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Monday, May 05, 2008
No, No, No, Don’t Tell Me to G-- D--- America
By Peter J. Wirs
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Will Hillary Clinton fight for the nomination past June 1st?


Although the Civil War’s individual military records were never known for their accuracy, my fifth-great grandfather, John Arms, was apparently in the 72nd Pennsylvania regiment, stationed in reserve behind the 69th (the "Fighting Irish") and 71st Pennsylvania regiments of the Philadelphia Brigade, responsible for manning the "Angle," the turn in the stonewall that took the brunt of Pickett’s charge on the afternoon of July 3rd in Gettysburg. What is certain is that my fifth-great grandfather was shot in the leg by a Confederate bullet, taken to the rear, bit on a bullet to offset the pain while the surgeons sawed off his leg (amputation was the only reasonable surgical procedure since musket rounds splattered upon impact), given a shot of whiskey and sent home.

Accordingly, I take great umbrage when Senator Barak Obama’s preacher/mentor the Rev. Jeremiah Wright lumps me under the Malcolm X/ James Hal Cone belief that all white people are devils.

To set aside the media rhetoric for the moment, Rev. Wright of is the Black Liberation school of theology, although initiated by Malcolm X, was academically fined tuned by Rev. Dr. James Hal Cone of Union Theological Seminary. Under Cone, Black Christianity is required to retreat from the universality of Christianity. "Black theology," argues Cone, "refuses to accept a God who is not identified totally with the goals of the black community. If God is not for us and against white people, then he is a murderer, and we had better kill him." Cone advocates: "Black theology will accept only the love of God which participates in the destruction of the white enemy." This theology is based on the New Testament, in that according to Cone, "Jesus is not for all, but for the oppressed, the poor and unwanted of society, and against oppressors."

Cone asserts that "Theologically, Malcolm X was not far wrong when he called the white man ‘the devil.’ The white structure of this American society, personified in every racist, must be at least part of what the New Testament meant by demonic forces. . . About [sixty] years ago it was acceptable to lynch a black man by hanging him from a tree; but today whites destroy him by crowding him into a ghetto and letting filth and despair put the final touches on death." On a PBS interview with Bill Moyers, Cone argues and Moyer, the quintessential Southern Democratic apologist, readily agrees, that lynching is in "America’s DNA."

Well excuse me, lynching is not in my DNA. Taking his Philadelphia speech at his word, if Obama wants to get into a serious discussion about racism, let’s get the facts straight. Stop acting as if American history began with the advent of television. Racism is not, and never has been, a mere black-white issue. Racism has, is, and probably always will be a North-South issue (and to an equally rich-poor divide). There is no such thing, as per Rev. Wright’s dictum, a U.S. of KKK A.

May I remind Sen. Obama, Rev. Wright and Dr Cone, that 110,000 Americans died in battle (and other 250,000 succumbed to disease) as Union soldiers, fighting to preserve the Union and free the Black Man. May I also remind Sen. Obama, Rev. Wright and Dr. Cone that it was the Republican Party who prosecuted the Civil War, a Republican Congress that funded the Union Army, Republican governors who raised the regiments (U.S. Army was still state-based during the Civil War), and a Republican President who issued the Emancipation Proclamation. It was Republicans who wore the Blue, Democrats wore the Gray.

And after the Civil War, it was a Republican Congress that passed the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. It was a Republican Congress that passed all major civil rights acts of 1870 and 1871. Even when the Democrats controlled the Congress, it was Republicans who broke the filibusters and provided the necessary votes to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Indeed, the very reason for the existence of the Republican Party was the Abolitionist Movement, which began in 1688 not more than a couple blocks from my office in Germantown. Continued...

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About The Author
Peter J. Wirs is currently the Chairman & Co-Trustee of the Republican Leadership Trust as well as the incoming President of the National Conference of Public Officials.
 
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Wow
Well first off I don't think Senator Obama told you or anyone to GD America. Before I dive into this however, I must say that that this kind of material degrades the viability of Town Hall as being a news source.

Obama has said numerous times that those views expressed by wright are not his own and never will be. But even more so, You lump Obama and Wright in this category as if they are of a single body or thought. Its almost as if Obama isn't able to run off his own thoughts and was just a brainwashed church member who believed everything his pastor said. Let me tell you something, As an african-american christian, My accountability is to God and God only. My pastor, while I admire him and serve under him, at the end of the day is not who I turn to for my walk with God. Yes, he facilitates the place where I worship, and is a leader who is charged with giving me insight into the scriptures. I also have my own personal relationship with Christ that supercedes my membership in the church. This is the type of relationship we should all have pertaining to faith. Your pastor nor your church is what gets you into heaven, its your personal walk with Christ. So how about this, how about you look at obama's personal writings. His personal walk with God. Oh and please, grow up.

What is wrong with you people?
I have no intention to vote for Obama ever. But this smearing is just ridiculous.

You put up a picture of Obama and his wife, and then write about this Cone guy who calls all white people devils. That is not, nor has it ever been, something Obama said.

You've now gone one more step. It's not just Obama's pastor, but now it's someone who might have written a book Obama's pastor might have read.

I still think that Charley Reese summarized this whole thing best when he said:

Obama caved in to the media pressure. As a result, I think a lot more of Wright than I do of Obama. No one should ever let somebody else tell him who he is supposed to like and dislike, and whose views he is supposed to denounce. When people write off other human beings because of a difference of opinion, then you know those people are fanatics. Obama claimed to be offended that the Rev. Wright said Obama had to speak as a politician while he had to speak as a pastor. Then Obama did exactly what the Rev. Wright said he would do – he spoke like a politician.

Never did Obama say G-D America. Before you write "And I will not let Senator Obama and his mentor, Rev. Wright tell me to God Damn America," get your facts straight!


But I will leave you with a new Republican attack plan. Find out something horrible and sordid that Kevin Bacon did in the 80's (anyone seen Footloose?) and then try to somehow link Obama to Bacon.

I bet you can't do it with six links or less!