Posted on 03/18/2008 6:27:46 PM PDT by goldstategop
I grew up on the south side of Chicago in the 1970s and 1980s so I have a bit of local interest in Senator Barack Obamas race for the White House.
Obama and his family live in my old neighborhood, Hyde Park. My siblings and I all attended our local public high school Kenwood Academy. Obamas wife Michelle went to Whitney Young High School. The city swimming championship was always held there. My older brothers were members of Kenwoods swim team. Aside from its swimming pool, I never saw much of Whitney Young. It was a magnet school. But my parents always said that didnt mean much. All of Chicagos public schools were basically horrible.
Kenwood was reclassified an academy rather than a regular high school sometime in the 1970s. It was the principals way of expelling the gang members from the school. In the Chicago public school system, if you attended an academy and werent passing your classes you could be expelled. I understand that the distinction was removed a couple of years after I graduated in 1987, and the school rapidly declined to its previous status as a gang and drug infested flophouse for adolescents. The year after I graduated, in a sign of what was happening, the school authorities installed metal detectors at all the entrances.
When I went to Kenwood, the school was 85 percent black and 15 percent other. The others were mainly white with a sprinkling of Asians and Latinos. Going to school there probably gave me a somewhat skewed view of the reality of race relations in America, because the only bigotry I experienced was black bigotry against whites.
I was one of the only white girls on the track team and my coach, Joyce Brown was quite a black bigot. She made every white girl on the team run the mile and two mile. Only the black girls could sprint. It didnt matter to her that I was better at the 200 than the mile. When I asked to run sprints, she just said, No, thats not for you girl. So I quit.
I was in 9th grade in the lead-up to the 1984 presidential elections. Most of the kids in the school were fired up about Jesse Jacksons candidacy. I was personally offended by their support for a man who referred to New York as a hymietown, and I let my feelings be known. I dont think that anyone thought worse of me for saying I didnt support a man who was anti-Jewish. But then, it never occurred to me to care. If they had thought worse of me for standing up for my rights as a Jew, then that was their problem, not mine.
At any rate, I remembered my exchanges with my classmates about Jackson today as I read Obamas speech about race and his pastor Jeremiah White. It was an excellent speech as far as it goes. But it left me feeling very uneasy about the quality of Obamas character.
I was 13 years old when I stood up alone to all my classmates and told them that I thought they should be ashamed of themselves for supporting an anti-Semite for president. I was a child. But Obama came to Wright as an adult. And as an adult, he sat through 20 years of Wrights anti-white, anti-Jewish, and anti-American vitriol and said nothing. Indeed, until just a few months ago, he was honoring him as his spiritual mentor. What does that say about him?
As a child, I thought that my track coach was discriminating against me because I was white and so I got up and left. When he -- as an adult -- heard his pastor spewing poison, he never said anything and he didnt quit.
It can be argued that there is a difference between how I reacted to black bigotry and how he reacted to black bigotry because I was an outsider and he was an insider. I wasnt trying to become a member of the black community. I was simply demanding to be treated with respect as a non-black by blacks who happened to be the vast majority of my classmates and teachers.
But then, heres another example.
In January, I spoke at an anti-jihad conference in Dallas, TX. It was organized by a group called the America Truth Forum. Basically, it was a conclave of an anti-jihad public with anti-jihad speakers. That is, we were all members of the same ideological community or so I thought when I agreed to attend.
One of the speakers on my panel was an older man named Paul Williams. I had never heard his name before. He approached me before the panel and flattered me, saying that I was the best writer around. So it goes without saying that I was not ill-disposed to him.
But then he began to speak; and pure poison came out. He began his remarks by telling the audience of mainly religious Christians that some woman had told him that he is a prophet. That already had me questioning his character. But then he went on, giving incorrect statements about Muslims. Rather than provide information about jihadist doctrine or infiltration of American mosques, he simply began demonizing Muslims as a group. They became this amorphous other incapable of individual choices or actions. It was bigotry pure and simple.
And so, I walked off the stage and out of the hall. I didnt return until he finished speaking and when I returned, I refused to shake his hand or have anything to do with him.
I saw that the audience had given him a standing ovation and so I began to wonder if I shouldnt simply return the check I had received from the organizers and leave. But I decided to stay and to challenge him.
And that is what I did. I quietly and forcefully explained why what Williams said was wrong, un-American, and in defiance of both Christian and Jewish values and approaches to human beings. And, as luck would have it, I received an even larger standing ovation than Williams did.
The point here is that I didnt nod my head to fit in, or treat him politely simply because we sat on a stage together. And I didnt surrender the floor to him. We were supposedly on the same side, but his statements were so contrary to what I believe that it occurred to me that Id rather be shopping with Nancy Pelosi than sitting through his hateful nastiness.
And I write all of this not to puff myself up. I dont think I did anything extraordinary by standing up to Williams or to my classmates and teachers in high school. I think that it is how people should behave particularly if they are smart enough to understand that ideas are important. And Obama is certainly smart enough to understand that ideas are important.
Obamas denunciation of Wrights bigotry amounts to too little too late. The time to stand up to him wasnt now, when his association with Wright is sinking his hopes for the White House. The time to have stood up to Wright was when Obama was just another member of his church. If he truly believes in what he says he believes, he should have walked out of Wrights church or grabbed Wrights microphone and told his fellow churchgoers that Wright was wrong and that they mustnt hate. In twenty years of attending Wrights church, why didnt Obama once stand before his fellow church members and tell them that they mustnt hate their country and their fellow Americans?
The fact that he didnt, and the fact that he upheld this man until just a few months ago as his spiritual mentor and still refuses to condemn him and his deeply flawed character tells me everything I need to know about Barack Obama. I think that he is an opportunistic, weak man. I hope and pray that he doesnt become President.
How do you think he hooked up with Wright? He met Wright when he was doing community service and they immediately hit it off, but Wright told him that it would benefit his work, if he would join a church because most of the people that he was working with went to church. So Obama joined Wright's church. Wright taught Obama a lot about crowd control (manipulation) and when Obama went to Harvard Law, he took a set of Wright tapes with him to practice imitating Wright's style. He was so good that he became known for his persuasive southern minister style speeches at law school.
They both oppose racism. However, for Glick, it seems that she's only against racism toward her 'race,' while dismissing racism towards others.'
Glick also seems to share something with Jeremiah Wright: anger toward another 'race' due to members of that 'race' being racist to her when she was growing up.
The same seems to be the case for a lot of 'white' freepers who will harp on and on about racism toward 'whites' while simultaneously pretending that it doesn't happen to 'blacks' (especially) or other 'races.'
What do you know? Racists of a feather flock together--even though they might not realize it.
People of all 'races' who have been subjected to racism should have an ability to empathize and understand each other due to their common experience. Instead, they just become racists themselves.
Barack Obama comment about Rev. Wright:
The man I met more than twenty years ago is a man who helped introduce me to my Christian faith
And before Obama was introduced to his Christian faith he was a _____________ ?
What kind of racist are you?
Ping!
Very good points... very good points, indeed.
Excellent article, thanks for posting it!
He doesn’t have to fool Israel, just Liberal American Jews. Who, for whatever reason, are really easily fooled.
That’s a really damn good question!
Good eye. Easy to miss in all the high-sounding gobbledygook.
Where might we find her great review of BO?
Golly Gee it’s PC victomolgy @ it’s finest:
People of all ‘races’ who have been subjected to racism should have an ability to empathize and understand each other due to their common experience.
I hope one of the media biggies get around to asking that question.
This was an excellent post! Like the old saying, “the only thing needed for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.”
Obama doesn't oppose racism.
One is not born Muslim, one chooses to be a Muslim. If someone chooses to join the KKK, one is a bigot. If one chooses to join the ranks of Islam, one is a death cultist. Not an ordinary stiff. Ordinary stiffs do not join religions bases on world conquest, torture and murder.
I guess I just have a hard time trusting people who's highest religous ideal is to be a mass murderer.
Again, I don't think that this is the main point of the thread, but Caroline Glick said it adequately. The average nominal Muslim is more interested in earning a living and raising his family than he is in Islam.
I guess it is a glass half empty and a glass half full kind of thing. The only problem is it is not water in the glass but human blood. And Islam is dripping constantly the teachings that the glass must not be just full but over flowing. Drop by drop that glass fills till your nominal neighbor decides to get up in the morning and shave all his body hair, perfume his body and wait for you out side your door this morning to slit your throat ear to ear as you walk to your car.
It is not bigotry to have little tolerance for evil. And Islam is evil. So is tolerance of evil. I hold up the Palestinian Authority for a perfect example. Here is Islam in a nut shell, a group of Arabs that lived in peace under Israel's rule and made a decent living. They had voting rights, social security, hospital care and they had and have the greatist free ride on the world welfare system. The fruits of this tolerance is that now in a poll taken in the last week, 84% of them cheer a school yard killer of Jewish religious students. They kill people in the streets, in their beds, lob mortars on housing tracts, and cut your throats in the streets. They are slowly, with billions of dollars of free cash from liberals all converting to radical Islam.
It is kinda like weeds in the garden, tolerate them and you will have a garden of weeds and no food.
To nail my point home, let me say that the 84% demographic is in Carolyn Glicks backyard. In her neighborhood, the "average nominal Muslim" is down to 16% of the popluation.
And dropping...
I'm sure he will appreciate the humor in his new last name. LOL.
BTTT
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