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Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Kathleen Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Guilting America to the White House
by Kathleen Parker
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Barack Obama is a magician.

He could tell me it's raining on a sunny day, and I'd grab an umbrella. He could tell me the moon is the sun, and I'd reach for my shades.

He could even tell me that the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's rants god-damning America and blaming AIDS on a white-man conspiracy were wrong but essentially justified by a racist past ... and I'd have to slap myself before I saddled up a polka-dotted horse and galloped down the Yellow Brick Road.

Obama's speech Tuesday from Philadelphia -- the city of brotherly love -- was eloquent, inspiring and will be read in schools for generations. But between the lines of change and reconciliation were a discomfiting hint of buried fury, a sense of racial righteousness and a tacit approval attached to his expressed disapproval of Wright's now-famous raves that will leave many Americans wondering: Is he with us? Or is he against us?

In a flourish of brilliance, Obama framed his Rev. Wright problem in the context of America's unfinished work toward "a more perfect union," as envisioned by the nation's forefathers. It isn't that Wright is off-the-wall, we were to infer. It is that our country is falling short of its promise.

Which isn't completely false, of course, but not completely true, either. America isn't finished with its business of equality -- and race does still bedevil us -- but our progress since the twin blights of slavery and Jim Crow isn't insignificant.

Ever conscious of his pledge to unity, Obama acknowledged as much, saying that Wright wasn't wrong to talk about racism -- even if it was one-sided. He was wrong to speak "as if our society was static: as if no progress has been made."

But what he didn't acknowledge is that Wright is completely off-the-wall, even if the snippets we've seen are only a fraction of his life's work. Give Wright credit for helping the unfortunate and for leading Obama to his faith. But those accomplishments don't quite neutralize the anti-white message of the man Obama selected as his spiritual mentor.

Like the best politicians, Obama senses our restlessness. One of his many gifts is his ability to lull people with flawless logic and uplifting rhetoric.

Of course he disagrees with some of Wright's controversial statements -- just as most people disagree with some of what their pastors and rabbis say. We're yum-yumming that idea, thinking "Yeah, that's right," when our inner reality-checker kicks in and kills the buzz.

Then we remember that advancing lies and conspiracy theories that pit black against white is not, in fact, defensible. And that what many find offensive in Wright's statements is not comparable to the minor differences they likely have with their own pastors and rabbis.

The question still remains: Why did Obama, future author of racial harmony, stay with a preacher whose black nationalist leanings were no secret?

Obama said he could no more denounce Wright, who is "like family," than he could denounce the black community -- or his white grandmother. Instead, he praised Wright's larger presence and purpose in the black community as outweighing the YouTube replays of a profane man on the verge of paranoiac hysteria. Continued...

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About The Author
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
 
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Subject: Emancipation Proc. From White Guilt
Kathlenn,

Please encourage America to pronounce their ‘Emancipation Proclamation From White Guilt’. I posted mine on Townhall on my blog, 26 September 2007. It is one of my featured articles.

As for Barack Hussein Obama, America must seriously consider how important it is to elect their first racially black president without looking at the moral and spirituality of this presidential candidate. America will find itself under the tyranny of a Nelson Mandela of South Africa type whose’s platform was in the name of ‘apartheid’ but actually began to persecute whites after he was elected. I really hope America re-reads the full context of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s literature to understand the real meaning of equal rights and spirituality. 'Black Christianity The Next Jihad Against America'

Dave Kooker
http://dmkooker.blogtownhall.com

Thanks
Thanks, Mrs. Parker,

For helping to crystallize some of my own thoughts and feelings after this speech. You want to believe him, you really do, and you wish you could just move on. But then, as you said, your inner reality checker kicks in.
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