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Obama's Oblique Race Card
American Thinker ^
| January 01, 2008
| Lee Cary
Posted on 01/02/2008 8:58:06 PM PST by neverdem
Barack Obama's new stump speech employs the homiletically lyrical style of his well-received Jefferson-Jackson Day delivery, while making oblique reference to the race card.
On December 27, Barak Obama rolled out his new, revised stump speech to Iowa voters. The speech uses several literary techniques typical of Old Testament Hebrew poetic parallelism. For example:
[Synthetic parallelism where successive lines add to the first.]
I've met Maytag workers who labored all their lives only to see their jobs shipped overseas, who now compete with their teenagers for $7-an-hour jobs at Wal-Mart.
I've spoken with teachers who are working at doughnut shops after school just to make ends meet, who are still digging into their own pockets for pay for school supplies.
[Antithetic parallelism finds the second part of the line contrasting with the first.]
I've spoken to veterans who talk with pride about what they've accomplished in Afghanistan and Iraq, but who nevertheless think of those they've left behind and question the wisdom of our mission in Iraq...
[Climatic parallelism follows successive lines to a climax.]
Just two weeks ago, I heard a young woman in Cedar Rapids who told me she only gets three hours of sleep, because she works the night shift after a full day of college, and still can't afford health care for her sister with cerebral palsy. She spoke not with self-pity, but with determination, and wonders why the government isn't doing more to help her afford the education that will allow her to live out her dreams. [climax bolded]
Obama's new stump speech continues his oratorical practice, patterned after Dr. Martin Luther King's "I Have A Dream" speech, wherein identical lead-in words, followed by slight shifts in meaning, are repeated at the beginning of a series of sentences, most notably at or near the close of a delivery. For example, at the close of his new speech, Obama said:
We've already beaten odds that the cynics said couldn't be beaten. When we started 10 months ago...
[T]hey said we couldn't run a different kind of campaign.
They said we couldn't compete without taking money from Washington lobbyists...
They said we couldn't be successful if we didn't have the full support of the establishment...
They said we wouldn't have a chance in this campaign unless...
Then, as a political altar call, Obama moves into his close with a five-fold repetition of "believe."
Because I know that when the American people believe in something, it happens.
If you believe, then we can tell the lobbyists that their days...
If you believe, then we can stop making promises to American workers...
If you believe, we can offer a world-class education to every child...
If you believe, we can save this planet and end our dependence...
If you believe, we can end this war, close Guantanamo, restore our standing...
While Republican candidate Mike Huckabee has gained the most media attention for using religion to promote his candidacy, Barack Obama has made the most effective use of speech patterns from American church sermonizing. The leading public figure in that venue from the 20
th Century was Dr. King. As Obama did in his Jefferson-Jackson Day speech, he invoked Dr. King's phrase, "the fierce urgency of now," as a key concept of his candidacy. He
used it again on
Meet The Press, December 30
th. We will likely hear it again, and often.
MLK overlaid the language of Christian eschatological expectations onto the Civil Rights Movement, most notably Jesus' non-violence, and blended it with Old Testament exodus motifs, likening himself to Moses leading an oppressed people to a new land.
Obama is implicitly packaging himself as the leader of a people wandering in a political wilderness, escape from which requires the eschatological "fierce urgency of now" that demands radical change. Change that he alone claims to be able to bring. His language is a whole lot more linguistically crafted and artful than Hillary's policy-wonk approach (e.g., her Christmas TV ad) and Edward's divisive Two Americas theme.
Obama's oratory displays implied biblical imagery applied to a partisan political setting. If truth is the first casualty of war, then history is stressed by political speechmaking. In the context of making the case that his candidacy is about both change (Clinton's co-theme, along with experience) and hope, Obama offers five (numbering added) historical episodes to illustrate how hope and change are linked.
I know that hope has been the guiding force behind the most improbable changes this country has ever made. [1] In the face of tyranny, it's what led a band of colonists to rise up against an Empire. [2] In the face of slavery, it's what fueled the resistance of the slave and the abolitionist, [3] and what allowed a president to chart a treacherous course to ensure that the nation would not continue half slave and half free. [4] In the face of war and Depression, it's what led the greatest of generations to free a continent and heal a nation. [5] In the face of oppression, it's what led young men and women to sit at lunch counters and brave fire hoses and march through the streets of Selma and Montgomery for freedom's cause. That's the power of hope - to imagine, and then work for, what had seemed impossible before.
The concepts of hope and change are, of course, inseparable. Only a masochist undertakes the role of change agent against determined opposition without the hope of, at least, partial success. But, was not the "guiding force" behind [1] the American Revolution, the drive for independence from a distant taxing and controlling government; [2] the abolitionist movement, the zeal for freedom; [3] Lincoln's wartime leadership, including the suspension of habeas corpus, his overriding objective to save the Union; [4] the self-sacrifice of the World War II generation, their all-consuming drive toward victory; and [5] the Civil Rights Movement, a non-violent appeal for justice? After all, hope alone is no virtue. Even despots are driven by hope that their tyranny will succeed.
Three of the five historical illustrations chosen by Obama's speech writers are race-related. That can be no accident. One illustration blatantly promotes revisionist history. Abraham Lincoln resisted Confederate succession with force of arms not to free the slaves, but to save the Union.
Putting aside whether it yields him the votes to win, is there anything worthy of criticism with regard to Senator Barak Obama's somewhat oblique playing of the race card?
As an American Thinker, that's for you to answer.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: barakhusseinobama; barakobama; obama; racecard; stumpspeech
1
posted on
01/02/2008 8:58:09 PM PST
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
And,
"If you believe"...... That this unaccomplished junior Senator from Illinois - Senator Barack Hussein Obama can change ANY of that, then I've got several bridges I'd like to sell you...
2
posted on
01/02/2008 9:06:25 PM PST
by
river rat
(Semper Fi - You may turn the other cheek, but I prefer to look into my enemy's vacant dead eyes.)
To: neverdem
He still won’t admit he is half white and is a Muslum.
3
posted on
01/02/2008 9:13:12 PM PST
by
freekitty
((May the eagles long fly our beautiful and free American sky.))
To: freekitty
Well, I believe, but obviously not what Obabama mama believes, no ifs, ands, or buts about it.
4
posted on
01/02/2008 9:23:39 PM PST
by
Karliner
("Things are more like they are now than they ever were before. DDE)
To: freekitty
Well, I believe, but obviously not what Obabama mama believes, no ifs, ands, or buts about it.
5
posted on
01/02/2008 9:23:42 PM PST
by
Karliner
("Things are more like they are now than they ever were before. DDE)
To: neverdem
Sharia law will fix all of that.
6
posted on
01/02/2008 9:24:14 PM PST
by
Mad_Tom_Rackham
(Elections have consequences.)
To: Karliner
7
posted on
01/02/2008 9:35:00 PM PST
by
freekitty
((May the eagles long fly our beautiful and free American sky.))
To: river rat
If the American public is so dim that they can make sense of the bit about veterans being “proud of their accomplishments”, but still “questioning our mission in Iraq”, they deserve what they get. Does that sound incongruous to anyone else? To me it makes no sense. Veterans, I think, would be likely to think one thing or the other, but not both simultaneously. They seem mutually exclusive.
The fact that Barack Hussein Obama adds, into the exact middle of this statement, that veterans “think of those they’ve left behind”, places a spotlight on his glaring naivety. EVERY veteran who has ever served during war, I daresay, thinks of "those they've left behind". It is too obvious an observation.
8
posted on
01/02/2008 10:02:52 PM PST
by
singfreedom
("Victory at all costs,.....for without victory there is no survival." Winston Churchill)
To: freekitty
He still wont admit he is half white ...
From adolescence onward, Obama
wanted a race to belong to, a team whose accomplishments would reflect well upon him. Of course, it was unthinkable in his liberal white family to take pride in the achievements of his mothers race, so Obama gloried in being part of his absent fathers race.
From the age of ten onward, though, Obama desperately wants to be black: I was trying to raise myself to be a black man in America, and beyond the given of my appearance, no one around me seemed to know exactly what that meant. Honolulus paucity of African-Americans means he has to learn to be black from the media: TV, movies, the radio; those were places to start. Pop culture was color-coded, after all, an arcade of images from which you could cop a walk, a talk, a step, a style.
He cherishes every cause for complaint he can discern
against white folks. He is constantly distressed at being half-white. Obama says he ceased to advertise my mothers race at the age of twelve or thirteen, when I began to suspect that by doing so I was ingratiating myself to whites,
When his grandmother wants a ride to work because the day before, while awaiting the bus, she was threatened by a black panhandler, he is outraged -- at his grandparents.
Later, when he moves to the South Side of Chicago in 1984, he eventually discovers that, like his grandmother, hes sometimes scared of black males on the street, too.
The Obama File
9
posted on
01/03/2008 4:38:40 AM PST
by
Beckwith
(Dhimmicrats and the liberal media have chosen sides -- Islamofascism)
To: singfreedom
You are correct of course in your observations....
Too bad more folks aren’t more attentive and critical of the meaningless babble “clever” writers put into the mouths of inadequate politicians....
The mere fact that many Americans would actually vote for Obama as President — should give folks pause to consider the depth to which this Republic has sunk to consider such a shallow and unaccomplished individual for President...
Then, to have the a$$ clown play with cute words and sentiments to politicize war or warrior’s losses to his political gain is unforgivable.
10
posted on
01/03/2008 5:54:50 AM PST
by
river rat
(Semper Fi - You may turn the other cheek, but I prefer to look into my enemy's vacant dead eyes.)
To: potlatch; PhilDragoo; ntnychik; MeekOneGOP; Beckwith; Alamo-Girl
11
posted on
01/03/2008 6:13:52 AM PST
by
devolve
(---- - Hey Boone! - My bonus check is late again! -)
To: devolve
Muslim Americans for Obama '08' features the masthead comment,
"DONATE TODAY: One $1 DOLLAR for ONE NATION UNDER GOD"
In case there is any doubt as to which "God" these folks are speaking of, the first two paragraphs make it abundantly clear.
With God's Name ~ Quran 49:13 Oh Mankind! We have created you male and female, and have made you nations and tribes that you may know one another. The best of you, in the sight of God, is the best in conduct. Allah is the best knower, aware.
As Salaam Alaikum, (The Peace of God Be Upon You) and welcome to Muslim Americans for Obama'08.
Interesting, an endorsement instead of a fatwah
Oh, and
here is the video of Obama disrespecting the Flag and the Anthem
One must ask, Is Obama simply following
this advice from "Ask the Imam?"
Question: Could we sing national anthem and say the plegde of allegience to the secular state while the flag is being raised up?
Answer: As Muslims, our pledge of allegiance is only to Allah and His Rasul (Sallallaahu Alayhi Wasallam). However, as Muslims in a non-Muslim state, we are obliged to follow the laws of the country which are not contrary to Shariah.
The allegiance of pledge by singing the national anthem of a secular state which has many un-Islamic laws, for example, legalising homosexuality, lesbianism, pornography, etc. is not permissible.
And Allah Taãla Knows Best.
Was salaam
Mufti Ebrahim Desai
Or
this?
Question: Should I stand up for the national anthem? Should I stand up when a judge enters the court and everyone is ordered to stand up?
Answer: 1. No.
2. It is not necessary to stand up, you should not do so.
and Allah Taala Knows Best
Mufti Ebrahim Desai
The Obama File
12
posted on
01/03/2008 8:00:53 AM PST
by
Beckwith
(Dhimmicrats and the liberal media have chosen sides -- Islamofascism)
To: devolve
To: devolve
I love this post, it’s great!!
14
posted on
01/03/2008 12:14:26 PM PST
by
potlatch
("Life may not be the party we hoped for, but while we're here we might as well dance!")
To: potlatch
.
Thanks potlatch!
I had to estimate placement of .gifs
15
posted on
01/03/2008 1:04:12 PM PST
by
devolve
(---- - Hey Boone! - My bonus check is late again! -)
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