Posted on 08/28/2011 11:10:18 PM PDT by Nachum
On November 16, 1990, Barack Obama, then president of the Harvard Law Review, published a letter in the Harvard Law Record, an independent Harvard Law School newspaper, championing affirmative action.
Although a paragraph from this letter was excerpted in David Remnick's biography of Obama, The Bridge, I had not seen the letter in its entirety before this week. Not surprisingly, it confirms everything I know about Barack Obama, the writer and thinker.
Obama was prompted to write by an earlier letter from a Mr. Jim Chen that criticized Harvard Law Review's affirmative action policies. Specifically, Chen had argued that affirmative action stigmatized its presumed beneficiaries.
The response is classic Obama: patronizing, dishonest, syntactically muddled, and grammatically challenged. In the very first sentence Obama leads with his signature failing, one on full display in his earlier published work: his inability to make subject and predicate agree.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Seventy people on the Harvard Law Review staff! How large is the Harvard Law School enrollment?
How many people know that the year Barry was going to be a senior is the first year that the position of “editor” was changed to “president” of the review who was chosen by vote of members, not by faculty advisors?
Something a white raised biracial with no slave blood can’t be.
Without the teleprompter, he doesn’t speak very well either. Between Obama and Biden we have have Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum running the country.
I might need forgiveness for shifting to the stock market, but I've found that the market shows the same foibles that politics does - and political beliefs don't complicate things there. So, it's illustrative.
Back in the late 1960s, there was a saying that was taken to heart by many investors: "Anyone who sold IBM, regretted it." This maxim was ballooned into the "one-decision stocks" theory: some companies were so good, you were crazy to sell them. You bought, but you never sold. A market crumble was merely an opportunity to buy more.
That theory, after working for a few decades, came crashing down in 1974. What always worked, didn't anymore.
I think the same fate is in store for the race card. It works so well, liberals might as well say "anyone who didn't play the race card, regretted it." When a technique works like magic, razor-sharp sword and adamantine buckler in one, the people using it become complacent and don't notice its decay.
There will come a time when the race card becomes little more than a joke. I don't know when, but I am sure it will disintegrate in their hands. Call it a hunch. "If it's this easy, it's too easy."
Maybe that's why Caligula did it in the first place: as a deliberate insult to the candidates for the job.
That means that the perception changes from one of decency requiring that African-Americans get a fair chance to an understanding that to advance one racial or ethnic group, qua group, is to retard another group.
The obvious example is to award places in universities on the basis of race.
This is certainly already taking hold in white middle America and it would be very surprising if California Orientals who are disfavored in the university admissions process despite their talent did not also feel themselves aggrieved. I would assume that Hispanics are beginning to see that favoritism in (quasi) government jobs to African-Americans in places like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is unfair.
The unvarnished reality is that blatant racism inevitably breeds reaction in kind.
And that's pretty sad. Martin Luther King went out of his way to drain the kind of vindictiveness that's been normalized by present 'civil rights' norms. His stand was, the past is done; just bury it. A level playing field is enough.
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