Posted on 10/09/2012 11:29:48 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Unhappy with President Barack Obamas support of same-sex marriage, a group of African-American faith leaders have announced a campaign aimed at stripping 25 percent of the black vote that went to Obama in 2008 (95 percent).
The newly formed nonprofit group, God Said, will begin targeting voters in Ohio, Virginia, North Carolina, Wisconsin and Florida with television and radio advertising, as well as a grassroots campaign to encourage people to consider the gospel when they enter the voting booth.
The black community is among the most religious in America and we are offended that President Obama has announced his support of same-sex marriage, that the NAACP has blindly supported the secular views of the Democratic Party, and that their national platform plainly supports same-sex marriage, said Apostle Claver Kamau-Imani of RagingElephants.org, and a God Said founder, in a statement. I am confident that this message will be well received and acted upon on Election Day.
The group currently has 22 advisory board members and plans to spend an estimated $1 million on the campaign, a spokesperson told TheDC, adding that its message has support among other faith leaders and congregants, including the Coalition of African-American Pastors (CAAP), which has vociferously protested against Obamas same-sex marriage stance. Some of the CAAP members are on the God Said board.
During the 2008 elections, 70 percent of African Americans voted to ban same-sex marriage in California while they also voted for Barack Obama for president, added Dr. Alveda King, niece of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and black outreach director of the pro-life Priests for Life. We fully intend to shift 25 percent of the black vote from the 2008 election by charging every voter to examine each candidate and vote for the one that supports their core belief in natural marriage.
The group claims their goal is to give voice to black supporters of traditional marriage who feel like they are not represented by the Democratic Party or NAACP. To be sure, a vast majority of African Americans identify as Democratic.
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Since they voted twice, one must shoot for 50% to get the desired effect.
....ten days before Obama gave that speech, Congress had waived the Stafford Act requirement for Katrina. He was well aware of that fact,too. After all, [Obama] was one of only 14 senators to vote against the waiver. It was part of a bill to fund the war effort in Iraq. That is,to pander to his Bush-deranged, anti-war base, Obama decided that squeezing New Oleans was a price worth paying. Then,he lied about what happened in order to foment racial resentmentan atmosphere that he calculated would help his presidential bid.
Just as hes doing today."
During my walk today, I saw a rabid 2008 0 bummer gal's car that had a R/R sticker on the back window. She is black in a mixed race marriage.
Outlier.
Even thought I applaud their efforts, I fully expect Obama to get at least 93% of the black vote. However, barring fraud, I cannot imagine the turnout will be as larges as 08.
PRAISE THE LORD, finally.
They might stay home but they wont vote R....& I’ll take that.
Don’t mock these efforts. I’d bet 10% effective this year and that is all we need!!!
Kudos to these courageous Christians.
I agree. I think roughly the same percentage, but with fewer total black votes.
The black actresss political views prompted a backlash from fans online.
One Twitter user ranted, Youre an unemployed black woman endorsing Mitt Romney. Youre voting against yourself thrice. You poor beautiful idiot. Another responded, I guess Clueless star Stacey Dash endorsing Mitt Romney shows that she is indeed clueless.
Dash responded to her detractors with a simple tweet: My humble opinion EVERYONE is entitled to one.
Dash, who appeared on CNNs Piers Morgan Tonight on Tuesday, said shes concerned about the state of the country and wants the next four years to be different.
Dash also told Morgan that GOP vice-presidential candidate Paul Ryan reached out to her and thanked her for her support."
Remember the video, released the night before last week's debate, from June 5, 2007? The one where Obama alleged to a black audience that the federal government had not waived the Stafford Act requirements for New Orleans after Katrina like they did for New York after 9/11 or for Florida after Hurricane Andrew? The implication was obviously that this was because the federal government doesn't care as much about New Orleans or its "predominantly black" inhabitants.
Thomas Sowell clears up a bit about the president's then, ahem, "confusion" on this matter in his latest piece at Townhall:
"If you want to know what community organizers do, this is it -- rub people's emotions raw to hype their resentments. And this was Barack Obama in his old community organizer role, a role that should have warned those who thought that he was someone who would bring us together, when he was all too well practiced in the arts of polarizing us apart.
Why is the date of this speech important? Because, less than two weeks earlier, on May 24, 2007, the United States Senate had in fact voted 80-14 to waive the Stafford Act requirement for New Orleans, as it had waived that requirement for New York and Florida. More federal money was spent rebuilding New Orleans than was spent in New York after 9/11 and in Florida after hurricane Andrew, combined.
Truth is not a job requirement for a community organizer. Nor can Barack Obama claim that he wasn't present the day of that Senate vote, as he claimed he wasn't there when Jeremiah Wright unleashed his obscene attacks on America from the pulpit of the church that Obama attended for 20 years.
Unlike Jeremiah Wright's church, the U.S. Senate keeps a record of who was there on a given day. The Congressional Record for May 24, 2007 shows Senator Barack Obama present that day and voting on the bill that waived the Stafford Act requirement. Moreover, he was one of just 14 Senators who voted against -- repeat, AGAINST -- the legislation which included the waiver."
Not only was the Stafford Act waived by Congress two weeks before Barack Obama went all Kanye West in this speech in 2007, but Barack Obama voted against the bill that waived it. ........................"
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