Obama supporters cry wolf on race again.

The New Republic
Hold On--'3 A.M.' Wasn't Racist by Sean Wilentz
Obama supporters cry wolf on race again.
Post Date Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Reading Orlando Patterson's op-ed in the New York Times, "The Red Phone in Black and White," is a depressing experience.  Not only does the piece scurrilously accuse Hillary Clinton's campaign of cutting an ad that borrows from the filmmaker D.W. Griffith's glorification of the Ku Klux Klan. Not only is this attack based on a Clinton advertisement about national security, not domestic policy (let alone race), that required a singularly tortured and biased "close reading" by Patterson to reach its conclusions. What is truly depressing is that the essay fits what has become a troubling and familiar pattern by the Obama campaign and its fervent supporters to inject racial politics on the eve of yet another Democratic primary in a Southern state, in this case Mississippi, where African-American voters are expected to vote in large numbers.

I described this pattern on February 27, accounting for how the Obama campaign has cleverly played what I called the "race-baiter card"--and yet blamed Hillary Clinton.  These efforts, undertaken both by Obama's own campaign and its boosters in the press, escalated after Clinton's surprising win in New Hampshire and in the build-up to the South Carolina primary.  To recount the ugliness: Obama--through his national co-chair, Representative Jesse Jackson, Jr.--accused Clinton of studied callousness toward the victims of Hurricane Katrina; his press supporters falsely ascribed her victory to racism among New Hampshire's Democratic voters; the Obama campaign then went on to seize upon non-controversial and historically accurate statements by Bill and Hillary Clinton (as in the notorious Martin Luther King-Lyndon Johnson episode, fully discredited by Bill Moyers and others) and called them inflammatory race-baiting.

Now, in anticipation of the Mississippi primary, it's happening again.  In Texas, Ohio, and Rhode Island on March 4, as earlier in New Hampshire, the Obama campaign did not achieve the knock-out blow it expected and predicted. Indeed, just before those primaries and since, Obama's camp started to receive serious criticism and scrutiny for the first time, over the candidate's connections to indicted Chicago fixer Tony Rezko, and over the amateurish and revealing actions of senior advisers Austan Goolsbee, Susan Rice, and Samantha Power. The campaign has turned to double-talk and to stonewalling the press. And once again, it has lashed out by playing racial politics while accusing the Clinton campaign of playing the very same game.

Interpreting the Clinton 3 A.M. phone ad on preparedness and national security as a hidden appeal to white racism takes a remarkable bit of bad faith on the part of Professor Patterson. But the bad faith is not restricted to him alone. Earlier in the campaign, in speeches to black audiences, Obama mouthed lines generally believed to come from Malcolm X about how African Americans were being "bamboozled" and "hoodwinked" by white oppressors and Uncle Toms--except that the lines were not actually Malcolm's but were scripted for  Denzel Washington playing Malcolm X in Spike Lee's movie. Now, in Mississippi, Obama is talking about blacks being bamboozled and hoodwinked again. Then, after Obama conceded that Clinton had nothing to do with the ridiculous posting on the disreputable Drudge Report of a picture of Obama in ceremonial Somali dress--supposedly an appeal to racial and religious fears--he now is telling the voters of Mississippi that in fact she was responsible for the photo's appearance, and that she did it in order to scare people--a charge he well knows to be untrue.  In the televised debate in Ohio on February 26, Obama said that "I take Senator Clinton at her word that she knew nothing about the photo.  So I think that's something that we can set aside."

But on March 10 in Jackson, Mississippi, he declared, "When in the midst of a campaign you decide to throw the kitchen sink at your opponent because you're behind, and your campaign starts leaking photographs of me when I'm traveling overseas wearing the native clothes of those folks to make people afraid ... that's not real change"

The flip-flopping is bad enough, even if the press corps does not always report it. But the cynical race politics by Obama and his passionate followers, is toxic, not just for this campaign but for American political life.



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Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

Isn't that what Keith Lieberman said in his special crap ,when i saw that i knew the guy wasn't serious


Educated in a small town Taught to fear Jesus in a small town Used to daydream in that small town Another born romantic that's me.
by lori on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 01:37:40 PM EST

Obama's Pastor's Comments (none / 0)

Now, we have news of a harsh denunciation of America by Obama's pastor of 20 years. [Click here for more....]
by zenful6219 on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 01:40:37 PM EST

Re: Obama's Pastor's Comments (none / 0)

when you listen to obam's pastor, you understand Michelle Obama didn't misspeak. I told everyone here at the time.

She and many obama supporters are stuck in "victimology", where even though this is the best country for everyone and A.A.'s especially, they see problems everywhere and all the time.

"for the first time in my adult life" she meant every word of it.

Obama is running a fairytale campaign saying he is "beyond race" when everyone around him are using it to win the dem nomination.


by yellowdem1129 on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 01:44:53 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

Don't be so quick to ascribe every statement by an Obama supporter to Obama. I am an Obama supporter and I found the op-ed to be quite silly. As Ferraro proved, each candidate is bound to have a lot of loony supporters.
Oregon Hussein KCG - Hussein means: "good; small handsome one" in Arabic.
by oregonkcg on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 01:45:33 PM EST

THIS IS NOT A SUPPORTER (none / 0)

He is the guy's mentor.  Read up on the history.

This is a person he has and would call for advice.

Don't fool yourself.


by yellowdem1129 on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 01:54:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

Ferraro is not loony.  Rev Wright is loony.
I just watched Rollin Martin (I'm not sure I've spelled his name right sorry) on CNN and he is calling Ferraro a racist and so is the Obama camp.  They have gone to far no turning back now.
by bradydundee on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 01:55:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

Be Patient. Ferraro is headed to looney land soon if she keeps this up.


by Pravin on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 05:28:21 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

When Obama was asked about the article he stated, "You know, I'm not buying into the notion that race played a factor there."

So, although you apply the diary to Obama supporters, to go on and say the "cynical race politics of Obama. . ." is pretty intellectually dishonest.


by shalca on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 02:00:31 PM EST

Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

The mere fact that these opeds pointing out how the Obama campaign is forever raising racism issues indicates a growing public awareness of an obvious truth. Who in the world other than the most slavish Obama supporters believes Ferraro is a racist or illiberal. Certainly not Axelrod who is just using a spun version of her comments to attack Clinton and ensure the black vote stays solid for Obama. He's obviously never heard of the law of diminishing returns because the public appears to be catching on to the total phoniness of all these racist claims. If she wins big in PA no doubt we'll all be hearing it was the racist white vote that did it. Of course they don't happen to mention that this so called racist white vote will still be around in November. You can't have it both ways.  


by ottovbvs on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 02:35:07 PM EST

I'm a proud and black woman for Obama. (none / 0)

I used to be for Clinton, but in my lifetime i've felt so insulted as I have been by Hillary in the last few months.

I'll never forget. I'll never forgive.

The whole Clinton family has turned out to be one big NIGHTMARE. History will judge them for whom they are.


by Obamagirl2327 on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 03:01:51 PM EST

Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

The problem is, and the Republicans are counting on,  if Obama is the nominee and there really are racist attacks during the campaign, then no one is going to believe him.  It will "ho, hum, there they go again"

Just ask Kwame Kilpatrick (the mayor of Detroit) how  many people believe what he said in his State of the City speech a couple of days ago about the racist attacks he's been getting?  No one believes him....


by cmugirl90 on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 03:15:15 PM EST

Mc Cain has a daughter from Bangladesh (none / 0)


McCain basically has a dark-skinned daughter. I don't think he will accept rascism from his party. I'm sure republican surrogates like talk radio and some idiot rep politicians will try.

BUT...

Unlike Hillary McCain will fight it. I'm sure he doesn't hate his daughter, and when people insult Obama because of his skin, he will think of his daughter.

That's why he was against calling Obama a muslim. After all, Islam is the dominant religion in Bangladesh too nowadays. If people can paint Obama as a Muslim, certainly they could do the same one day to his daughter.

I don't like republican policies when it comes to the war, the economy, healthcare,etc. But I think Mc Cain is genuinly not a rascist and at least will do his best to avoid a campaign focused on race.

I'm sorry to say I can't say the same for Clinton.


by Obamagirl2327 on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 03:31:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Mc Cain has a daughter from Bangladesh (none / 0)

 Hillary is not racist either. But the Clintons have taken AA for granted.


by Pravin on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 05:30:20 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Obama supporters cry wolf on race again. (none / 0)

The cruel irony of Obama's race-baiting is this without the pioneering efforts of people like Geraldine Ferrarro, Hillary Clinton and others, it would not have been possible for him to be where her is now. (Required disclaimer to avoid being branded racist: This is in no way a comment on his qualifications, sincerity or character.)

Why is Obama not outraged at the 90% margins of African-Americans who vote for him in all the primaries. He should be speaking out against their monolithic voting unless he truly believes that they are voting for him because of the content of his character rather than the color of his skin. (Insert appropriate disclaimer.)

When will he reject, renounce and repudiate the comments of his pastor? This is a dangerous game and two (or more) can play at it. I'll see you a Ferraro and raise you a Wright!


by STUBALL on Thu Mar 13, 2008 at 03:46:14 PM EST


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