Tag Archives: race issues

WaPo’s Richard Cohen: ‘Palin Couldn’t Be President of Black America or Hispanic America’

If you thought the media attacks on Sarah Palin and her family were deplorable in 2008, it's clear with the 2012 presidential campaign starting and her name being bandied about, you ain't seen nuttin' yet. Take the Washington Post's Richard Cohen for example who penned a column Tuesday concluding, ” She could not be the president of black America nor of Hispanic America “: read more

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WaPo’s Richard Cohen: ‘Palin Couldn’t Be President of Black America or Hispanic America’

O’Reilly Smacks Down Maher for Claiming Anti-Obama Sentiment is Racist

Bill O’Reilly on Wednesday smacked down Bill Maher when the comedian blamed Barack Obama’s bad poll numbers on racism. In the first part of his much-anticipated interview with the “Real Time” host, O’Reilly asked Maher’s opinion on why the public seems to have soured on the President.  After blaming Obama’s woes on everyone but Obama himself, Maher said, “Of course a lot of it is racially…” Maher didn’t get a chance to finish this pathetic thought for O’Reilly cut him off mid-sentence (video follows with transcript and commentary):  BILL O’REILLY, HOST: But there’s something more in play here, I think, and I just wondered if you had noticed anything about the President’s presentation or the way he goes about his job that you might point to? BILL MAHER: Well, obviously, people think he’s a little bloodless. I happen to like that in a president. I like a president that uses his brain and not his faith or his heart or his gut as the former president did. I kind of like that in our president. But, you know, again, they don’t brag about their accomplishments and when you downplay the economy, all of the dissatisfaction with him is about the economy. Of course a lot of it is racially — O’REILLY: You think it’s racially? MAHER: Almost all of it. O’REILLY: You’re on that bandwagon of if you don’t like him, you’re a racist and you can’t be there. Maher, that’s not you. You can’t be there. MAHER: Oh, so you don’t think it’s racially involved at all? O’REILLY: Of course not. You know, he was elected by 53% of the public and when he took office, his approval was over 70. Come on. Come on! Indeed. In fact, Obama’s favorability rating was closer to 80 shortly before he was inaugurated. Do folks like Maher think the nation suddenly turned more racist than it was in January 2009? Regardless of the answer, Maher wasn’t done saying foolish things, and O’Reilly wasn’t done smacking him down:  MAHER: But Bill, but Bill, just for example, I mean, the Teabaggers, they’re the ones that are so upset about the debt. Most of the debt came from Bush. That’s just a fact. And under Bush, Cheney said it, deficits don’t matter. Nobody was angry about the deficit when it was President Bush. O’REILLY: Because they didn’t know about it. Look, President Obama has spent more money — MAHER: They didn’t know about it? O’REILLY: No. They didn’t. It wasn’t a big issue as it is now. He’s the biggest spending president in the history of the republic, Maher. You got to know that, man! MAHER: Of course he, of, well, first of all, that’s not, that’s not a true statement. He’s not the biggest spender. Bush was the biggest spender. O’REILLY: No, Obama is the biggest — his budget is bigger than Bush’s budget. MAHER: Most — most of the money that has been sent has been trying to dig us out of the hole that Bush put us in. O’REILLY: We’re running up trillion dollars of debt. We got ObamaCare that’s going to add more to that, and I’m not any better off, and the economy is not any better off. So it’s all a waste. He’s not doing it. That, and I’m not saying that’s the right point of view. I’m saying that’s what’s inside many Americans’ brains. Indeed. As for Bush being a bigger spender than Obama, Maher was once again proving how being a liberal in America today means having to ignore facts whenever they interfere with your agenda. Bush’s final budget authorized $3.1 trillion in federal outlays. By contrast, Obama’s first official budget as President authorized $3.7 trillion in spending, a 19 percent increase.  Of course, with the various bailouts that occurred in ’08 and ’09, the government spent far more than originally anticipated. But at $3.5 trillion, it was still less than what Obama will spend in FY ’10. Yet that’s only part of the story, for Obama not only had a hand in creating Bush’s last budget, he also was directly involved in all the additions to it.   On March 14, 2008, then Sen. Obama voted in favor of the 2009 budget. The 51-44 vote that morning was strongly along party lines with only two Republicans saying “Yes.” When the final conference report was presented to the House on June 5, not one Republican voted for it. This means the 2009 budget was almost exclusively approved by Democrats, with “Yeas” coming from current President then Sen. Obama, his current Vice President then Sen. Joe Biden, his current Chief of Staff then Rep. Rahm Emanuel, and his current Secretary of State then Sen. Hillary Clinton. But that’s just the beginning, for on October 1, 2008, Obama, Biden, and Clinton voted in favor of the $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program designed to prevent teetering financial institutions from completely destroying the economy.  And what about the $787 billion stimulus bill that passed in February 2009 with just three Republican votes? Wouldn’t Obama only be blameless if he vetoed it and was later overridden? Of course, he didn’t, and, instead signed it into law on February 17. Nor did he veto the $410 billion of additional spending Congress sent to his desk three weeks later. Add it all up, and Obama approved every penny spent in fiscal 2009 either via his votes in the Senate or his signature as President. As such, Maher’s claim that Bush was a bigger spender than Obama is 100 percent false. But that shouldn’t be too surprising to NewsBusters readers, as we have regularly pointed out when Maher plays fast and loose with the facts. Recall that when he did this in front of George Will on ABC’s “This Week” in May, he ended up looking like quite the fool. PolitiFact even found what he said that Sunday false. Maybe the PF folks will look into Wednesday’s misstatement as well. Stay tuned.  

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O’Reilly Smacks Down Maher for Claiming Anti-Obama Sentiment is Racist

Amazing: AP Writers Obsess Over Negative Electoral Impact Of Upcoming Census Bureau Poverty Stats

It seems reasonable from their coverage in anticipation of the Census Bureua’s release of income and poverty statistics this week that Hope Yen and Liz Sidoti of the Associated Press have a roof over their heads and aren’t particularly worried about where their next meal is coming from. If so, good for them; may those circumstances continue. What’s remarkable, though, is how a government report that the media, especially the AP, has traditionally treated as an indicator of society’s alleged failure to take care of its neediest –with the blame often directly aimed at Republicans and conservatives — is now primarily a political problem for the party in power. Yen and Sidoti engage in a presidential pity party, and in the process come off as indifferent about what the numbers, for all their imperfections (and they are substantial), might mean in human terms — again, something the press normally obsesses over, especially when a Republican or conservative is president. This time, it seems that if Ms. Yen and Ms. Sidoti had their way, this unfortunate information would be held until at least November 3. What follows are graphic capture’s of the pair’s first four paragraphs, followed by paragraphs 12-16: Comments: This report comes out each September, but this one is suddently “unfortunate timing” and “another blow” for the president and his party. The AP didn’t seem to handle things the same way eight years ago, the last time a new president and his Congressional majority party faced mid-term elections. Even though George W. Bush’s administration was dealing with the aftermath of an official “recession” and the poverty rate rose, you’ll see in this unbylined AP item in the September 24, 2002 Gainesville Sun published after the release of that year’s report that there was no reference to how unfortunate the timing or the news might be for W. The AP did find the time to get a quote from Democrat Paul Sarbanes, who, in AP’s paraphrasing, said that “the Bush administration had focused too much attention on tax cuts and not enough on the needs of the most vulnerable citizens.” “Rightly or wrongly, Republicans could cite a higher poverty rate as evidence” that “Obama’s economic fixes are hindering the sluggish economic recovery.” It would have been interesting to see Yen and Sidoti try to find someone to quote on this topic. It seems only fair, given that they gave Paul Sarbanes a chance to say why George Bush was allegedly wrong. Yen and Sidoti automatically assume that blacks and Hispanics will respond to the reported rise in their poverty rate by voting as they usually do or staying home during the midterm elections. Isn’t it just a little bit possible that some of them will decide that voting for the other team might make more sense after almost two years of not so benign neglect at the hands of the party they have traditionally favored? Oh, and am I supposed to believe that the Essential Global News Network doesn’t have a homelessness-related photo dated later than the April 13, 2009 article-accompanying item seen at the top right of this post? Why, you’d think AP might be trying to imply that homelessness hasn’t gotten any worse in the intervening 17 months. But  it has .  Really . As is seemingly typical at AP, in unexcerpted material the report quoted and labeled one allegedly “conservative” political science professor at New York University while later quoting an economist from far-left American Prospect co-founder Robert Kuttner’s Economic Policy Institute (board members, including Kuttner, are listed and described  here ). Of course, the EPI “somehow” went unlabeled. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Amazing: AP Writers Obsess Over Negative Electoral Impact Of Upcoming Census Bureau Poverty Stats

Will Texas Taxpayers Reward Racist, Anti-American ‘Machete’?

Do the math. Instead of someone with the last name Rodriguez telling the tale of noble, sympathetic Hispanics victimized by white American southern rednecks  – all of whom are portrayed as murderous racists, what if we had a white filmmaker telling the tale of noble and sympathetic Texas border ranchers victimized by marauding, racist, gold-toothed unwashed Mexicans out to steal their land? Oh, and we would close our story with a stand-up-and-cheer race war where Texas ranchers unite to violently mow down evil Mexicans. The same Left whose standards are so low that opposition to ObamaCare, same-sex marriage, and the Ground Zero Mosque can only be driven by a “phobia” or “ist” – the same PC Left  that hides  “silly” old Bugs Bunny cartoons and can’t broadcast a season of “24″ without including a patronizing  Don’t Be Racist to Muslims  PSA – sees the vicious portrayal of white Texans in “Machete”  as nothing more than a silly goof . I guess it’s easy to convince yourself of that when your principles are based on an agenda as opposed to any sense of consistency or intellectual honesty. The bottom line, however, is that whether Rodriguez likes it or not, this is still the United States of America, which means he has the right to make whatever film he wants and 20th Century-Fox has the same right to distribute it. But does that mean Texas taxpayers should  foot part of the bill  for a cinematic slandering of both their state and identity? [emphasis mine] A tax incentives bill passed by the Texas Legislature in 2007 and strengthened in 2009 offers grants of five per cent to 17.5 per cent, based on the type of project and the amount of money spent in the state, the Austin Statesman reported. But the law requires that productions meet certain standards.  It also rules out incentives for movies that cast Texas in a negative light . …. The film was released this weekend, meaning Rodriguez now has about two months to submit it to the Texas Film Commission. The Commission’s head Bob Hudgins, has to decide whether to approve funds for the film, which was filmed in and around the Texan city of Austin. He recently told Texan media that he was nervous about turning down the state’s most prolific film director. However, he added:  ‘I have to make my determination on the final version of the film. I have to be Switzerland about it.’ If Commissioner Hudgins is going to be “Switzerland about it”  then Commissioner Hudgins should always be “Switzerland about it.” Meaning, the awarding of “Machete” with taxpayer dollars is also the setting of a precedent that might come back to haunt both him and the state somewhere down the line: Alamo Dawn:   Set in 2030, this affectionate nod to low-budget, paranoid, political actioner-thrillers like  Red  Dawn,  finds Texas overrun and under the thumb of lazy, shiftless Mexicans who may not need no steenkin’ badges but do need their tequila and white women. Tired of being racially oppressed, a group of good ole’ boys militia up to yee-haw and gun down all those who brought the failed and corrupt policies of Mexico to America. “This time they f*cked with the wrong Southerner.” If Commissioner Hudgins is going to force Texas taxpayers to foot the bill for “Machete” he had better ask himself what he would do if a bunch of rich, white “rednecks” got $30 million together to produce, market and self-distribute a ” Bizarro -Machete.” Could happen, right? After all, we are a bunch of racists. Crossposted at Big Hollywood

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Will Texas Taxpayers Reward Racist, Anti-American ‘Machete’?

Dean: ‘Lost Souls’ Follow ‘Racist Hate-Monger’ Beck

Howard Dean pulled off the rare twin-trashing this morning, dumping on both Glenn Beck and the people who respond to his message.  He began by calling Beck crazy , saying he has “a few things the matter with him up here, up in the head there.” Later, he compounded the calumny, calling Beck a “racist” and a “hate-monger.”  So who were the hundreds of thousands of people who attended the rally and the millions more who watch and listen to Beck?  Why, according to Dean, they’re “lost souls.” New York Times columnist Charles Blow had set the vitriolic tone during the show’s first hour, accusing Beck of “hiding behind a cross” and participating in a “rhetorical assassination” of Pres. Obama. HOWARD DEAN: You know, I think, it was kind of a Tea Party type of event. You know, 300,000 people is a lot of people to have on the Washington Mall, but in terms of who, how many people vote, it’s not a very big crowd.  I don’t know what, I think that Glenn Beck has got a few things the matter with him, up here, up in the head there.  So I just don’t know what to make of it.  I mean, it’s a lot of people. JOE SCARBOROUGH: So, I didn’t know. He’s a doctor.  You’re a psychiatrist. And later . . . DEAN: What I see is, these folks are kind of, and I don’t mean this in a mean kind of way, but they’re a little like lost souls in the sense that they really do, they’re at sea, the country’s changed a lot, they don’t, they’re in the middle of a horrible economic downturn which has probably affected a lot of them personally. So they follow this guy who is like Father Coughlin from the 1930s.  He’s a racist, he’s a hate-monger. And here was Blow earlier . . . WILLIE GEIST: You had a column Saturday about Mr. Beck’s rally on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on the anniversary of the I Have A Dream speech.  You said it incensed you, you called Beck the anti-King.  Just lay out your criticism of Glenn Beck. CHARLES BLOW: Well Beck is an incredibly divisive figure, and no amount of him wrapping himself in the flag and hiding behind a cross is going to scrub his history of the things he has said and done.  And he is part of what I see as a rhetorical assassination of a good man. Wonder when Charles ripped the Dissent is Patriotic sticker off his bumper?

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Dean: ‘Lost Souls’ Follow ‘Racist Hate-Monger’ Beck

John Cusack Wants ‘Satanic Death Cult Center at Fox News HQ’

Want a tutorial in the hypocrisy, vitriol and deep unhappiness of the American left? You don’t need to subject yourself to MSNBC, or wade through the muck of Daily Kos. Actor John Cusack’s Twitter feed is a clearing house for liberal memes and nasty rhetoric. Here’s his peaceful entry from Aug. 29 [All spelling from original Tweets, but Cusack admits: “I type with I phone fast and loose with no spellcheck.”]: Johncusack: I AM FOR A SATANIC DEATH CULT CENTER AT FOX NEWS HQ AND OUTSIDE THE OFFICES ORDICK ARMEYAND NEWT GINGRICH-and all the GOP WELFARE FREAKS Presumably, this is a reference to the controversy over the Ground Zero Mosque. And “all the GOP WELFARE FREAKS” seems to follow on this theme: Johncusack: taht’s the gop philospy.. gourge the stae while claiming to be rugged individuaist who live by the free market – biggest joke there is.. Johncusack: think of our the us treasury as the last frontier to be stripped mined if only pesky gov itelf wasn’t in the way. Johncusack: privatized gains- socialized loses– complete hippcorites But elsewhere, Cusack said Glenn Beck (at his “Restoring Honor” rally) was “unifying whites -class war of blame and fear” and said Beck was starting a “class war to capitallize on economy they destroyed” – a strange accusation from a man that claims the GOP wants to gut the treasury. And what liberal rant would be complete without the leftist’s two favorite pejorative? Back’s tactics, he wrote were “strraigjt fr tfriendly racist playbiook.” A minute later, Cusack added, “Sorry frendly fascist playbook.” Elsewhere, he wrote: “[Charles] krathhammers a joke son please do me a fav and dont watch.” He called another Tweeter a “flag sucking halfwit,” presumably for the sin of patriotism. Strong words from a man who also Tweeted about having “to weed out all the little trolls who can’t bare it when someone has an opinion they dont like.” He “blocked as many haters as i could a i still can’t get below 200 thou,” but confessed, “i guess someone turned off the automatic hate spewing machine.. i kind of miss them.” Whew! Glad some of the hate’s gone from Twitter. Cusack, who, according to OpenSecrets.org gave $1,000 to Vice President Biden’s 2008 presidential campaign, has a long history of using strident partisan rhetoric. He called the Bush administration ” criminally incompetent robber barons ,” and “the neo-con/White House Iraq Group lunatics,” and demanded that Attorney General Eric Holder imprison the guilty Bush officials . He also did an anti-McCain ad for the far-left group MoveOn.org

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John Cusack Wants ‘Satanic Death Cult Center at Fox News HQ’

Beck ‘On Crack, Taking Stupid Pills’ Say Mika, Joe

When Joe Scarborough wondered out loud “how many times can you set your hair on fire?” before viewers stop being shocked, you might have thought he was talking about Keith Olbermann, the man whose scenery-chewing soliloquies inspired an instant-classic Saturday Night Live skit . But no, Joe was speaking of Glenn Beck.  Perhaps the shot Scarborough took at Ed Schultz a couple weeks ago exhausted his monthly quota of internecine MSNBC insults. On today’s Morning Joe, Joe and Mika Brzezinski took turns ripping Beck’s promotion of the rally at the Lincoln Memorial he’s staging Saturday on the anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.  Riffing off a Colbert Show segment showing clips of Beck, Mika claimed he sounded like a drama student “on crack.”  Scarborough, suggesting Mika might have gone too far, surmised Beck might merely have taken “stupid pills.” JOE SCARBOROUGH: Hey, I don’t get it. MIKA BRZEZINSKI: I don’t either. SCARBOROUGH:  How many times can you set your hair on fire before you stop having your viewers being shocked? BRZEZINSKI: It’s like the boy who cried wolf in drama form, on crack. SCARBOROUGH: On crack?  That’s awfully harsh. I don’t know if I’d go that far. BRZEZINSKI: It’s just silly: how many times can you set your hair on fire? SCARBOROUGH: On crack? Maybe he’s taking stupid pills.   I don’t think it’s crack. BRZEZINSKI: That’s better: you’re so smart.

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Beck ‘On Crack, Taking Stupid Pills’ Say Mika, Joe

Schultz Guest: Beck & Koch Brothers Plotting To Provoke Race Riots

I was going to say the left has now officially hit rock bottom.  But it’s still a long way to Election Day for the desperate Dems . . . On this evening’s Ed Show, trial-lawyer guest Mike Papantonio accused Glenn Beck and the Koch brothers of consciously plotting, via Beck’s DC rally, to provoke race riots. In Papantonio’s fevered mind, the Beck-Koch axis is attempting to recreate the race riots of 1968 . . MIKE PAPANTONIO:  There’s no difference. If you even look at the money that’s behind the tea-bagger movement, it’s the same money that was behind the Richard Nixon movement, the fear movement, that took place back then. ED SCHULTZ: So you would say, and I don’t want to put words in your mouth, is this about self-promotion for the guy who’s organizing this, or is it really about restoring honor? PAPANTONIO:   Well it has nothing about restoring honor. It’s a bunch of inheritance–here, if you follow the money, Ed, it’s about inheritance babies, the Koch brothers, inheritance babies, who don’t want to pay taxes, they want conservatives in power. The way you get conservatives in power is to scare the hell out of Americans.  I’ll tell you what Glenn Beck is hoping. He’s hoping that two blocks away from the Lincoln Memorial, that African-Americans are going to be so angry about what he’s done on that important day, when Martin–Martin Luther King stood up and gave the most important speech of his career.  And here you have this buffoon, this demagogue, that’s going to be preaching hate.  What does that do to the African-Americans that are two blocks away, listening to this hate speech? Any way you dress it up, Sarah Palin can’t help herself. Glenn Beck can’t help himself. But you know what? They’re not the money behind all this.  The money behind this are the Koch brothers who put $100 million into spreading hate in this country.  And they want the same divisiveness, they the same ugliness that we saw in the Watts riots to emerge , so the next conservative movement can come into power.  It’s the same blueprint, Ed. I promise you: it’s the same blueprint. Mike seems awfully interested in “money,” mentioning it four times in his rant. Not surprising from a trial-lawyer promoting big class action lawsuits stemming from the BP spill.  As for the “self-promotion” that Schultz decries,  Papantonio’s incessant Ed Show appearances are little less than infomercials for his legal services.   All of that didn’t stop Papantonio from slurring Beck, the Koch brothers, and by extension the Tea Party movement [that he twice called “tea-baggers”] as attempting to provoke race riots. This is what the Dems, and their backers in the trial bar, have been reduced to, facing electoral disaster down the line. Note: the Koch brothers, libertarian-oriented conservatives, have become a favorite whipping boy of the left.  Have a look at P.J. Gladnick’s piece for a description of the way The New Yorker slimed them.

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Schultz Guest: Beck & Koch Brothers Plotting To Provoke Race Riots

Newsweek Puff Piece on Al Sharpton Distorts Reality

The transformation of Reverend Al Sharpton from street provocateur to civil rights eminence ranks as one of the more remarkable image makeovers in American public life. And mainstream journalism has played a central role. Anyone doubting as much should read the recent (August 2) cover story of Newsweek magazine,  “The Reinvention of the Reverend.”  Written by Allison Samuels and Jerry Adler, the article is a fawning and misleading portrait of the Harlem-based preacher/politician. The piece doesn’t quite beatify Sharpton. But it does make a highly selective use of information, some of it factually wrong, in stating the case for “the Rev,” as he is commonly known, as a moral conscience of the nation. It also stands as an example, as if any more were needed, that “diversity” in the newsroom isn’t about a diversity of opinion.  Reverend Sharpton, as National Legal and Policy Center often has noted, has a long history of public demagoguery in the service of civil rights. In the spring of 2009 NLPC released a lengthy Special Report (which I had written) documenting how Sharpton has used his social standing among many fellow blacks to transform a crime, or an allegation of it, into collective moral grievance. His style follows a distinct pattern. First, he receives word of a black or blacks allegedly victimized by white civilians or cops. Should he be sufficiently outraged, he will insist on serving as that person (and his or her family’s) “adviser.” At that point, he will launch a nonstop media-focused campaign in the streets designed to mobilize public opinion in favor of the victim and against the opposition. In his mind, blacks continue to be second-class citizens, their cries for justice all but ignored by powerful elites. Thus, these elites must feel the heat of the street. In his 2002 autobiography, “Al on America,” he writes (pp. 93, 95): “To many in America, racism is a thing of the past. It’s something that happened ‘back then.’ To millions of blacks in this country, it is something we live with every day…(T)he outcome of my marches is one of the reasons why I will always be considered ‘controversial’ in some circles – because I rip the veil off Northern established liberal racism.” It’s true that Al Sharpton doesn’t project the buffoonish swagger and menace that launched his career as an A-list provocateur around 25 years ago and carried him through the Nineties. To some extent, that’s a product of aging. Now 55, he would look doubly foolish remaining in his old guise, pompadour hairstyle intact. But more significantly, he doesn’t have to project menace. He knows he can accomplish far more with his America-is-still-racist-country message by affecting statesmanlike dignity. Over the years the man has cultivated many friends and allies in the top echelons of politics, business, labor, philanthropy, clergy and entertainment. His New York-based nonprofit organization, National Action Network, enjoys generous financial support from corporations such as Coca-Cola, Home Depot, Macy’s, Toyota and Wal-Mart. He has become a Democratic Party kingmaker in New York City. And he’s reached across that proverbial aisle, befriending such conservative politicians and media stars as Republican National Chairman Michael Steele, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Fox News Channel talk show host Bill O’Reilly. With the help of his top aide and media consultant, Rachel Noerdlinger (herself an underrated figure), he’s become The Man to See. Not less than eight times since President Obama’s inauguration, he’s been a White House guest. At his core, Rev. Sharpton is still the same man, something he doesn’t hesitate to point out. The Newsweek article quotes him: “My mission, my message, and everything else about me is the same as always. The country may have changed, but I haven’t.” But his evolution in style, as opposed to beliefs, has everything to do with why mainstream media, generally dismissive of Sharpton during the Eighties, Nineties and even his run for the presidency in 2004, now appears almost lovestruck. No longer an embarrassing spectacle, he’s become Sensible and Dignified, a pragmatic facilitator of an overdue “national conversation” on race. Even more than Jesse Jackson, he is the presumptive heir to Martin Luther King, wielding his church- and street-bred wisdom to “heal” America. Typical of this view is an article appearing this March in the Wall Street Journal by Peter Wallsten titled, “Obama’s New Partner: Al Sharpton,” which hopefully took note of Sharpton’s emergence as a key confidante of President Obama. Now here come Newsweek’s Allison Samuels and Jerry Adler with a full-fledged cover story. It’s a puff job – often informative and nuanced, but still a puff job whose intent is image enhancement. Lead author Samuels herself is black; she in fact had authored a post-election celebration piece in 2008 in that magazine’s heralding the impending arrival of Michelle Obama as First Lady ( “What Michelle Means to Us” ). This latest article, not unexpectedly, takes any number of facts out of context and inserts some suspect ones. Consider the opening sentences: If the Rev. Al Sharpton didn’t exist, he would have had to be invented. In fact, the novelist Tom Wolfe has claimed he did invent him, in the character of the Reverend Bacon, a supporting figure in The Bonfire of the Vanities. Each generation of black America gives birth to its own incarnation of the charismatic preacher-activist who confronts the white power structure in the streets and talks circles around it on Meet the Press. Just a few months after the fictional Bacon made his appearance in 1987, the real Sharpton burst onto the national stage as the fiery advocate for Tawana Brawley, a New York teenager who claimed to have been raped by a gang of white men, including a policeman. This is wishful thinking. If Al Sharpton, whose syntax is often wanting, “talks circles” around lackeys of the white power structure on “Meet the Press” or any other political TV talk show, few have noticed. And Tawana Brawley didn’t simply “claim” to have been gang-raped; she fabricated a massive hoax which Sharpton chose to believe against all sound evidence to the contrary. Moreover, one hardly can imagine Tom Wolfe, an exceedingly sharp-eyed observer of the colliding social worlds of New York City, claiming that his composite literary creation, Reverend Reginald Bacon, “invented” Reverend Sharpton. If anything, it was the other way around. By the time “The Bonfire of the Vanities” appeared in bookstores in 1987, Sharpton already had become a national public figure, having made mayhem in the streets of New York in trying to railroad “subway vigilante” Bernhard Goetz and do likewise to the putative perpetrators of the death of a young black man, Michael Griffith, in the Queens neighborhood of Howard Beach. Sharpton, having absorbed first-hand the convictions and theatrical styles of Adam Clayton Powell, Martin Luther King, Jesse Jackson, and James Brown (among others), invented his own persona and ran with it. He needed no help from Tom Wolfe. The authors’ snow job becomes even more blatant when they assess the impact of his campaigns over the years: Sharpton has been right much more often than wrong in his choice of causes, dating back at least to the 1989 murder of Yusuf Hawkins, a black teenager who paid with his life for the mistake of walking down the wrong block in Brooklyn. Many African-Americans will be forever grateful to Sharpton for taking on the thankless task of defending the victims of Bernhard Goetz, who opened fire on four unarmed black teenagers in the subway. But he also has made some grave missteps. In 1991, during a tense confrontation between blacks and Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn, he notably failed to calm tensions with a remark about “the diamond merchants in Crown Heights.” In 1995 his reference to “white interlopers,” at a protest against the eviction of a popular Harlem music store, was followed by a fatal arson attack on the white-owned business that held the lease. Each of these statements misrepresents the facts, if not in letter then certainly in spirit. The phrase “right much more often than wrong” is a huge stretch. The authors give just two examples of his being “right.” Let’s a have a look at the case of Yusuf Hawkins. His fatal shooting one evening in August 1989, as I explained at length in the NLPC Special Report, was indeed a crime. But the sequence of events leading up to it makes clear this was as much a case of mistaken identity as it was a wanton act. Only a few among the crowd of white male teens was materially involved. Moreover, the group earlier had been threatened by a local white teenaged girl who reacted to members’ disapproval of her dating a black male by vowing to sic a group of his black friends on them. The young whites had good reason to be nervous when they encountered Mr. Hawkins and three black companions. They guessed wrong, of course. But the shooter’s action did not reflect on the whole Bensonhurst neighborhood. Oblivious to context, Rev. Sharpton and his minions thought it did. For many months thereafter, he routinely held protest marches through the neighborhood, holding up the community as a haven of hate. The ceaseless provocations would produce another crime in January 1991; an enraged white spectator stabbed Sharpton in the staging area of a planned march, nearly fatally. The case for Sharpton as a hero in the wake of the arrest of Bernhard Goetz is even more preposterous. By any reasonable definition, Goetz had acted in self-defense when he shot four young menacing blacks who had surrounded him in a New York City subway car on the afternoon of December 22, 1984. His “victims” – Barry Allen, Troy Canty, James Ramseur and Darrell Cabey – already by then had amassed a combined nine criminal convictions. Two of the “unarmed” youths, moreover, were packing sharpened screwdriver shanks. Their intent, as Cabey himself admitted at Goetz’s civil trial, had been to rob Goetz. To describe Goetz, a mild-mannered white electronics repairman, as having “opened fire” on these criminals is true only in the narrowest sense. Any number of blacks, one might add, publicly defended Goetz, including civil rights leader Roy Innis. If defending Goetz’s assailants was a “thankless” task, it’s because Sharpton didn’t deserve any thanks – especially since it was his intent to send Goetz to prison. Even where the authors Samuels and Adler admit Sharpton’s campaigns were ill-advised, they parse their language to minimize his role in egging on mobs, even if he wasn’t there in person. The “tense confrontation” between blacks and Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights in August 1991, in fact, was a case of predator fitfully encountering resistance from prey. Roving bands of blacks had gone on a rampage in the wake of a local black boy accidentally struck and killed by a passing car occupied by Jews. What ensued was a full-fledged riot, not simply a confrontation. One of the rioters stabbed an unarmed Jew to death. To say Sharpton “failed to calm tensions” gives him far too much credit. He helped create them. One wonders if Samuels and Adler would describe the Rape of Nanking as a “tense confrontation” between Japanese and Chinese. As for the fatal arson attack on a retail store in Harlem in December 1995, the Newsweek authors conveniently omit the fact that the attack (actually a combination of arson and gunfire) was committed by a black and that it claimed the lives of seven innocent people plus that of the murderer, Roland Smith aka “Abubunde Mulocko.” They also omit the fact that the white-owned retailer holding the lease on the black-owned record store (actually it was a sublease – a black Pentecostal church was the landlord), Freddy’s Fashion Mart, was white-owned. That’s why it was targeted in the first place. Sharpton, for his part, did more than simply denounce a “white interloper” on a radio broadcast months earlier. He also had sent one of his lieutenants, Morris Powell, a man with a history of mental instability, to organize menacing pickets in front of Freddy’s Fashion Mart to prevent the “racist” eviction of that record store which had operated at the same location for some 20 years. The murders were the culmination of months of Sharpton-directed intimidation. The authors, of course, don’t deny Sharpton’s faults (as if we don’t all have a few). But on balance, they conclude, his legacy is highly positive. Here’s how they wind things up: It is, of course, the fate of people like Sharpton to be misunderstood, and his own tendency to get carried away while addressing a crowd has contributed to it at times…He is out there alone, still standing on the same principle he first enunciated in his housing project in Brooklyn: poor people have the same rights as rich ones, to justice in the streets and in the courts. If he didn’t exist, we might, in fact, need to invent him. We’ll probably be seeing a lot more media revisionism like this. And we probably won’t have long to wait. Rev. Sharpton is prime organizer and scheduled lead speaker at a “March on Washington” on August 28 to commemorate the 47th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. The event will start with a rally at Washington, D.C.’s Dunbar High School and follow with a march to the site of the Martin Luther King Memorial now under construction on the National Mall. Having become the acknowledged standard bearer of King’s message, Sharpton’s stock probably will rise higher than ever. The problem is that his hobby horse, a “national conversation” on race, will continue to be one-sided. And if there is anything people like Sharpton don’t like, it’s when opponents inject inconvenient facts into the narrative. Crossposted at the blog of the National Legal and Policy Center

Link:
Newsweek Puff Piece on Al Sharpton Distorts Reality

Juan Williams: Media Always Make Blacks the Victims and Whites the Perpetrators

Juan Williams on Saturday said when it comes to news stories about race, America’s media always make black people the victims and white people the perpetrators.  As the discussion on “Fox News Watch” turned to last week’s murders at a Hartford, Connecticut, beer distributor, host Jon Scott read clippings from the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Associated Press all claiming the killer had been responding to years of racist treatment. When done, he said incredulously, “Juan, the guy was caught on camera stealing beer and the media turned it into a racial story.” Williams responded in a fashion that likely shocked many viewers (video follows with transcript and commentary):  JON SCOTT, HOST: Those murders in Connecticut last week at a beer distributor near Hartford. This week the business reopened eight days after a guy named Omar Thornton killed eight and wounded two moments after he lost his job for stealing beer. Omar was black, his victims were white, and this is how the coverage went. August 3rd, the New York Times headline read “Troubles Preceded Connecticut Workplace Killing.” And in the second paragraph the Times reported, “He might also have had cause to be angry. He had complained to his girlfriend of being racially harassed at work.” Here is the Associated Press report from August 7th, four days after the murders. It was reprinted in the Washington Post and other places. “To those closest to him, Omar Thornton was caring, quiet and soft spoken. But underneath, Thornton seized with a sense of racial injustice for years that culminated in a shooting rampage.” On August 7th, 2010, the Washington Post headline read “Beer Warehouse Shooter Long Complained of Racism.” Juan, the guy was caught on camera stealing beer and the media turned it into a racial story. JUAN WILLIAMS, NPR: They don’t have to turn it. I mean, this is the way the media treats all race stories in this country, Jon. It’s always that black people are the victims, white people are the perpetrators. You know, it’s white guilt, black victimhood and it’s constant, it’s in every area, not just this, but in terms of our political discussions about race that to me are always one-side and twisted and prevent us from having the honest kind of dialog that is so important. In this story, I don’t have any objection to people saying, “What was the cause of this man committing the act?” But the way that they then back peddle and say. You know what, the unions don’t have any record of this. The employer has no record of this is to me evidence that in fact, this was a racial attack on whites. Subsequently we’ve seen other attacks on blacks in this country. But let’s have an honest discussion. Indeed, Juan. Let’s have an honest discussion. Unfortunately, that has seemed far less likely since the inauguration of Barack Obama despite America being sold on the notion that all of our race problems would go away with the election of our first black President. Quite the contrary, things have seemed to go backwards, especially for media members that have become even less colorblind than they were before. Why might that be? 

Originally posted here:
Juan Williams: Media Always Make Blacks the Victims and Whites the Perpetrators