Posted on 08/27/2012 3:11:01 AM PDT by ElIguana
It didn't take long for liberals in the blogosphere to make backhanded and blatantly false accusations of racism against Congressman Paul Ryan, and you're not going to believe the rationale used for leveling the accusation. Apparently, Paul Ryan is a racist because....
Here's the scoop. Kelli Goff, the political writer for The Root, informs us that Ryan not only has a "Black sister-in-law," but that "his 'college sweetheart' was African-American" as well.
And how, in heaven's name, do those facts make Ryan a racist? They don't, but that didn't stop Goff from using convoluted and almost comical 'reasoning' to make the clear and libelous implication.
As Goff explains it: "When someone finds himself on the ropes facing an allegation of racism, the go-to reflex defense is usually something along the lines of 'But some of my best friends are black!' Translation: 'I can't possibly be racist or racially insensitive because there are black people I like and they like me.'"
Did you catch the implication, and how Goff has now lowered the bar on accusations of racism to previously unheard of depths? If someone is actually capable of offering a legitimate behavior-based defense to a false and baseless accusations of racism, then that person must be a racist.
While the accusation is only implied, my mother, when she was alive would have called it a "backhanded accusation," Goff is clearly leading the reader to believe that Ryan must be a racist because, assuming someone actually came right out and made an explicit accusation of racism against Ryan, he would then be inclined to say; 'I have a Black sister-in-law and I dated an African-American girl in college' and, as everyone knows, the fact that Ryan would be inclined to plea the but-some-of-my-best-friends-are defense, constitutes undeniable proof of his racism, prior to the fact.
If you still didn't catch Goff's implication, don't waste your time thinking too hard. While her thesis is clearly ridiculous, judging by many of the comments from the Amen-Chorus on the article, it's more than clear that readers not only clearly understood the implication but also fell for it hook, line and sinker.
And if you're looking for any other evidence that Goff might be relying upon, say some quirk in Ryan's behavior or an incident in his past, to make the accusatory implication, don't bother, you won't find it, as the bulk of the remainder of Goff's article is devoted to what initially appears to be a dysfunctional and tangential hashing-up of old stories about the late-Senator Strom Thurmond, television commentator Lou Dobbs and Trayvon Martin's shooter George Zimmerman.
Later in the article it appears that Goff only went off onto the tangent as a means of working up to a broader point; as she put it; that "it is possible to have a black friend, Asian friend, Hispanic friend or Muslim friend or wife and still exhibit prejudice toward that group."
However, while it would be impossible to know Goff's intentions, it is interesting that she devoted so much type to Thurmond, Dobbs and Zimmerman. Guilt by association is a powerful weapon and her tangential ramblings did supply the perfect ruse for her to interject an association between Ryan and Thurmond, Dobbs and Zimmerman, people that Goff obviously assumes that her liberal readers view as villains, even though no association actually exists between these men.
And so, in The 'World According To Goff' one should not dismiss any claims of racism against Ryan that may surface in the future because it is entirely possible that a white person can have cordial and intimate relationships with minorities and still be a racist, and should accusations be made at some future time, and Ryan refers to his personal relationships as a defense, then the statement would not only be a clear admission of guilt, but would also place him in the esteemed company of Thurmond, Dobbs and Zimmerman.
While Goff's implications are clear (and clumsy), they may also be telegraphing what is yet to come as the presidential campaign unfolds. At least the rather mendacious odor of a set-up is in the air.
Will false, and more emphatically stated, accusations of racism against Ryan come at a later date, and if so, will some other journalist actually reference Goff's 'innocent observation' to bolster the false accusation after Ryan issues the logical response?
You can almost envision some liberal writing, at a future date, 'of course, this isn't the first accusation of racism against Ryan....' Would it be paranoid to suspect that there a set-up in the works?
Crystal Wright penned an excellent retort of Goff's backhanded hit-piece for Town Hall (a highly recommended read, by the way) in which she observes: "Referencing no examples of behavior by Ryan that could be viewed racist, Goff only suggests that one day Ryan may be faced with racist allegations and use the fact that he dated a black woman in college as his defense."
Wright isn't necessarily implying that there's more to come (then again, maybe she is, but let's not put words in her mouth), but her statement does provide some reassure that suspicions, at least in this particular case, wouldn't necessarily qualify a person for membership in the tin-foil-hat club.
At the very least, Goff's accusation is deplorable and her incredulous cry of innocence toward the end of the article that she's "not calling Ryan a racist," rings hollow. Goff's implication was clear. One only need ask, if Goff didn't intend to throw out a false and baseless accusation that Ryan is a racist, then why did she write the article in the first place?
The answer, of course, is that Goff intended to place the question into the political dialogue. As to her purpose, and whether more is to come, only time will tell.
Their motto should be: “win if you can, lose if you must, but always play the race card; in case of emergency....blame Bush”.
Their motto should be: “win if you can, lose if you must, but always play the race card; in case of emergency....blame Bush”.
The slant on this story is all wrong.
The story that Ryan can say he isn’t a racist because he has a black sister in law or because he dated a black is so much BS.
The story is meant to appeal to real racist voters who will not want to vote for Ryan because he has a black sister in law and dated a black woman.
Hell-— in todays America we all have a relative who married a black or had a child by one.Most of us even have a homosexual in the family somewhere.As for dating a black woman, I would have to see a picture of her.It might upset me if she looked like Whoopi Goldberg.
Every Jim Crow law ever written, enacted or enforced was done so by democrats
Goff? Any relation to Stan Goff, the communist military black ops specialist so proud of doing shady tasks for the Democrats?
Heck! Joe Biden’s a racist because he referred to BO as “clean and articulate”, implying that African Americans are usually NOT “clean and aticulate”.
~ Larry Elder, "The Ten Things You Can't Say In America"
But as far as being a racist, it doesn't matter if Ryan had married a black woman or was part black himself. Like George Zimmerman (who has a black grandparent), Ryan would be a white African-American who hates himself and is identifying with his "oppressor." There is no ideological contortion libs won't make to justify their insane racial views.
These people are mentally unstable.
I’m glad I let off steam with video games and by playing guitar.
A shared feature of virtually all totalitarian states and cultures is the tactical use of accusation as evidence of guilt as a further means of invalidating political opponents. To be charged by the state or its supporters is to be guilty, since why would one be charged if one were truly innocent?
Instrumental in making this tactic successful is the acquiescence of a state-run or state-friendly news media, which parrots the approved narrative while denying the validity of opponents, without dispassionate consideration of either facts or argumentation.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Roy Medvedev and other Soviet dissidents have painstakingly documented such tactics as practiced under Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev. In those days, it was difficult to imagine an America so far gone down the path of socialist orthodoxy, news media uniformity and cultural complicity that the merest accusation would effectively serve as proof of guilt, justifying social condemnation. I find increasingly that this is no longer the case.
Witness the common behavior of all Democrat Party spokespersons, whether named Axelrod, Wasserman-Schultz, LaBolt, or Plouffe. Seemingly within minutes of a Republican or conservative offering any comment deemed "controversial" by the Left, the comment is offered as proof of guilt of (choose: racism, sexism, homophobia, bigotry, intolerance, etc.) and then extended to smear all Republicans/conservatives with the same tar-soaked brush.
Regardless of what one thinks of Missouri's Todd Akin and his ill-considered thoughts on rape and conception, the accusation-as-guilt tactic has been employed against him, and at least to this moment, it has been done successfully.
I would love to know what Paul Ryan’s black girlfriend looked like. Did she look like Beyonce or did she look like Sheila Jackson Lee?
I hope she comes out on the National Enquirer soon.
LLS
Once black, but not back (instead of “never back.”) He must be a racist!
And I had two black roomies at Goodfellow AFB in 1960.
On the other hand, if he had never mentioned it, they could accuse him of trying to hide it !!!
I agree, and while I could be wrong, it’s entirely possible that someone is attempting to lay the groundwork for a follow-up (also false) allegation... the MSM does this with some frequency.
As for Akin, he’s not the first politician to make a stupid gaff, it’s actually very common, but rarely gets reported; and I know in my heart that some party elites wanted to tank his candidacy and were simply waiting for the right excuse. The story was simply blown out of proportion too far and too fast... it smells of a coordinated effort.
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