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preservanation
09-05-2008, 02:31 PM
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/06/05/politics/main2888706.shtml
Obama: Bush Ignoring Blacks' "Quiet Riot"

HAMPTON, Va., June 5, 2007
(AP) Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama said Tuesday that the Bush administration has done nothing to defuse a "quiet riot" among blacks that threatens to erupt just as riots in Los Angeles did 15 years ago.

The first-term Illinois senator [Obama] said that with black people from New Orleans and the Gulf Coast still displaced 20 months after Hurricane Katrina, frustration and resentments are building explosively as they did before the 1992 riots.

"This administration was colorblind in its incompetence," Obama said at a conference of black clergy. "But the poverty and the hopelessness was there long before the hurricane.

"All the hurricane did was to pull the curtain back for all the world to see," he said.

Obama's criticism of Bush prompted ovation after ovation from the nearly 8,000 people gathered in Hampton University's Convocation Center, particularly when he denounced the Iraq war and noted that he had opposed it from the outset.

Repeatedly, he [Obama] referred to the riots that erupted in Los Angeles after a jury acquitted four police officers of assault charges in the 1991 beating of Rodney King, a black motorist, after a high speed chase. Fifty-five people died and 2,000 were injured in several days of riots in the city's black neighborhoods.

"Those 'quiet riots' that take place every day are born from the same place as the fires and the destruction and the police decked out in riot gear and the deaths," Obama said. "They happen when a sense of disconnect settles in and hope dissipates. Despair takes hold and young people all across this country look at the way the world is and believe that things are never going to get any better."

He argued that once a hurricane hits or a jury renders a not guilty verdict, "the frustration is there for all to see."

Obama, who is bidding to become the first black president, took the stage after a succession of ministers repeatedly brought the crowd to its feet, singing, praying and swaying to music.

Repeatedly, with evangelical zeal, he raised issues that roused the crowd: increasing the minimum wage and teacher pay, funding for public schools and college financial aid for the poor, ending predatory lending and expediting the reconstruction of New Orleans and the Mississippi coast.

He introduced his own pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright of Chicago's Trinity United as "Unashamedly Black and Unapologetically Christian." He credited Wright with introducing him to Christ, and peppered his speech with scriptural references, at one point invoking the opening lines of the Lord's Prayer.

Obama noted that during the riots, a bullet pierced the abdomen of a pregnant woman and lodged in the elbow of her fetus. The baby was delivered by caesarian section, the bullet was removed and the child, Jessica Glennis Evers-Jones, has only a small scar on her arm to show for it.

Using the incident as a metaphor, Obama said society's problems are worsening because "in too many places across the country, we have not even bothered to take the bullet out."

"When we have more black men in prison than in college, then it's time to take the bullet out," he said.

Obama doesn't regularly focus on racial themes in his standard campaign speeches. He did speak out on black issues in Selma, Ala., in March, when he told a largely black audience that he was a product of the civil rights movement and lectured blacks for failing to vote in large numbers. OMFG!
Here it comes...the ace-race card from up the sleeve.
Inciting riots and promising racial violence if America fails to elect him.

The fact that he played this shocking an despicable "violence" card during the primary is an indication that it will be played soon in the general.

This is the "last card" he can play and will signal his visceral desperation.
The earlier it is thrown,
the more desperate Obama is.

AnnEsthesia
09-05-2008, 02:35 PM
You did notice that this was more than a year ago and that he said nothing about him being elected, right?

preservanation
09-05-2008, 03:14 PM
You did notice that this was more than a year ago and that he said nothing about him being elected, right?Yes I read it....
But the specter has been raised lately.
I think it will be inevitable that this card will be played.
If not by Obama himself, surely by his followers.

Phyxius
09-05-2008, 03:16 PM
Yes I read it....
But the specter has been raised lately.

By you. Simply because you feel the need to project your own racist fears on the world doesn't make them in any way connected to reality... :shame:

piratemonkey
09-05-2008, 03:17 PM
You did notice that this was more than a year ago and that he said nothing about him being elected, right?

I love it!

:madlaugh:

preservanation
09-05-2008, 03:18 PM
Kay-POW! And If Obama Loses?
Townhall.com ^ | August 29, 2008 | Patrick J. Buchanan

Posted on Friday, August 29, 2008 6:57:59 AM by Kaslin

DENVER -- After the phony roll call vote was taken here to formally nominate Barack Obama -- a roll call that did not remotely reflect the true delegate strength of Hillary -- the media exploded in an orgy of celebration about the historic character of the moment to which they had just been privileged to be witness.

"The first black presidential nominee ever of a major party in history!" was proclaimed. Coming on the 45th anniversary of Dr. King's "I Have a Dream" speech, Barack's nomination is being hailed as the last great step forward in the long march to equality and justice in America.

The moral pressure to join the march of history is enormous.

Nor is it unfair to say that some journalists here are obsessed with the issue of race in this campaign. There may be wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, rising tensions with Russia, a falling regime in Pakistan, and reports of U.S. and NATO warships headed for the Persian Gulf, but here it is all about the first black ever nominated for president.

During the primaries, Bill Clinton was charged with racism by liberal Democrats for saying that Barack's claim to being consistent on Iraq was a "fairy tale" and for implying that Barack's victory in South Carolina was no big deal because Jesse Jackson had carried the state twice.

Here at the convention, the media watched Hillary and Bill's speeches with a commissar's care -- to ensure they not only embraced Barack but "validated" his credentials to be president. Should they not go all out for Obama, we are told, the Clintons are dead in the party.

The psychic investment in Barack's candidacy is immense.

So great is the moral pressure to conform that John Lewis, the young hero of Selma Bridge, buckled and recanted his endorsement of Hillary. And that act of disloyalty and betrayal, a capitulation to race solidarity, is regarded as praiseworthy.

Black radio has become a cheering section for Obama. Every GOP ad mocking Obama is inspected for racial motives. Campaign books that portray Obama as a radical or phony are denounced by people who have not even seen them. The thought police are out in force.

Michelle Obama's speech about her upbringing and beliefs -- crafted by Barack's hires -- is said to be the last word on what a mainstream patriotic woman she is. But why, then, would she have taken her two lovely daughters to be baptized by the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and to listen on Sundays to his racist rants against America?

Abroad, we are told, Europe and the Third World are awaiting the moment when America turns her back on her racist past and elevates this black man to the presidency. The subtext is that this is not just a political contest, but a moral test for America.

cial riots of the 1960s that followed.

Barack has just shot 6 points ahead of McCain. But he has not yet closed the sale. And to prevent his closing of the sale, the GOP must raise doubts in the public mind as to whether he is really a man of Middle America or the closet radical of the Rev. Wright's congregation who said of Pennsylvanians that they are bitter folks, who cling to their Bibles, bigotries and guns because the world has left them behind.

No candidate has ever been nominated by a major party with fewer credentials or a weaker claim to the presidency, or more doubts as to his core beliefs. If Obama wins, the country could be in real trouble. And if he loses, the country could be in real trouble.

What the media celebrate today, they may rue tomorrow. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2070439/posts?page=29

You guys are just too easy today.
Get enough sleep?

piratemonkey
09-05-2008, 03:25 PM
Wow.

Your proof?

Pat Buchanan speculating about race riots on a Conservative Blog.

That's fabulous proof of your assertion. :rolleyes:

Pres, you're completely delusional today if you think you are winning these discussion.

Here... let's see if I can find something on DailyKOS about rednecks wanting to assassinate Obama. Wanna bet me I can find something like that?

Delusional.

AnnEsthesia
09-05-2008, 03:28 PM
Kay-POW! http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2070439/posts?page=29

You guys are just too easy today.
Get enough sleep?

So now freerepublic is an unbiased news source for what Obama or democrats think?

dgun
09-05-2008, 03:36 PM
He was not inciting riots. He was talking about the reason for riots.

Exactly what part of that piece preservation do you think is inaccurate?

preservanation
09-05-2008, 03:39 PM
Ahhh, so you think I'm making things up again?

Phyxius
09-05-2008, 03:43 PM
Ahhh, so you think I'm making things up again?

You? Pulling things out of your ass to make a bullshit partisan point? Say it's not true... http://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a176/Hasatude5150/rolleyes.gif

preservanation
09-05-2008, 03:46 PM
Kay-POW!

You guys are hopping around on one foot trying to avoid the shit on the floor while cracking your skull on the door jam.
Those "quiet riots" that take place every day are born from the same place as the fires and the destruction and the police decked out in riot gear and the deaths. They happen when a sense of disconnect settles in and hope dissipates. Despair takes hold, and young people all across this country look at the way the world is and believe that things are never going to get any better. You tell yourself, "My school will always be second rate." You tell yourself, "There will never be a good job waiting for me to excel at." You tell yourself, " will never be able to afford a place that I can be proud of and call my home." That despair quietly simmers and makes it impossible to build strong communities and neighborhoods. And then one afternoon a jury says, "Not guilty" -- or a hurricane hits New Orleans -- and that despair is revealed for the world to see.

Much of what we saw on our television screens 15 years ago was Los Angeles expressing a lingering, ongoing, pervasive legacy -- a tragic legacy out of the tragic history this country has never fully come to terms with. This is not to excuse the violence of bashing in a man's head or destroying someone's store and their life's work. That kind of violence is inexcusable and self-defeating. It does, however, describe the reality of many communities around this country. http://blogs.suntimes.com/sweet/2007/06/sweet_blog_special_obama_warns.html

Obama wants it both ways...He wants to condemn it but will understand if people do take racist violence to the streets.
Obama is clearly inciting.

dgun
09-05-2008, 03:56 PM
Obama wants it both ways...He wants to condemn it but will understand if people do take racist violence to the streets.
Obama is clearly inciting.

That's pathetic preservation. He never condoned it. Not once. He tried to explain why it happened.

But keep on trolling lies about your next President, if it makes you feel better.