Am I the only one who recalls how it was during the
2008 presidential campaign when there were literally legions of commentators
from all across the political spectrum who were doing their best to convince
themselves as well as the electorate that the election of America’s “first
black president”—then Senator Barack Hussein Obama—promised to usher in a new
era of race relations, a “post-racial” epoch.
And judging from a Gallup poll conducted shortly before the election,
voters bought it, hook, line and sinker.
Over half of all Americans were confident that interracial relations
would dramatically improve because of this “historic” event.
In the wake of his election, this number soared to
seven out of ten Americans who entertained high hopes for the future of race
relations in America—and the world. And there
were many notable players within the black community who actually endorsed this
nonsense. Some going so far as to argue
that the presence of a black man as “uniquely poised” as Barry “Almighty” in
the Oval Office could inspire troubled black youth to aim for success. And of course, Barry, not unsurprisingly,
spared no occasion to both fuel and exploit these hopes. And now, some years later, how silly these
true believers in Barry’s “post-racial” America should feel.
Now Barry, on the other hand, looks not so much
silly as deceitful, and possibly even treacherous, for not only did he fail
abysmally to deliver what he implicitly—and repeatedly—promised; race relations
are actually worse in many respects now than they were prior to Barry’s
election. And they are worse to no
slight extent precisely because of Barry, the same guy who supposed to be the
great uniter, has been anything but.
Even prior to his election Barry had the distinction of introducing to
the nation the toxic “black liberationist,” his pastor and “spiritual mentor”
of over 20 years, the close friend of Louis Farrakhan, the “Reverend” Jeremiah
Wright.
But it was in 2009 after he became the 44th
President of the United States that Barry began to further spoil the well of
racial discourse when he insisted upon springing to the defense of his (black)
friend, Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The latter had a confrontation with white
police officers in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and although Barry himself
publicly conceded that he knew few if any details, he nevertheless couldn’t
resist criticizing the police. And then,
of course, he would again come to insert himself into the Trayvon Martin, Michael
Brown and most recently the Freddie Gray incidents. And for no other reason than to incite.
While black-on-white violence has been a problem for
decades, it seems to have noticeably intensified during Barry’s tenure as
president. For instance, black-on-white
riots have returned to America on Barry’s watch—although now they aren’t
referred to as “riots.” Rather, we call them “flash mobs,” and they have
erupted in cities across the nation. In
fact, Barry and his fellow ideologues in the Democrat Party have worked
overtime to fuel the perception—a perception that remains all too pervasive
among blacks, and the black underclass in particular—that his opponents—i.e. at
least half of the nation—are simply “racist.”
During what have been some of the most
racially-charged news events that America has witnessed in quite some time,
Barry has seemed to go out of his to exacerbate, rather than diffuse, the
resulting tensions. And in choosing to never
actually wait for the facts of any of these cases to become known, Barry has preferred
in each and every instance to do little more than to shoot from the hip, fully
aware of what the consequences of his actions will be. I mean, here we have our president, our black
president, who has repeatedly worked to create a perception that would actually
come to make the facts of each case essentially irrelevant.
Now we fast-forward to earlier today when Moochelle
Obummer was heard urging students at Tuskegee University, a historically black
university in Alabama, to remain involved in civic life during a time of
tension regarding race relations across the country. At the school's commencement address,
Moochelle set about to list what she see as being those scenarios in which African-Americans feel they
encounter systemic discrimination, such as "nagging worries that you're
going to get stopped or pulled over for absolutely no reason." She went on to make the rather twisted
argument that those feelings are "real," but disengaging is not an option.
Moochelle said, "I want to be very clear that
those feelings are not an excuse to just throw up our hands and give up. Not an
excuse. They are not an excuse to lose hope. To succumb to feelings of despair
and anger only means that in the end, we lose." Her comments come a week after violent riots
brought Baltimore to a halt following the arrest and death of 25-year-old
Freddie Gray, a black man who died in police custody of yet to be determined
causes. Maryland State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby has charged all six Baltimore
Police Department officers involved in Gray's arrest for offenses including
second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter.
Moochelle noted that events like those in Baltimore
and Ferguson have generated feelings of futility amongst black men and women
who believe the institutions of civil society aren't designed to protect or
represent them. She said, "They're
rooted in decades of structural challenges that have made too many folks feel
frustrated and invisible. And those feelings are playing out in communities
like Baltimore and Ferguson and so many others across this country." Moochelle pressed the students to vote to
ensure those institutional systems work more equitably. Moochelle works to create a perception of things
as she sees them, not as they actually exist
Moochelle said, "The first thing we have to do
is vote. Hey, no, not just once in a while. Not just when my husband or
somebody you like is on the ballot. But in every election at every level, all
of the time." She went on to say, "Because
here is the truth — if you want to have a say in your community, if you truly
want the power to control your own destiny, then you've got to be
involved." And in sense, I would
agree staying informed. You simply cannot, as implied by Moochelle,
use as your only criteria in choosing for whom to vote, the skin color of the
candidate.
So as we can very plainly see, racism seems to be
prevalent in the first family. Because
they know, as does the Democrat Party as a whole realize, if blacks were ever
to desert the party, all would be lost.
Not that that is likely to happen in the foreseeable future. Despite the fact that the black community
under this black president, voted for by 95 percent of the blacks in this
country, is far worse off, nearly on every front, today than it was back in
2008. And yet despite all that Barry
remains very popular among those in the black community. If I was one of those attending Moochelle’s
speech, I’d be rather selective in following her advice.
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