dumbest Things
“The white race is the cancer of human history.” — Susan Sontag
“Reparations are a really good way for white people to admit they’re wrong.” — Zack Webb, University Of Kentucky NAACP
1987: Sharpton spreads the incendiary Tawana Brawley hoax, insisting heatedly that a 15-year-old black girl was abducted, raped, and smeared with feces by a group of white men. He singles out Steve Pagones, a young prosecutor. Pagones is wholly innocent the crime never occurred but Sharpton taunts him: If were lying, sue us, so we can . . . prove you did it. Pagones does sue, and eventually wins a $345,000 verdict for defamation. To this day, Sharpton refuses to recant his unspeakable slander or to apologize for his role in the odious affair.
1991: A Hasidic Jewish driver in Brooklyns Crown Heights section accidentally kills Gavin Cato, a 7-year-old black child, and antisemitic riots erupt. Sharpton races to pour gasoline on the fire. At Gavins funeral he rails against the diamond merchants code for Jews with the blood of innocent babies on their hands. He mobilizes hundreds of demonstrators to march through the Jewish neighborhood, chanting, No justice, no peace. A rabbinical student, Yankel Rosenbaum, is surrounded by a mob shouting Kill the Jews! and stabbed to death.
1995: When the United House of Prayer, a large black landlord in Harlem, raises the rent on Freddys Fashion Mart, Freddys white Jewish owner is forced to raise the rent on his subtenant, a black-owned music store. A landlord-tenant dispute ensues; Sharpton uses it to incite racial hatred. We will not stand by, he warns malignantly, and allow them to move this brother so that some white interloper can expand his business. Sharptons National Action Network sets up picket lines; customers going into Freddys are spat on and cursed as traitors and Uncle Toms. Some protesters shout, Burn down the Jew store! and simulate striking a match. Were going to see that this cracker suffers, says Sharptons colleague Morris Powell. On Dec. 8, one of the protesters bursts into Freddys, shoots four employees point-blank, then sets the store on fire. Seven employees die in the inferno.
If Sharpton were a white skinhead, he would be a political leper, spurned everywhere but the fringe. But far from being spurned, he is shown much deference. Democrats embrace him. Politicians court him. And journalists report on his comings and goings while politely sidestepping his career as a hatemongering racial hustler.
Sharpton aide named Perry McKinnon stepped forward to make a remarkable series of disclosures. A former police officer, private investigator, and director of security at a Brooklyn Hospital, McKinnon revealed that Sharpton acknowledged to me early on that The [Brawley] story do sound like bull-—t, but it dont matter. Were building a movement. This is the perfect issue. Because youve got whites on blacks. Thats an easy way to stir up all the deprived people, who would want to believe and who would believeand all [youve] got to do is convince themthat all white people are bad. Then youve got a movement. Explaining that Sharpton was methodically building an atmosphere for a race war, McKinnon continued: Sharpton told me it dont matter whether any whites did it or not. Something happened to her...even if Tawana done it to herself. To prove his truthfulness, McKinnon submitted to a lie detector test administered on camera and passed all questions.
When Pagones sued Sharpton for defamation of character in 1997, the latter portrayed himself as a wrongly persecuted man of honor who, mysteriously, could no longer recall having made a number of his slanderous accusations against Pagones and other law-enforcement officials years earlier. When asked whether he had made even the slightest attempt to verify Brawleys allegations about Pagones before going public with them, Sharpton self-righteously retorted, I would not engage in sex talk with a 15-year-old girl.
Pagones won a court judgment against Sharpton for $345,000, which Sharpton never paid. Moreover, during the decade prior to Pagones long-awaited vindication in court, the former prosecutor had suffered constant stress and anxiety (exacerbated by numerous death threats from Sharptons credulous followers) that contributed heavily to the devastating dissolution of Pagones marriage and the virtual ruin of his life. In comparison to what Sharpton did, Don Imus recent transgression seems rather minor, doesnt it? And unlike Imus, Sharpton has neverin twenty yearshad the courage or the decency to acknowledge what he did and to apologize for it. Never.
But the Brawley hoax was merely one of the early chapters in Sharptons long career as a peddler of racial grievance. Consider his response to the 1989 case of a white female jogger who was raped and beaten nearly to death in New Yorks Central Park by a gang of at least 30 black and Hispanic teenagers who later acknowledged that they had specifically set out to target a white woman. Fracturing her skull with a lead pipe and mutilating her face with a brick, the assailants left the woman for dead. She lost three quarters of her blood in the attack and was so badly mangled that even her boyfriend was able to recognize her only by a familiar ring on her finger. When investigators later asked one of the attackers why he had tried to smash the victim skull, he candidly replied, It was fun. A multiracial jury convicted several of the defendants on the basis of their own confessions. But Sharpton, who served as an adviser to the boys families, said the defendants had been framed by a racist justice system. At one point during the trial, he escorted Tawana Brawley into the courtroom in an attempt to illustrate the alleged inequities of that system. Those boys arent guilty for what happened to the jogger, Sharpton said. This is just like the old Scottsboro Boys case.
Does anyone think Obama has ever eaten Fried chicken and waffles?
There is no shame in being a black man.
I hate this BS that no whites may enter.
Al Sharpton: “Jewing the Numbers Up And Down”
So are they going to keep Jewing numbers up and down until they can try to get two guys because they wanted school (unintelligible) they can do it..
If the Jews want to get it on, tell them to pin their yarmulkes back and come over to my house.”
Rev. Al Sharpton during the Crown Heights crisis in New York City in 1991
Sharpton and Jackson are dueling over who will be the nation’s best-paid race hustler, a lucrative occupation. For example: According to the Wall Street Journal, the owners of the Word Network, which is devoted to running black church services, pay Sharpton and Jackson roughly $10,000 per protest to demonstrate at the headquarters of cable operators that don’t yet carry Word. A Sharpton-led protest in March 2002 prompted a St. Louis operator to begin carrying the cable network.
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