Posted on 12/12/2002 10:26:02 AM PST by NewDestiny
As the head of a nationally recognized nonprofit black organization BOND, the Brotherhood Organization of A New Destiny, my organization and I accept Senator Trent Lotts apology regarding his remarks at Senator Strom Thurmonds birthday celebration. I encourage the Senator to not give into the demands of racists who want to keep blacks on the Democratic plantation.
Sen. Lott has released a statement and appeared on national media to apologize for his statements. He has explained his statement and the context in which it was madeenough is enough!
Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Maxine Waters, and the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) are hypocrites and they are the real racists.
Jackson has not apologized for his Hymie town comments, nor for his forty years of immoral leadership; Sharpton has never apologized for his role in the Tawana Brawley disgrace; members of the Congressional Black Caucus have never asked fellow Democrat Sen. Robert Byrd to step down for using the word nigger twice on national television.
Black and white Democrats alike who continue to demand that he [Lott] step down are doing so only for political reasons. And Republicans who fail to support him are displaying cowardice. Lott should not step down; he should not offer any more apologiesthis matter is done! We should judge people based on their hearts and actions, and unlike many of his detractors, Trent Lott has no history of being a racist.
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Bah humbug. It isn't against the law to say what Lott said. And as far as the racial sensitivities of the race baiters and race whores, let them go pound sand. As much as I dislike Lott, I'm not about to throw him to the wolves over some dumb comments that have been taken completely out of context.
I've already heard about that and made a comment on another thread. I don't care! This is bigger then Bush and this is bigger then Lott. But it goes to show just how much Lott wants to play in the new arena of Republican political correctness. Sickening!
And to your earlier remarks made to me. I called for Trent Lott to step down, following the loss of the Senate last year. I also gave partial blame for that political fiasco to PresBush and was thumped by many of the saintly FReepers around here. If I remember correctly, you even joined into that chorus too.
His comments went way beyond stupid. For cryin' out loud, the Dixiecrats were one of the most despicable political movements in this country's history. Among other things, they opposed a federal law banning LYNCHING. They and their ilk forever tainted the noble concept of state's rights by trying to wrap it around their racist positions. And Lott said we might have avoided some "problems" if the rest of the country had followed Mississippi's lead and voted for Strom. That's just insane. Someone that dense, that oblivious to history and political sensitivities is not qualified to be the party leader in the Senate.
That's exactly why he included those remarks. Bush played President Panderbear today. Rev.Peterson is right on this one and Bush is out of line!
And as I said, let him run in January, not just assume the position. Let the SENATORS decide if they want Lott to lead them.
I would hope that Peterson would be above trying the moral equivalence approach. I really don't care to use the actions of Jesse and Al as any kind of benchmark for conservative leaders, other than as a general guide to what we should NOT be doing.
We know how the game's played, folks. If Lott steps down and keeps his seat, this will become an even greater issue. They'll demand his resignation from the Senate. They'll probably even demand much more. We know we can't win with them; we can't prove our committment to the egalitarian ideal in such a way as to have them leave the issue alone. So why give them what they want? After all, it won't do us a bit of good if we do.
And you're missing the context. The speech was made at a birthday party. It was a joke. And, as we all know, jokes are not supposed to be taken seriously.
How Republicans have been tied to the Democratic South with this little speech should be the subject of an entire book. When Thurmond was running, you couldn't find a Republican in the South. And this is somehow *our* problem?
Liberals want to make it our problem, sure, but it wasn't then and it isn't now.
Look, Lott was the one who resurrected the issue. Not the Dems.
This is all about the liberal establishment seeing an opening and taking advantage of an opportunity to blow a minor event out of proportion.
No, this is about conservatives taking responsibility for mistakes, and not acting like democrats and blaming the other side, downplaying the transgression or playing the moral equivalence game.
This is America's liberal elites spreading their political correctness and employing their race baiting tactics for political gain.
I'm sorry, but saying that the Dixiecrats and segregation was dead wrong is hardly PC, and saying that Lott was insane for even going down this particular road is hardly PC, either - hence the disgust voiced by commentators across the political spectrum.
You've fallen for their rhetoric and their efforts. Too bad.
You've resorted to their tactics. Sad to see.
He should not have made it sound like he was in agreement with the rhetoric being used by the liberal establishment. But that's exactly what he did. Bush came across like he was an outraged Democrat. Under the circumstances, I would have appreciated it, if the President would have kept his mouth closed and not gave credence to the political correctness or race baiting tactics of the liberal elites. And it was pandering, plain and simple.
Actually, Tommy Daschle was doing his best to help Lott out. Most of the Dems LIKE Trent Lott. But the condemnation of Lott's comments has come from across the political spectrum, and the only defense I have seen is from folks trying to play the moral equivalence game. Sorry, I don't care to get down and play on that level.
I really don't care what they say. I care about what Lott said, both the actual words and the incredible lack of sense he displayed in uttering them.
And you're missing the context. The speech was made at a birthday party. It was a joke. And, as we all know, jokes are not supposed to be taken seriously.
Some do. Jokes have a long history of blowing up in the face of political figures. Ask James Watt. Or Bert Lance. Two figures with big mouths and poor judgement, and they paid for it.
How Republicans have been tied to the Democratic South with this little speech should be the subject of an entire book. When Thurmond was running, you couldn't find a Republican in the South. And this is somehow *our* problem?
Once again, LOTT RESURRECTED THIS. This wasn't a Democrat making a baseless claim - it was a leader of the GOP making a very, very, VERY idiotic statement.
Liberals want to make it our problem, sure, but it wasn't then and it isn't now.
It is our problem only if we try to deny, obfuscate and equivalence it away, like the Dems did with the Clintons. And the Dems paid dearly for that.
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