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Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Jonah Goldberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Great Speech But For Deja Vu
by Jonah Goldberg
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It was, in parts, a lovely speech. It was far better than I expected, and I am not one to underestimate Barack Obama’s skill at constructing cathedrals with his words.

Rhetorically, his address in Philadelphia represented a historic achievement. The Democratic front-runner, the first viable black presidential candidate, showed that a liberal can, in fact, abandon the calcified talking points and buzzwords of racial discourse that have slowed progress. Democratic politicians have carried the baggage of black victimology and white guilt for generations. Whenever Republican candidates have tried to advance our politics without such baggage, Democrats have yelled, “Here, catch,” and crushed them with it.

This, for me, was the thrilling part of Obama’s speech: For a moment, he put down the albatross.

He sang the praises of the Founding Fathers and the implicit promise they made to all Americans, not just to white men. He denounced his former pastor’s denigration of the “greatness and the goodness of our nation.” He partially acknowledged the moral legitimacy of what he too narrowly calls the American “immigrant experience,” which rejects the idea that a man today is responsible for the sins of others long dead. He recognized that the black community is too quick to blame outside forces for its own problems. He blamed the Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s biliousness on an antiquated worldview enmeshed in a “static” view of this wonderfully fluid nation.

Yes, he refused to fully denounce Wright, but he managed to seem like he was grounding his refusal in love and personal loyalty while still making it clear that Wright’s words were unacceptable. In effect, he says he loves the sinner but hates the sin. In this age where politicians throw their inconvenient passengers under the bus after the first pothole, this was refreshing even if it was intellectually wanting.

In short, there was wonderful stuff to be found in Obama’s address. You can be sure the mainstream press and the Democratic faithful will leap at the opportunity to coronate Obama for his statesmanship and brilliance the way a man dying of thirst plunges into the cool water of an oasis. The Wright story is over for everybody but the so-called forces of divisiveness

But oases can reveal themselves to be mirages.

Obama proved he’s capable of dropping the baggage of yesteryear. But he also proved he’s even more adept at picking it back up. Continued...

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About The Author
Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online.
 
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Subject: Obama and Wright, religious hypocrites..
Obama has said that Wright led him into his religious commitment and baptized him. As a biblical systematic theologian, I have to point out that Mr. Wright has proven by his own words to be anything but a Christian. He may be a Black Muslim on the order of Louis Farrakhan, but he is no Christian by any legitimate biblical definition of the term. Than means that Obama is not a genuine Christian either, but rather the same type of hypocrite as is his mentor. This should be important to all of the immature, easily deceived Christians tempted to vote for him because of his false claim to being a follower of Jesus. The great George Washington Carver would counsel all of us at this point in history to run from people like Obama and Wright because "they are evil."

RL
Me too. If I ever get out of line, just call me on it.
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