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Article

Obama’s Speech

Thomas Sowell | Primetime Politics

Did Senator Barack Obama’s speech in Philadelphia convince people that he is still a viable candidate to be President of the United States, despite the adverse reactions to statements by his pastor, Jeremiah Wright?

The polls and the primaries will answer that question.

The great unasked question for Senator Obama is the question that was asked about President Nixon during the Watergate scandal; What did he know and when did he know it?

Although Senator Obama would now have us believe that he is shocked, shocked, at what Jeremiah Wright said, that he was not in the church when pastor Wright said those things from the pulpit, this still leaves the question of why he disinvited Wright from the event at which he announced his candidacy for the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination a year ago.

Either Barack Obama or his staff must have known then that Jeremiah Wright was not someone whom they wanted to expose to the media and to the media scrutiny to which that could lead.

Why not, if it is only now that Senator Obama is learning for the first time, to his surprise, what kinds of things Jeremiah Wright has been saying and doing?

No one had to be in church the day Wright made his inflammatory and obscene remarks to know about them.

The cable news journalists who are playing the tapes of those sermons were not there. The tapes were on sale in the church itself. Obama knew that because he had bought one or more of those tapes.

But even if there were no tapes, and even if Obama never heard from other members of the church what their pastor was saying, he spent 20 years in that church, not just as an ordinary member but also as someone who once donated $20,000 to the church.

There was no way that he didn’t know about Jeremiah Wright’s anti-American and racist diatribes from the pulpit.

Someone once said that a con man’s job is not to convince skeptics but to enable people to continue to believe what they already want to believe.

Accordingly, Obama’s Philadelphia speech—a theatrical masterpiece—will probably reassure most Democrats and some other Obama supporters. They will undoubtedly say that we should now “move on,” even though many Democrats have still not yet moved on from George W. Bush’s 2000 election victory.

Like the Soviet show trials during their 1930s purges, Obama’s speech was not supposed to convince critics but to reassure supporters and fellow-travelers, in order to keep the “useful idiots” useful.

Best-selling author Shelby Steele’s recent book on Barack Obama ("A Bound Man") has valuable insights into both the man and the circumstances facing many other blacks—especially those who were never part of the black ghetto culture but who feel a need to identify with it for either personal, political or financial reasons.

Like religious converts who become more Catholic than the Pope, such people often become blacker-than-thou. For whatever reason, Barack Obama chose a black extremist church decades ago—even though there was no shortage of very different churches, both black and white—in Chicago.

Some say that he was trying to earn credibility on the ghetto streets, to facilitate his work as a community activist or for his political career. We may never know why.

But now that Barack Obama is running for a presidential nomination, he is doing so on a radically different basis, as a post-racial candidate uniquely prepared to bring us all together.

Yet the past continues to follow him, despite his attempts to bury it and the mainstream media’s attempts to ignore it or apologize for it.

Shelby Steele depicts Barack Obama as a man without real convictions, “an iconic figure who neglected to become himself.”

Senator Obama has been at his best as an icon, able with his command of words to meet other people’s psychic needs, including a need to dispel white guilt by supporting his candidacy.

But President of the United States, in a time of national danger, under a looming threat of nuclear terrorism? No.

(c) 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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Comments

maybe Obama joined this church because of the incredible work it does with poor and oppressed blacks.  you might have heard that he has a history of community organizing.  the truth is many in the press are--like you are attempting to do here--trying to hang these comments around Obama’s neck.  well i have news for you...the right-wing churches in this country have been spewing hate for as long as i can remember.  ever heard that gays brought on 9/11?  i’m still waiting for Bush to distance himself (or McCain for that matter) from these types of statements.

seriously, your article makes me sick to my stomach the way you can paint these broad brush strokes over something as deep and profoundly intense as the black experience.  i should have been a writer because i could be making a much better contribution to our society than you are.

Posted by John  on  03/18  at  11:38 PM

John,

If McCain attended the “right wing church” you mention, called its pastor his mentor and contributed 20 grand to his ministry, what do you think your and the media’s response would be?

If you’re drawing an equivalence between right wing hate and left wing hate, I’ll agree.

I don’t agree that one should be given a pass though.

Posted by John Johansson  on  03/19  at  01:05 AM

John of 12:38 AM sounds like a gentleman who has had someone take a crap in his Easter Basket....

That is EXACTLY the feeling of those who WANTED to believe Obama was leader—only to learn he is a follower of a hate filled “Black Liberation Theology”—founded on the works of Cone - who in any sane society would be certifiably nuts!  A hater of the first order..

If Cone were white - preaching his thoughts from a WHITE perspective—every black in America would RIGHTLY call for his hanging—and I would help!

Posted by John Morris  on  03/19  at  01:21 AM

Obama is playing a political game with Black and White voters. He is saying what he thinks his audience will believe.
He is not a Black activist. He is not someone who wants to ‘bring us all together’. He’s not ‘African-American. He’s not a very good grandson - and, according to MIchelle, he’s not a good husband. He also does NOT have my vote because I don’t like the content of his character.

Posted by David Adams  on  03/19  at  05:18 AM

To John and the other black racists here. Dr. Sowell is 10 shades darker than Obama or Wright. If all you care about is skin color you ought to be followers of him, not race hustlers and race baiters like Wright, Jackson, Sharpton and their ilk!

(I’m holdng my arm up to the monitor. What color is it?)

Posted by Dyna Chrome  on  03/19  at  09:39 AM

John =
Let’s look at Obama speaking thinly veiled threats himself in this video taken at a conclave of black separatist ministers...Headline: “Obama Warns of “Quiet Riot” Among Blacks”

He needs to answer for his OWN words as well.

http://cbs2chicago.com/topstories/Obama.Blacks.Quiet.2.337535.html

Posted by mari77  on  03/19  at  09:46 AM

OBAMA is a wierd father to those little girls.  What decent
father would bring two little girls into that ‘den of iniquity’ to
be indoctrinated into “HATE SPEECH”!

A good and decent father would be trying to enforce “good”
into their minds instead of hate for those that may be a little
different from them.  There are plenty of fine role models for
them that would inspire and help children of that age. 

OBAMA is a wierd as his wife and no better than that nutcase
The Rev. Wright!  Without people like Obama his church would
lose a lot of parishioners. We do know how it works.  I wonder
if the American public can see the IRS statement of the
Rev. Wright?  Can we see the IRS statement for the OBAMA’s

Posted by tess  on  03/19  at  10:03 AM

I am so disappointed. I had such hope for Obama, and feel that I have been “had” by just another opportunistic politician.

It seems that all that has been done for some of us (welfare, ADC, medicaid, etc) isn’t enough. Daniel Patrick Moynihan was right. We democrats have destroyed the black community and family, turned neighborhoods into drug dens, destroyed our cities, and still blame “whitey” for destroying our kids, our hope, our dreams.

What will be enough? What is “equality”. Whatever happened to “character” as the solution?

Obama lost my vote. I probably won’t even bother to vote now.

Posted by gigi  on  03/19  at  10:59 AM

no way you can voluntarily sit in the pews and listen to your “spiritual advisor”, and not be indoctrinated by his hate, his lies and his vitriol.  Obama has NO excuse, except to excuse the preacher by blaming white America.  Seems to me that the preacher is doing just fine in “racist America” despite all the evil white people like me.

Obama has shown not only is he NOT a uniter, and NOT honest...but he shows terrible judgement.  He has proven himself to be unacceptable as a candidate.

Posted by joyce  on  03/20  at  03:01 AM

I thought his reaction speech to his pastor’s comments was done in a truthful, honest and tasteful way.  I forget which news channel I was watching but one of the regular folks that were interviewed made a statement that made so much sense to me, “For those that are white, Imagine your grandparents and their comments towards minorities, etc… that’s exactly what you have here in the pastor"… He’s not an evil man, he is just sharing his view of the world as a black man… a black man from a generation that was not nearly as accepting as current generations (don’t get me wrong we still need to get rid of lots of ignorance on both sides of the racial fence).  I remember when my grandmother learned that my college roommate was going to be black… she was genuinely worried about me and how it could impact my college career.  This feeling of hers is shared by many of her generation and it stems from ignorance, not evil.  The problem is this is so blown up in the media and it sways people’s judgement ... another example of our media intervening in politics… Racism will change… it will go away… The relationship between media and politics needs to change too.

Posted by dstrack  on  03/20  at  09:58 AM

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