Posted on 01/28/2012 8:12:49 PM PST by SeekAndFind
On Thursday night’s Politics Nation, host Al Sharpton called out Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer‘s disrespectful conduct toward President Obama during their tarmac tussle, connecting it to a pattern of such contemptuous behavior by Republican leaders. Sirius XM radio host Joe Madison gave it a name, saying that there are people “who cannot stand the fact that this is an african-american who is now one of the most powerful individuals on the planet.”
RELATED: Drama Clubbed: Jan Brewer Says I Felt A Little Bit Threatened By President Obama
Rev. Al opened the segment by calling Gov. Brewer’s finger-pointing “unacceptable” and “disrespectful,” noting “but she’s not apologizing.”
He played video of Brewer recounting the incident to reporters, calling the President “thin-skinned,” and saying she “felt a little bit threatened.”
To his credit, Rev. Sharpton is one of the few commentators to key in on the racial subtext of Brewer’s remarks. “Thin skinned? You felt threatened?” he said. “What does that even mean, you felt threatened? By the President of the United States? This is yet another example of disrespect and delegitimatizing this president.”
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Rev. Al then played a fairly comprehensive rundown of clips that featured prominent Republicans behaving disrespectfully toward the President, including Rep. Joe Wilson‘s infamous “You lie!” moment. Speaking of lying, Sharpton also noted Gov. Brewer’s dueling descriptions of her 2010 meeting with the President, which was the genesis of the tarmac dispute.
“So Governor Brewer,” Rev. Sharpton said, “when were you telling the truth? When you just walked out of the meeting and told the press in front of the White House, with a smile on your face, how it was cordial and how the tone was very good, positive, or when you wrote a book saying it was condescending, and he was lecturing you?”
He also characterized Brewer’s handing of a letter to the President as political grandstanding. That letter centers around what sounds like an invitation for the President to be lectured by Brewer, to learn at her knee, if you will. “I’d love an opportunity to share with you how we’ve been able to turn Arizona around with hard choices that turned out to be the right ones,” it reads.
Joe Madison weighed in by pointing out that even a small child knows it is disrespectful to point in someone’s face, and related some suggestions he got from his radio audience, including bending back her finger, to having the Secret Service jack Brewer up. “I give the President of the United States credit for doing what?” Madison said. “Walking away.”
Madison also told Rev. Al to add to his dis list Newt Gingrich’s (and others) tendency to refer to the President simply as “Obama,” and Republicans’ demands to see the President’s grades. “Excuse me,” Madison said, “what 50-year-old-plus man has to provide his grades? What, getting elected as the president of the Harvard Review is not enough?”
He continued, “This is nothing more, and I’ll just say it straight up. There are some people, not all, in this country who cannot stand the fact that this is an African-American who is now one of the most powerful individuals on the planet. And there are those who cannot consciously and subconsciously handle it.”
“You know you’re not going to get a debate from me,” Rev. Al replied. “They brought race in. They put a race deck on the table. If you pull a card, it’s a race card because they set the deck.”
What you have to ask yourself is not whether Republican leaders have been disrespectful to this president, but whether they have done so in ways that white presidents have not had to deal with. The same holds true for liberal critics of the President, are they treating him as they would a white Democratic president?
This doesn’t have to mean that all of these folks hate black people. People like Gov. Brewer and Speaker Gingrich ought to ask themselves if they have succumbed to something more insidious, this tendency in white media culture (or as I call it, “media culture”) to promote, at best, informality with (and among) black people, the effect of which is to lower the inhibition to behave bluntly.
Here’s the clip, from MSNBC:
But, of course, THIS was not a race related incident nor an insult.
Hey, moron Christopher! Your point is irrelevant even if it were true, which it isn't. Sharpie's peeps aren't going to vote GOP, in any case, so WTF cares why?
TO GO PLAY IN HEAVY TRAFFIC.....
WHEN ALL ELSE FAIL FOR THE Africans THEY RESORT TO THEIR FAVORITE PLAY CARD...RACE
THEY ARE ALL PATHETIC.
When Obama was leaving the state of the union he did the same thing over and over. Someone would say something to him then he would walk off in mid sentence.
She is such a Lady, From me he would be getting another finger. I’d say: now get your bony ass back on the plane and never, never, never come back!
And if there's anyone who has the moral authority to lecture people about what constitutes "unacceptable" and "disrespectful" conduct, it is certainly Al Sharpton.
Wait, wut?
Al’s a$$ is unacceptable and disrespectful, let alone the ill wind that emanates from it.
Yankel Rosenbaum, Twana Brawley, Freddie’s Fashion Mart.
Al Sharpton-convicted liar.
Dims really hate it when someone stands up to them - especially since they have made it clear that one risks being called racist and all sorts of other slurs for doing so. They remind me of when my brother was little and having a spat with his friend from across the street - the other kid told my brother, “Scotty, I’m going to hit you, but don’t you hit me back”. What a budding democrat that kid was - he really got pissed when my brother slugged him back...
Actually I detect sexism on the part of Sharpton... I mean the nerve of that uppity woman telling a man his business, after all!!!!
I’m sure she would have the same reaction to any America-hating, foreign born Marxist refusing to do his job while shredding the Constitution.
I hate his white half too, so up yours al.
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