[VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn America'

According to ABCNews.com, Senator Barack Obama's pastor says blacks should not sing "God Bless America" but "God damn America." Should Obama's pastor, Jeremiah Wright, who is a member of Barack Obama's African American Religious Leadership Committee, resign?

"The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Obama's pastor for the last 20 years at the Trinity United Church of Christ on Chicago's south side, has a long history of what even Obama's campaign aides concede is "inflammatory rhetoric," including the assertion that the United States brought on the 9/11 attacks with its own "terrorism."

In a campaign appearance earlier this month, Sen. Obama said, "I don't think my church is actually particularly controversial." He said Rev. Wright "is like an old uncle who says things I don't always agree with," telling a Jewish group that everyone has someone like that in their family."

This was brought to my attention by one of the commentators, "If you want to understand where Barack gets his feeling and rhetoric from," says the Reverend Jim Wallis, a leader of the religious left, "just look at Jeremiah Wright."

Remember when Michelle Obama said a few weeks ago that she was proud of America for the first time in her adult life? Maybe some of Wright rubbed off on her. I guess we should just add this latest gem from Wright to the growing pile.

More from the article:

"An ABC News review of dozens of Rev. Wright's sermons, offered for sale by the church, found repeated denunciations of the U.S. based on what he described as his reading of the Gospels and the treatment of black Americans."

I completely disagree with this racist person, Reverend Wright. Obama is not just his parishioner of 20 years. His kids were baptized by this man. The title of Obama's one book was chosen by this guy. It is the closest of affiliations. If I were someone who claims to be against racism and this kind of radicalsim, I think I would have found another pastor a couple of decades ago.

More eye-opening statements from someone very important to Obama. Reverend Wright, in his own words:

“Barack knows what it means living in a country and a culture that is controlled by rich white people,” Wright said. “Hillary would never know that."

“Hillary ain’t never been called a n*****. Hillary has never had a people defined as a non-person.”

“Hillary is married to Bill, and Bill has been good to us. No he ain’t! Bill did us, just like he did Monica Lewinsky. He was riding dirty.”

!!! Give this diary a recommendation !!!

Tags: Barack Obama (all tags)

Comments

258 Comments

Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

the Obama's contibuted over $20,000.00 to this  church last year...it's right there in his tax records...this guy d has been Obama's mentor and father figure.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 08:14AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

I have days when I want to damn this country too. He is an American remember.

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 08:21AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

Via  Rolling Stone Magazine, which recently endorsed Obama:

   "This is as openly radical a background as any significant American
    political figure has ever emerged from, as much Malcolm X as Martin Luther King
    Jr. Wright is not an incidental figure in Obama's life, or his politics. The
    senator "affirmed" his Christian faith in this church; he uses Wright as a
    "sounding board" to "make sure I'm not losing myself in the hype and hoopla."
    Both the title of Obama's second book, The Audacity of Hope, and the theme for
    his keynote address at the Democratic National Convention in 2004 come from
    Wright's sermons. "If you want to understand where Barack gets his
    feeling and rhetoric from," says the Rev. Jim Wallis, a leader of the religious left, "just look at Jeremiah Wright."

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:00AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

And after writing this they also endorsed him. Bye Rolling Stone. Never again.

by Fleaflicker 2008-03-13 09:17AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

I feel sorry for you, you've written off every TV network, just about every liberal blog, radio hosts and now Rolling Stone magazine.

When all this ends in November you are going to be one hell of a bored, uninformed individual.

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 01:26PM | 0 recs
look at Jeremiah Wright
"look at Jeremiah Wright" means more then just watching a clip piece of video. You know that right?
 
by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 09:20AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

There is a huge difference between the individual feelings of one person and pastor telling everyone of a particular race that they should do something together. HUGE difference.

by Fleaflicker 2008-03-13 09:16AM | 0 recs
Well yes, but what about the Christian aspect

of even saying "God Damn" anything.  Oooh, my Mama would whup me and then tell Daddy when he got home!

by Southern Mouth 2008-03-13 10:32AM | 0 recs
But you have to pay for advertising!

We should check Barry's campaign disclosures to see if this $20,000 was properly expensed.

by Shazone 2008-03-13 08:41AM | 0 recs
Check this out - he's not just a Rev

He's part of an official Obama committee!

http://www.gwu.edu/~action/2008/obama/ob ama120407pr.html

by cmugirl90 2008-03-13 11:52AM | 0 recs
Re: Check this out - he's not just a Rev

Sorry - I guess that was mentioned IN the blog!  That's what I get for hurrying!

by cmugirl90 2008-03-13 11:53AM | 0 recs
Where are Hillary's tax returns?

I wonder who has been giving the Clintons money.  Hmmmm.

by ReillyDiefenbach 2008-03-13 09:02AM | 0 recs
Re: Where are Hillary's tax returns?

So that's your defense? To deflect? /snark

by americanincanada 2008-03-13 09:15AM | 0 recs
Answer the question.

Where are the Clintons' tax returns and why won't they release them?  Maybe Kazakhstan rings a bell?  Contributions from all sorts of dubious sources including your new BFF Rupert Murdoch are the lifeblood of the Clinton campaign and the Clintons' personal income.

by ReillyDiefenbach 2008-03-13 09:20AM | 0 recs
Re: Answer the question.

This is a side show and where is Obama's 2007 tax return? This isn't about another person(kids do this all the time, she did it too!), this is about Obama and his 20yr close relationship with his pastor.

I would not continually sit in he pews of a church tha spewed this hate and bile. I would have (and have done) gotten up and looked for a church that was more inclusive and not so hate filled against other segments of the population.

by shark 2008-03-13 09:43AM | 0 recs
Maybe he hasn't filed yet, ya big silly.

by ReillyDiefenbach 2008-03-13 09:54AM | 0 recs
Re: Maybe he hasn't filed yet, ya big silly.

I know I haven't, and I can tell you without a doubt, my filing will be a check and a request for an extension.  It's been that way every year.

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 01:23PM | 0 recs
Re: Maybe he hasn't filed yet, ya big silly.

Don't get me started, Cats!  It may be time to think about Canada again.  Imagine it, a place where education is valued above worship of the troops.  Where healthcare doesn't cost $450 a month for two people.  Where old age isn't a time of terror about losing everything you've managed to pry away from the government boondoggles your whole life.   Oops, I went off anyway...

by ReillyDiefenbach 2008-03-13 01:44PM | 0 recs
don't even waste your time

he's an Obamaniac. He has no logic, and can only come back to Obama truth posts by saying "bill clinton this, tax returns that" you'd think he's Ken Starr. The fact is there was nothing wrong with the Kazakstan thing. Who cares? i tihnk having a racist pastor is a lot worse than knowing world leaders, something Obama does not do, and will never do.

by DiamondJay 2008-03-13 10:30AM | 0 recs
Re: Where are Hillary's tax returns?

No defense needed. Obama gave money to his church...so what.

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 09:22AM | 0 recs
Re: Where are Hillary's tax returns?

Here's your answer and it is another story by the apparently infallible Brian Ross.  Funny but I thought only my homophobic, anti-abortion, sexist Pope was infallible.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPxtv6kcn 7s

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 01:20PM | 0 recs
Obama Addressed Wright Long Ago

I don't think my church is actually particularly controversial. [Rev. Wright] is like an old uncle who says things I don't always agree with.

Also, Wright is not a part of the Obama campaign, so the poll is ludicrous.

by Walt Starr 2008-03-13 09:38AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Addressed Wright Long Ago

Yeah, he is - he is on an official committee

http://www.gwu.edu/~action/2008/obama/ob ama120407pr.html

by cmugirl90 2008-03-13 11:55AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama Addressed Wright Long Ago
Saying it doesn't make it true. It is an official Obama campaign committee.
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 11:57AM | 0 recs
Cites the assumptions in this diary?

1. That the pastor is a member of the campaign.
2. That he's even Obama's current pastor.

BTW, who is Hillary's current pastor?  I have no idea, but I do know her campaign described her as a "big Methodist," so I'm sure she must have one.  

by bosdcla14 2008-03-13 12:21PM | 0 recs
Re: Cites the assumptions in this diary?
If you take the time to read all the comments, you'll find links to proof that the pastor is a member of one of the Obama campaign's official committees.

I believe Wright recently retired, but I may be wrong. The man is, as Obama describes, like a member of the family. He's been the Obama's spiritual adviser for 20 years. The association with Obama couldn't be more personal.

by zenful6219 2008-03-13 12:25PM | 0 recs
Ok, fair point

So all official campaign committees are considered part of the campaign.

Also, it sounds as though the implication that he's Obama's current pastor is wrong.  He's his former pastor who Obama has a longtime association with.  Thus, it seems like any "Obama should disavow him" comments are disingenuous, since the real issue is that Hillary supporters have on this issue is the past, not the present.  

For me, it seems like if we start holding someone accountable for everything their pastor says, that's going to make religious faith akin to military service---seems like an advantage, but its so overscrutinized that it becomes a disadvantage.  Also, I can see circumstances where African-Americans would be saying stuff like that---Katrina comes to mind.  

by bosdcla14 2008-03-13 12:33PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

I have been critcial of both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton on issues.  I see them both as far too centrist and unable and unwilling to do what it will take to lead us from the likely deep recession we are in and extricate us from Iraq, let alone prevent a war with Iran.

In addition, I have been very critical of what I see as Obama idolary and Hillary Hate on Daily Kos.

That said, I think it is wrong to attack Barack Obama based on his pastor's words.  Barack Obama did not say that.

Stick to issues.  This is not an issue.  One can go to a church and not agree with everything the pastor says.

by TomP 2008-03-13 12:45PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

Take this book and shove it. Get a real job. Writers, dime a dozen. 50,000 college graduate English majors every year.  

Maybe the Hillary gang will help you out.

by shergald 2008-03-14 09:04AM | 0 recs
Here we go....

If you're not wearing a flag pin leave the country.

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 08:19AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

Josh Marshall has a take on this...TPM

But the simple fact is that we wouldn't be seeing this stuff now if it weren't for the fact that this is the kind of campaign Hillary Clinton's campaign has decided to wage -- often directly and at other times indirectly by not reining it in in her supporters when it crops up on its own. Wright is news today because Ferraro's been news yesterday. Are her comments racist? That's a loaded, too copious, word. And there've been cases where the Clinton team has gotten a bum rap on these matters. What I do know, however, is that Clinton's campaign and her surrogates have injected the subject of Obama's race into this campaign too many times now for it to be credible to believe that it is anything but a conscious strategy.

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 08:38AM | 0 recs
Which Hillary supporter...

released this video?  How can she rein in supporters whom she doesn't even know?

If I scream from the rooftops that Obama is a child abuser - it's her fault?  And she should make sure I am never allowed on roof tops again?

by Shazone 2008-03-13 08:44AM | 0 recs
Re: Which Hillary supporter...

I totally agree this is the points.  If any person who supports HRC, evern at a great distance, the media and BO personally accuse who of being behind it.  But for BO it is "he is just some guy who supports me".  The issue is the double standard.  KO went nuts last night saying HRC was personally responsible for what Ferrero said.  PERSONALLY.  Is BO personally responsbile for what Wright said.  Of course not the issue is the double standard.  PERIOD.

david

by giusd 2008-03-13 10:55AM | 0 recs
Re: Which Hillary supporter...

THIS BEGAN TODAY WITH RESEARCH DONE BY ABC NEWS'S BRIAN ROSS.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 12:43PM | 0 recs
Re: Which Hillary supporter...

Here:s another great piece by Brian Ross:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPxtv6kcn 7s

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 01:17PM | 0 recs
Re: Which Hillary supporter...
John Stossel!
Nice.
The Freeper tv dude!
by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:46PM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....
Is Wright's comment appropriate?
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 08:44AM | 0 recs
Josh has lost the ability to think clearly

This video was purchased directly from the church by abc news. 'Says so right in the report.

How hard is that to follow?

Josh, consider returning your PhD.

by Pacific John 2008-03-13 08:48AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....
Oh yes, because absolutely everything negative anyone says about Wright was TOTALLY Hillary's idea and ENTIRELY her fault. Everything is Hillary's fault! Why don't more people realize this??
by sricki 2008-03-13 09:02AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

You can see my defense of Senator Obama downthread.  However, Josh is way off base here.  Bleh.

by mgee 2008-03-13 09:06AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

Josh has been way off base for a while now. I couldn't believe it at first when I removed his RSS feed; now I wonder what took me so long.

by OrangeFur 2008-03-13 10:54AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

I know. TPM used to be one of my favorite places online. And now... Yuk! Truth is no longer welcome there and the reality went down the toilet when they turned on Democrats.

The Obama campaign contaminates everything it comes in contact with. What used to be a resurrecting party and a progressive blogosphere is reduced to a hollow echo chamber for the Kool-Aid drinkers.

by DemAC 2008-03-13 11:17AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

It looks like Josh Marshall is engaging in the age-old "looky over there...not here--oh, please, looky over there."  The questions I have: (1) Is the pastor of Obama's Church more than a mere acquaintance? I.e., is he a spiritual mentor as, I believe, Obama has indicated?  (2) How much money has he contributed to the Church and to his "spiritual mentor?"  Whether I am suggesting a type of "guilt by association" or not doesn't really matter.  Democrats such as myself do not go in for this nasty type of attack--for a number of reasons, the least of which it is not politically correct.  Yet, we know that Republicans do exactly that type of attack and more.  When we put aside our advocacy and our emotions, we know exactly the you-know-them-by-their-friends argument that will be played (& re-played) in the general.  To hum, cover our ears, and call each other names over it does not take away the obvious barrage is looming.  Better to talk about it calmly and confront it.

by christinep 2008-03-13 11:38AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

Brian Ross's report for Good Morning America on Barack Obama's pastor, Jeremiah Wright, is  a huge problem for Obama. In the piece, Ross has clips of Wright delivering sermons in which he says we should not say God Bless America, but God "Damn" America, in which he calls America the US of KKKA (referring to how racist the country is), and in which he says about September 11 that America's "chickens have come home to roost."

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 08:53AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

It didn't occur to me until I saw ABC's headline that this story was going to fit into the patriotism frame.  I had assumed it was going to be nothing but a "scary black church" storyline.

I am as sick and tired of any liberal of Republican demagoguery on the patriotism issue (did you see that video with Chris Matthews and Joe Scarborough the other day) but Obama has to show that he can deal with it effectively, particularly because he faces extra challenges due to his background.

I believe that whole flag pin thing was a self-inflicted wound, which I'll illustrate with a story.  I live in NYC, and after 9/11, it became customary for people and businesses to put up a flag or a flag sticker or a "God Bless America" sign or something of the sort.  But what I noticed was, there was a definite ethnic element to this custom.  For example, if you were a white taxidriver, you might have a little flag decal in the corner of the window.  If you were a Sikh taxidriver with a big turban, you would more likely have a gigantic "GOD BLESS AMERICA" sticker (notwithstanding that I'm pretty sure we were not attacked by Sikhs!)

If you ran a sandwich shop, you might have a flag in the window.  If you ran the "Kabul Deli," your front window would be so covered with flag stickers that people might not be able to see inside.  This is how it really was.

My point is that, if my name is Barack Hussein Obama and I'm running for President, I might want to wear 5 flag pins at a time.  I'm joking of course, but if someone asked where my flag pin was, I'd be inclined to laugh off the question and then make sure I wore my flag pin every day for the next week.  He really didn't have to give a speech about how patriotism is about more than flag pins, even though I and probably everyone else on this board would agree.  In electoral terms, it's a playing field on which we can lose yardage to the Republicans but never gain any.

Now that I see how this church thing fits into a patriotism frame I'm actually more concerned about it than I was previously.

by Steve M 2008-03-13 08:57AM | 0 recs
Great post Steve

Obama as DEEP and serious problems with his affiliations and videos like these.  There will be more to come.  It's just too much... nominating him is conceding the election to McCain.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 09:23AM | 0 recs
Re: Great post Steve

Well, I don't know about the last part, but I'd rather this come out now so we can see the reaction for ourselves... as opposed to it coming out in October.

Obama is a resilient politician and he has a LOT of supporters, so I'm not going to jump to conclusions.  If this sort of thing does in fact sink his candidacy, it will certainly be a sad day.

by Steve M 2008-03-13 09:50AM | 0 recs
There is no evidence of resiliency

Obama hasn't shown that he can handle the Republican attack machine and we simply don't know enough about him and how he'd handle the pressure of a long and grueling vetting process.

Hillary Clinton on the other hand, we know for sure is resilient.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 10:42AM | 0 recs
Re: There is no evidence of resiliency

And what we do know about him doesn't exactly inspire confidence.

by DemAC 2008-03-13 11:21AM | 0 recs
Re: Here we go....

Steve M: Well said. Diplomatic, yet right on point.

by christinep 2008-03-13 11:45AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

I have said God Damn America a lot since George Bush has been president.  When we have a new democratic president I will gladly sing God Bless America.

by Spanky 2008-03-13 08:20AM | 0 recs
Bush isn't OUR fault..

I never voted for him..  

by architek 2008-03-13 08:23AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing
According to Rev. Wright, only the blacks should sing "God damn America." Do you support that kind of thinking?
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 08:23AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

that's a misquote....nice try though

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 08:26AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing
Here's the quote verbatim from ABC News: "Sen. Barack Obama's pastor says blacks should not sing "God Bless America" but "God damn America."" Where in that sentence does Obama's pastor reference any other race?
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 08:33AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

Where did he say "only blacks"...he did not exclude anyone either.

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 08:42AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing
I already answered your question.
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 08:46AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

From Trinity's own website:

   We are a congregation which is Unashamedly Black and Unapologetically Christian... Our roots in the Black religious experience and tradition are deep, lasting and permanent. We are an African people, and remain "true to our native land," the mother continent, the cradle of civilization. God has superintended our pilgrimage through the days of slavery, the days of segregation, and the long night of racism. It is God who gives us the strength and courage to continuously address injustice as a people, and as a congregation. We constantly affirm our trust in God through cultural expression of a Black worship service and ministries which address the Black Community.

   The Pastor as well as the membership of Trinity United Church of Christ is committed to a 10-point Vision:

      1. A congregation committed to ADORATION.
       2. A congregation preaching SALVATION.
       3. A congregation actively seeking RECONCILIATION.
       4. A congregation with a non-negotiable COMMITMENT TO AFRICA.
       5. A congregation committed to BIBLICAL EDUCATION.
       6. A congregation committed to CULTURAL EDUCATION.
       7. A congregation committed to the HISTORICAL EDUCATION OF AFRICAN PEOPLE IN DIASPORA [ed. "the movement, migration, or scattering of a people away from an established or ancestral homeland"].
       8. A congregation committed to LIBERATION.
       9. A congregation committed to RESTORATION.
      10. A congregation working towards ECONOMIC PARITY.

   Trinity United Church of Christ adopted the Black Value System, written by the Manford Byrd Recognition Committee, chaired by the late Vallmer Jordan in 1981.

      1. Commitment to God. "The God of our weary years" will give us the strength to give up prayerful passivism and become Black Christian Activists, soldiers for Black freedom and the dignity of all humankind.
       2. Commitment to the Black Community. The highest level of achievement for any Black person must be a contribution of strength and continuity of the Black Community.
       3. Commitment to the Black Family. The Black family circle must generate strength, stability and love, despite the uncertainty of externals, because these characteristics are required if the developing person is to withstand warping by our racist competitive society.
       4. Dedication to the Pursuit of Education. We must forswear anti-intellectualism. Continued survival demands that each Black person be developed to the utmost of his/her mental potential despite the inadequacies of the formal education process.
       5. Dedication to the Pursuit of Excellence. To the extent that we individually reach for, even strain for excellence, we increase, geometrically, the value and resourcefulness of the Black Community.
       6. Adherence to the Black Work Ethic. "It is becoming harder to find qualified people to work in Chicago." Whether this is true or not, it represents one of the many reasons given by businesses and industries for deserting the Chicago area. We must realize that a location with good facilities, adequate transportation and a reputation for producing skilled workers will attract industry. We are in competition with other cities, states and nations for jobs. High productivity must be a goal of the Black workforce.
       7. Commitment to Self-Discipline and Self-Respect. To accomplish anything worthwhile requires self-discipline. We must be a community of self-disciplined persons if we are to actualize and utilize our own human resources, instead of perpetually submitting to exploitation by others. Self-discipline, coupled with a respect for self, will enable each of us to be an instrument of Black Progress and a model for Black Youth.
       8. Disavowal of the Pursuit of "Middleclassness." Classic methodology on control of captives teaches that captors must be able to identify the "talented tenth" of those subjugated, especially those who show promise of providing the kind of leadership that might threaten the captor's control.
       9. Pledge to Make the Fruits of All Developing and Acquired Skills Available to the Black Community.
      10. Pledge to Allocate Regularly, a Portion of Personal Resources for Strengthening and Supporting Black Institutions.
      11. Pledge Allegiance to All Black Leadership Who Espouse and Embrace the Black Value System.
      12. Personal Commitment to Embracement of the Black Value System. To measure the worth and validity of all activity in terms of positive contributions to the general welfare of the Black Community and the Advancement of Black People towards freedom.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 08:56AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

Hmmm, should the Scottish and Irish in America "remain true to their native land?"
Is there a distinct difference between a "Black Value System" and a "Jewish Value System?"
Should whites only support "white" institutions?
Do we expect the Italians in America to maintain a commitment to Italy?
Is someone in America with German grandparents to be referred to as simply German?

You see, if you substitute any race/nationality for the word "black" in the church's mission and vision you would be decried as racist. But for Trinity UCC it's not only allowed but promoted strongly.

And this is the place where Presidential candidate Obama gets his spiritual nurturing?

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 08:58AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

Next Monday is the St. Patrick's Day Parade, by the way.  Just saying.

by Steve M 2008-03-13 09:03AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

LOL!

by Fleaflicker 2008-03-13 09:22AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

This is the funniest thing I've ever heard. Who cares if he is excluding people or including everyone? The man said we should be saying "God Damn America!"

Many Democrats don't care, but some do, and more importantly many Independents and Republicans care a lot. It will send those voters into the arms of McCain.

Have the super-delegates seen this stuff? Do they know how this will effect the race in November? Democrats better pull their heads out of their back pockets or we will get crushed in November.

Obama has V.P. written on his forehead. that is his only path to the presidency. If he can't handle that then he needs to go back to community organizing.

by mmorang 2008-03-13 12:52PM | 0 recs
"the growing pile"

You're working on a growing pile of something alright.

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 08:28AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

Does he give us the rest of the lyrics?  If so I will take his, but here is a first pass:

God Damn America
Land That I loathe
Sit astride her, and slice her,
With a knife in the heart from above,
From the slums, to the projects
To the cess-pools
Filled with crap,
God Damn America,
My home no more!

by mikes101 2008-03-13 11:43AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

I am a caucasian woman by the way.  Every day I feel like sayng God Damn America since Bush has been in charge.

by Spanky 2008-03-13 08:24AM | 0 recs
Great. make it an Obama campaign slogan

so much for hope, of whatever ethereal nonsense the campaign was supposed to stand for.

by Pacific John 2008-03-13 08:50AM | 0 recs
Barack Obama calls Wright his mentor

and chose Wright as his spiritual advisor and pastor.

Here's text from a speech that Obama's spiritual mentor made at Howard University. :

   "Raising his voice in rage, Wright began his sermon by saying, "Fact No. 1:
    We've got more black men in prison than there are in college. Racism is alive
    and well. Racism is how this country was founded and how this country is still
    run. No black man will ever be considered for president, no matter how hard you
    run Jesse [Jackson] and no black woman can ever be considered for anything
    outside what she can give with her body."

   Omitting fact No. 2, Wright thundered on: "Fact No. 3: America is still the
    No. 1 killer in the world. We invaded Grenada for no other reason than to get
    Maurice Bishop [a Grenada revolutionary who seized power in 1979], invaded
    Panama because Noriega would not dance to our tune any more. We are deeply
    involved in the importing of drugs, the exporting of guns, and the training of
    professional killers. We bombed Cambodia, Iraq and Nicaragua, killing women and
    children while trying to get public opinion turned against Castro and Qaddafi."

   Wright continued: "Fact No. 4: We put [Nelson] Mandela in prison and
    supported apartheid the whole 27 years he was there. We believe in white
    supremacy and black inferiority and believe it more than we believe in God.

   Fact No. 5: We supported Zionism shamelessly while ignoring the
    Palestinians and branding anybody who spoke out against it as being
    anti-semitic."

   His voice rising, Wright was on a roll: "Fact No. 6: We conducted radiation
    experiments on our own people. They're just finding out about that. We care
    nothing about human life if the ends justifies the means. Fact No. 7: We do not
    care if poor black and brown children cannot read and kill each other
    senselessly. We abandoned the cities back in the '60s when the riots started and
    it really doesn't matter what those nations do to each other; we gave up on them
    and public education of poor people who live in the projects . . ."

   Wright went on: "Fact No. 8: We started the AIDS virus, and now that it is
    out of control, we still put more money in the military than in medicine; more
    money in hate than in humanitarian concerns. Everybody does not have access to
    healthcare, I don't care what the rich white boys in the Senate say. Listen up:
    If you are poor, black and elderly, forget it."

   Concluding, Wright said: "Fact No. 9: We are only able to maintain our
    level of living by making sure that Third World people live in grinding poverty.
    And fact No. 10: We are selfish, self-centered egotists who are arrogant and
    ignorant and betray our church and do not try to make the kingdom that Jesus
    talked about a reality. And -- and -- and in light of these 10 facts, God has got
    to be sick of this s***.' "

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:03AM | 0 recs
Source?

I am certain this is accurate but can you please provide a source link for the information?

And also for the info about Obama contributing $20,000 to this church?

by Fleaflicker 2008-03-13 09:26AM | 0 recs
Re: Source?

its from a youtube video of wrights speech named journeys end.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 11:04AM | 0 recs
Re: Source?

Thanks. I'll look it up.

by Fleaflicker 2008-03-13 12:49PM | 0 recs
Re: Barack Obama calls Wright his mentor

What's not true about any of what he says?

by Spanky 2008-03-13 10:14AM | 0 recs
hows ABOUT

We started the AIDS virus

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 11:05AM | 0 recs
Re: hows ABOUT

Somebody did.

by Spanky 2008-03-13 11:08AM | 0 recs
Re: hows ABOUT

oh

my

god

youre

crazy

too!

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:50PM | 0 recs
Re: Barack Obama calls Wright his mentor

Wow, lifted verbatim from the right wing Newsmax.  I suspected you visited the freeper world a little too often,  but now I am convinced you must own property there.

Hate to tell you but anyone who can cut and paste from right wing sites like you can, loses all credibility in my book.

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 01:02PM | 0 recs
It's fine to be mad at America, but to say

"God Damn America" is not hopeful language at all. Most Americans will find it insulting.

If Obama is the nominee, he is going to be surprised at all the stuff that was already out about him that no one seemed to care about too much is suddenly a BIG DEAL.

I sense a landslide loss by Obama. He is already having a hard time getting working-class whites to vote for him, and that's just in the Democratic primaries.

by mmorang 2008-03-13 01:02PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing

Well then your a jerk.

Damn your President and his policies, but never your Country.

Love it or Leave it.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 12:49PM | 0 recs
It's funny ...

Many feminists feel that Geraldine Ferarro is like an old aunt who says things that we don't agree with. And yet Hillary was forced to repudiate her.

It looks like Obama will have no choice in this matter, given the big stink his campaign raised re GF.

by Inky 2008-03-13 08:21AM | 0 recs
Re: It's funny ...

Really? Getting mad at your country is the same as saying that Obama is only here because he is black?

Oh...and the Pastor is not an official in the Obama campaign.

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 08:25AM | 0 recs
Being a member of his African-American...

...Religious Leadership Committee is not part of the campaign?

Boy, that's news to me.

by Andre Walker 2008-03-13 08:27AM | 0 recs
Re: It's funny ...

Not true.. you are a little slow with the news cycle today

http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0 308/Wrights_committee.html

by JustJennifer 2008-03-13 08:27AM | 0 recs
Re: It's funny ...

He is on his Religious Leadership Committee.

by LadyEagle 2008-03-13 10:04AM | 0 recs
Re: It's funny ...

JoeCoaster: Many Americans feel personally offended by another American damning the country. While progressives highlight free speech--and I certainly do--we expect our Presidents and their co-horts not to damn the country in public.  At the least, it goes to the individual's judgment. And, when we are still learning about an individual as a candidate, it starts to fill-in-the-blanks in a very negative way.  The incidents people are referring to here may seem relatively minor, in and of themselves.  But, try to see how people begin to form opinions about others based on a string of incidents...its cumulative.

by christinep 2008-03-13 11:53AM | 0 recs
CORRECT!

What's good for the aunt is good for the uncle, I always say!

by Shazone 2008-03-13 08:48AM | 0 recs
Re: CORRECT!

Crazy uncle indeed!  This is clearly not the image the Audacity of Hype wants to project.

One odd thing, though (New Yorker via The Corner, emphasis added):

   In 2006, the Obamas gave $22,500 to the church.

So, how many of you handed more than $22K over to your crazy uncle?

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:06AM | 0 recs
As I said upstream, it was paid advertising, not..

a church donation!

(That's a snark Obamaphiles - don't start screaming!)

by Shazone 2008-03-13 09:13AM | 0 recs
He can't dissociate himself from

this.  He chose to be associated with him for 20 years.  Family you can't do anything about, this is Obama's chosen 20 year long spiritual leader.

Why, why didn't the news do it's job a long time ago?  Man, I wish I'd known this was the 20 year long pastor who wrote "audacity of hope" a long time ago.

I want someone to defend this country, not have a spiritual leader who they've given $20,000 say 9/11 was America's chickens coming home to roost.  Not saying God Damn America.  

Not knowing Obama isn't poor (best private schools in world, Harvard, 2 best selling books, million dollar mansion, friends with billionaires like Oprah), and saying Hillary ain't been called an N word (she's been called everything else, baby).

Obama's deck of race cards is almost out so he is toast in comparison to John McCain.  I'd vote for a jar of peanut butter over this philosophy.

by chieflytrue 2008-03-13 10:19AM | 0 recs
Re: He can't dissociate himself from

Why, why didn't the news do it's job a long time ago?  

That's what I can't get over. Apparently all the "research" ABC News had to conduct was to buy the guy's sermons from his church.

God, what a pathetic press we have.

Can I get a pillow for you, Senator Obama?

by frankly0 2008-03-13 12:37PM | 0 recs
Re: He can't dissociate himself from

Preach on Brother (or sister)!

by mmorang 2008-03-13 01:09PM | 0 recs
I think my pastor

is a Republican, but that has nothing to do with why I attend the church.  I feel that I am being spiritually fed by scriptural message and enjoying working with the other members of the congregation.  I don't care about my pastor's political views.

by bigdcdem 2008-03-13 08:22AM | 0 recs
Re: I think my pastor

I have a Jewish colleague at work who is a bit of a wingnut.  We got onto the topic of mixing religion and politics, and he told me his rabbi always emphasized two things: don't bring religion into the temple, and don't get an adjustable-rate mortgage.  My people are full of good advice.

by Steve M 2008-03-13 09:00AM | 0 recs
Re: I think my pastor

That line is hilarious. Well done.

by OrangeFur 2008-03-13 12:00PM | 0 recs
Re: I think my pastor

The senator "affirmed" his Christian faith in this church; he uses Wright as a "sounding board" to "make sure I'm not losing myself in the hype and hoopla." Both the title of Obama's second book, The Audacity of Hope, and the theme for his keynote address at the Democratic National Convention in 2004 come from Wright's sermons. "If you want to understand where Barack gets his feeling and rhetoric from," says the Rev. Jim Wallis, a leader of the religious left, "just look at Jeremiah Wright.
[......]
Obama could have picked any church -- the spare, spiritual places in Hyde Park, the awesome pomp and procession of the cathedrals downtown. [......]
Obama chose Trinity United. He picked Jeremiah Wright.

From:

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/sto ry/13390609/campaign_08_the_radical_root s_of_barack_oba

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:20AM | 0 recs
Re: I think my pastor

The pope hates homosexuals, so should catholics disavow him??

by Spanky 2008-03-13 10:16AM | 0 recs
Catholics are born Catholic----

Obama found one spiritual mentor who he's followed for 20 years.  

So if you followed around a bigoted priest who made up his own version of Catholicism for 20 years, named your 2nd book after his words, had him baptize your children, called him your "moral compass," and gave him $20,000 in one year alone you might be joined to the bigoted priest at the hip.

by chieflytrue 2008-03-13 10:25AM | 0 recs
You would expect Obama to worship

in some kind of new age church, since his spin is that's he's the guy for change and unity, and is going to lead us all to a paradise that transcends race.

by internetstar 2008-03-13 11:42AM | 0 recs
If you think attacking someone's religion

like this is good politics in America, you are just misjudging the electorate entirely. There are millions of Americans who go to a particular church simply because they love their spouse.

The Clintons understand this, I can't believe no one is telling you all to stop this line of attack.

It sounds to me like you don't understand Catholicism or the TUCC.

Have you ever heard of titheing? Many people tithe in America.

Your "in one year alone" sounds pretty lame in that context.

by kid oakland 2008-03-14 12:25AM | 0 recs
Really?

Catholics are born Catholics???

What do you think its a gene?

People might be born into Catholic families and when they group they still make the choice to remain Catholic.

by kindthoughts 2008-03-13 04:17PM | 0 recs
Unlike the Evangelical church, you're

born and raised Catholic.  My family is Catholic, so quit slurring my family.

Sure you can be an ex-Catholic, and you can also join the Catholic church later in life, but you go through a lot more hoops than joining a Baptist or Evangelical church.  You undergo conversion like when someone chooses Jewish faith.

It's not an ethnic group that is also a religion like being Jewish or Muslim, but you're born, baptized and raised Catholic or you join after going through quite a few rigors as the former Prime Minister of England just did.

So Obama's relationship to his personal pastor is a 20 year long CHOICE he made--which is nothing like being Catholic or Jewish.  And, he made the choice after going to several churches and finding one he agreed with.  But he's gone above and beyond that.  He's personally befriended Reverend Wright and vice versa, he's used his sermon "Audacity of Hope" for his own book, he's called him his "moral compass," he's had him marry him and baptize his children.  He's had him be a part of his steering committee and espouses his specific beliefs.  This man is Obama's spiritual father, his introduction to Christianity.

Plus, the $20,000 dollar donation is humongous.  And if he's donating that much to this organization, that's an espousal of this HORRIFIC
person who leads his own separate church.

And whoever said that Reverend Wright has the same relationship as a Catholic to the Pope is absolutely ignorant about basic religion.

Try Farrakhan.  Reverend Wright is Farrakhan.

by chieflytrue 2008-03-14 06:57AM | 0 recs
Who attends church any more

Why are we giving religious leaders too much attention?

They're in the bottom rung of the food chain, in my universe.

THEY SHOULD ALL RESIGN from whatever position they have anywhere.

by Sieglinde 2008-03-13 08:26AM | 0 recs
Re: Who attends church any more

Umm .... increasingly large numbers every year. What planet are you from?

by ColoradoGuy 2008-03-13 08:38AM | 0 recs
Re: Who attends church any more

From that part of the planet that no longer goes to church, I guess.

The Big Church is currently anti-choice and anti-gay.  We're not even getting into what they were just a few decades ago-- might inflame another race riot here.

by Sieglinde 2008-03-13 08:54AM | 0 recs
I rarely comment on MyDD and am not a huge

Obama partisan... However, I'm an expert on 20th Century American Religion specifically concerning politics.  And implore people on both sides of this campaign not to tread here.

I understand the attraction and Responsibility to report the news. But, too much is at stake here.  I've written similar defenses toward people's questions on Hillary even being religious.  Wright is not on Obama's finance team, or a senior consultant, he is the pastor of what I believe was Michelle's Church... he should step down from the huge religious reach-out panel.  This sermon is likely racists to your ears, and many others ears, but that is really to be ignorant to the conversation Jeremiah Wright is, and has, engaged in.  Wright is speaking to a Church steeped chiefly in Cone, Katie Canon, Copeland, and West - where this is acceptable language.  He is not being literal in suggesting "Christ was a Black Man," nor is he intending to be exclusive.  Your right about the irrelevance about his standing in the Church.  The truth us, he is one of the most respected Black Theologians in the country, and widely respected (with and for numerous comments like these) at the leading theological schools in the country.  I just suggest before
(likely joining the rest of the media ignorance) you read Cone's God of the Oppressed or an article surrounding it.  In order that you understand what Wright was saying in the context of a black and womanists theological conversation... if the media blows this up it will blow up (wrongly) a long standing theological conversation - it will destroy Cornell West, Cannon, and others.  I ask that you take hold of your actions, even if it means not going along with the rest of media, and not report on what any persons church says.  Can you imagine the shame if anybody were called to "reject and denounce" their Church?  While Wright's rhetoric is harsh, trinity has a large white population, and is not a racists Church.  

Thank you,
Grant

by CardBoard 2008-03-13 08:27AM | 0 recs
Re: I rarely comment on MyDD and am not a huge

You are wrong about his role in the campaign.  And he is not Michelle's pastor he is Obama's pastor too.  And I don't really give a crap about that part but he is part of the campaign and Obama's "spiritual advisor".  Do I think Obama believes everthing Wright says is true?  No.  Do I worry that he might agree with some of it.  Not really.  Is what he says offensive?  On some level, yes.  I don't see it as being that big of a deal but after the stink everyone has made over Ferraro I think they have to walk the walk too.

by JustJennifer 2008-03-13 08:29AM | 0 recs
Re: I rarely comment on MyDD and am not a huge

This was taped several months ago, in the height of the Bill Clinton S.C. troubles...Fox held onto it until now, when there was already an uproar.

by CardBoard 2008-03-13 09:17AM | 0 recs
Re: I rarely comment on MyDD and am not a huge

your whole defense is 100% hogwash

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 12:57PM | 0 recs
It's his inclusion of Hillary that burns...

me up - that's where he went over the line. 

Hillary has never been called the N word BUT she has been called plenty of other "non-person" words like C__T, and Bitch and whore, and cast in non-person adjectives like evil and monster.
So, yes, Rev. Wrong has the right to preach but what he said goes over the line into political rhetoric - and for that his church should lose its tax-exempt status.

by Shazone 2008-03-13 08:52AM | 0 recs
Re: It's his inclusion of Hillary that burns...

You are correct. there was no reason to mention specific names of any political candidate from the pulpit.

I was also particularly offended by him saying that Hillary, a woman for the love of pete, doesn't know what it feels like to have to work twice as hard just to be accepted. That is ludicious on it's face.

I also doubt that Obama knows what it is like to be accused of being a lesbian or called a bitch or worse.

by americanincanada 2008-03-13 08:57AM | 0 recs
Re: It's his inclusion of Hillary that burns...

Shazone: Thank you for the reminder.  Hillary Clinton has suffered the verbal slings of every misogynist on the blogs.

by christinep 2008-03-13 12:09PM | 0 recs
The fact that Obama stays where he is tells me

Comment by Fleaflicker

If I didn't believe the racist things that my Reverend stated with veracity I would leave the church. To me that is only being true to your self. The fact that Obama stays where he is tells me that he agrees with what his Reverend says and what his church stands for. He can state over and over how he disagrees with his pastor but that just ain't being real. It would be like someone that went to a church in South Carolina where the Minister uttered horrible racist KKK type things every week. But when confronted you would be allowed to distance yourself by saying what Obama says, that you simply do not agree with everything the minister says. Sounds like bullshit to me. I'd be looking for your hood.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:37AM | 0 recs
Re: The fact that Obama stays where he is tells me
You choose your friends. You choose the church that you attend. With all the churches in Chicago - this was his choice for 20 years.
How would the Obama supporters feel if Hillary was attending a church where the pastor said inflammatory things against the United States? Or is that different? Convince me!
by georgiast 2008-03-13 10:11AM | 0 recs
Re: The fact that Obama stays where he is tells me

Bill Graham said lots of racist things, but the Clintons were still friends with him.  

by Spanky 2008-03-13 10:23AM | 0 recs
Re: The fact that Obama stays where he is tells me

first,I dont know that is true,

second,they werent in his "parish", nor have  either Clinton called him "their "spiritual mentor","guide" and "compass" as the Obamas have called Wright.

their pastor during the white house days was the Rev. Phillp Wogaman of Foundry Methodist.

Maybe youd be better off trying to slime him.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 10:59AM | 0 recs
Re: I rarely comment on MyDD and am not a huge

Look, whatever you may say, when you have the sort of connections to Jeremiah Wright that Obama does, baptizing your children in his church, using him a "sounding board" and spiritual mentor, apparently contributing tens of thousands of dollars to his church, then, even if you "disagree" with Wright's openly expressed views, you simply can't disagree very strongly, can you?

And that is what every honest and objective American voter will conclude about Obama, after they've seen this sort of performance from Wright. And not disagreeing very strongly is likely to be fatal for Obama's prospects in the general election.

by frankly0 2008-03-13 12:48PM | 0 recs
OK, let me be blunt

The overwhelming majority of Americans will not give a rat's ass about Cone, Cannon, Copeland, and West. Nor will they devote the time to an extensive examination of this literature in the hope of developing an intellectually sanguine attitude about all of this.  Most people engage in a far simpler analysis.  If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it is a duck.

But your post illustrates a frequent liberal response to an issue with emotional implications about what is perceived to be right or wrong.  If one just takes an intellectual view and examines the historical context, a rationalizing attitude that nothing is right or wrong but simply a reflection of relative culture will emerge. But I don't think most people buy into that mindframe.  

by lombard 2008-03-13 01:16PM | 0 recs
We serve no one when we engage in an

outrage-off.  

As I said in another diary about this issue, I don't hold Obama accountable for the Reverend's inflammatory rhetoric, and in the larger scheme of things, I don't think that we serve anyone when we escalate the already tense situation between the campaigns with an outrage-off.  

I was really sad and disappointed by the way many Obama partisans treated Geraldine Ferraro in response to her misguided remarks the other day (seriously - someone equated Ferraro with David Duke).  It make me heartsick, as I have a great deal of respect for Ferraro and the crazed response was all out of proporation to her remarks.  (Incidentally, the outrage police really had to search for that stuff.)  

So I think that it is equally important that I give Senator Obama the benefit of the doubt with regard to Reverend Wright, and perhaps even give Reverend Wright the benefit of the doubt with regard to the ABC News story.  There is context there, which, in my opinion, makes the Reverend's statements considerably less inflammatory than they appear on the surface. I'm not saying that I agree with the offensive portions of his remarks, but I do agree with some of the underlying sentiment - that we've built too many prisons, that three strikes laws have led us to incarcerate a generation, that mandatory minimums are bad policy, and that it is important for Americans to understand our own ambivalent history in the world, even as we celebrate our unique strengths.

So: there's my defence of Senator Obama and Reverend Wright.  

(**I note that I support HRC for president, and donate regularly to her campaign so that fellow Clinton supporters will understand that my opinion comes not from a partisan place or a desire to defend everything Senator Obama says or does.)

by mgee 2008-03-13 08:31AM | 0 recs
Re: We serve no one when we engage in an

I second this !!

(*And I note that I USED to support HRC for President, and HAVE donated to her campaign.  With all the *rap flying around, I am having second thoughts.  And, btw, I decided that I could not support Obama a long time back...for a long list of reasons which I do not see changing *)

by SevenStrings 2008-03-13 08:55AM | 0 recs
I agree Mgee, but his inclusion...

of Hillary in his "sermon" is the problem.  If you're a women, you KNOW that she has been treated as a non-person, too.  And while she has not been called the N word, there are tons of non-person words that she has been called (some start with c, some with b).  So Hillary and Barry should have been included in his speech...as two people who have suffered the same issues.

by Shazone 2008-03-13 08:58AM | 0 recs
Re: I agree Mgee, but his inclusion...

I agree with you; she's had much the same experience of name-calling and other things, perhaps more.  

by mgee 2008-03-13 09:12AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

The Obama Lemmings remind me of the W lemmings.

Always finding excuses.
Always denying anything anyone opposed to them says as trivial. Or being the FIRST to call names (especially the Racist remark)

While their PHONY outrage is justifiable???

LMAO!

What a joke all the LEMMINGS have become.
Like mirrors of each other from both sides of the extremist camps.  Neo cons are like a flip side of the same coin with the far far left loonies!

Really a SAD day!

by CarolinaDawn 2008-03-13 08:44AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn
It's getting sadder by the hour.
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 08:48AM | 0 recs
Really Sad!

What's really sad is the right wing propaganda techniques used by the anti-Obama forces here. Out of context quotes, outright lies, innuendo treated like damning evidence. I'll be interested to see if the anti-Obama forces here go away after the primary. I tend to think not.  

by JoeCoaster 2008-03-13 09:11AM | 0 recs
Re: Really Sad!

When Obama riffs on the "bamboozled" and "hoodwinked" lines he is quoting from Denzel Washington's portrayal of Malcolm X.

When Obama uses the words "hoodwinked" and "bamboozled" before mostly Black audiences, what he is saying to them is "Don't trust the White Man ". Make no mistake about it, he knows exactly what he is doing using these words in the manner he is using them. It is so obvious that it pleases him immensely that it is all an inside joke. He connects with the members of the audience who break out laughing and begins to laugh himself. If he doesn't know what he is doing, then why all of the laughter between him and his audience when he mentions these words.

Tell me he isn't "dogwhistling."

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:26AM | 0 recs
Ya been hoodwinked!

Here's the relevent part of the Malcolm X movie that Obama is plagiarizing/mimicking:

   I'm gonna tell you like it really is. Every election year these politicians are sent up here to pacify us! They're sent here and setup here by the White Man!

   This is what they do!

   They send drugs in Harlem down here to pacify us!

   They send alcohol down here to pacify us!

   They send prostitution down here to pacify us!

   Why you can't even get drugs in Harlem without the White Man's permission!

   You can't get prostitution in Harlem without the White Man's permission!

   You can't get gambling in Harlem without the White Man's permission!

   Every time you break the seal on that liquor bottle, that's a Government seal you're breaking!

   Oh, I say and I say it again, ya been had!

   Ya been took!

   Ya been hoodwinked!

   Bamboozled!

   Led astray!

   Run amok!

Why does Obama keep using "riffs" from a clearly racist speech?

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:30AM | 0 recs
Re: Really Sad!

OK. He wasn't dogwhistling. Cats on the other hand, meh, I dunno. They might have heard something.

by pitahole 2008-03-13 02:52PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor:

Wright comes out of a specific type of black religious tradition where this kind of hyper sermonizing is meant to get the congregation to become politically active; it's not meant to be taken as anti-american or anti-white. By the same token it isn't meant for non-white audiences for the very same reason. it can be taken in an entirely different way. Obama MUST distance himself from this quickly and firmly, especially given the hyper awareness and vitriolic way they react to the slightest, whiff of a non-pc comment from anyone else.

How do you explain that during a presidential campaign on a national stage? to a diverse national audience that you have tried to convince you are beyond racial politics? I have no idea, but that's Obama's challenge here. The campaign had to know this was coming; they should be prepared for it. We'll see.

I for one am offended, not so much by what Wright said, but more so by Obama's dismisal of it when he reacts so strongly to much less hateful statements from others.

Obama should ask Wright to step away from the campaign and he should distance himself from him publically.

by americanincanada 2008-03-13 08:55AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor:

How can he distance himself? Everyone already knows what church he goes to, everyone has this video. His only explanation is to defend the guy and let the guy defend himself. If you search for "Jeremiah Wright -obama", you can actually see results that tell more about the guy himself.

If it were Karl Rove, what would he do? Tell the candidate to stand by his beliefs. Trust me, there's less here than there appears. And no candidate as far back as I can remember has a history as deep with a church as Obama. That should not be so quick to be assumed to be a liability.

You think it'll take time to explain that message? Good, we've got six weeks. If he stands up now, he'll appear stronger.

by vcalzone 2008-03-14 03:45AM | 0 recs
video link
It is now on youtube. Can you include it in?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzhl-endv co
by prisonbreak 2008-03-13 09:05AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

There is a really off the wall sermon clip on Politico - Ben Smith.

by LadyEagle 2008-03-13 09:07AM | 0 recs
There are several and popping up everywhere

This is why vetting is important.  This pastor married Obama and was his mentor for 20 years.  It is a HUGE problem.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 09:25AM | 0 recs
Re: There are several and popping up everywhere
I'd say this blows the Geraldine Ferraro incident out of the water.
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 09:26AM | 0 recs
There are several and popping up

This is why vetting is important.  This pastor married Obama and was his mentor for 20 years.  It is a HUGE problem.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 09:28AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

The Clintons have now gone to an all-race-baiting, all-the-time strategy.  "Look at the crazy BLACK preacher and the crazy BLACK things he says.  Vote for us or lose your jobs to angry BLACK people."  The dog whistles are certainly out and it's a terrible black mark (no pun intended) on the Clinton legacy.

This is who these people are: they will stab you straight in the back if it will help advance their cause.  They've been using the Sista Souljah act for 15+ years now-- it's one of their most time-honored techniques.  But they will regret giving the middle finger to the AA community.  HRC's campaign is now forever tainted with the stench of race-baiting, and if she is the GE nominee this will cost her the election.  

by JK47 2008-03-13 09:14AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

This has nothing to do with the Clinton's. Fox bought the tapes. It's easy to do, the church sells them online.

If you continue making everything Hillary clinton's fault it will backfire.

by americanincanada 2008-03-13 09:17AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

Not that anyone has really been listening

But I'll try it again.

Ehem.

(in very quiet voice)

Voter here.

Listening.

For a new day.

Just sayin'

by 12 dogs and a blog 2008-03-13 09:33AM | 0 recs
The preacher is CRAZY

and he happens to be black.  Obama supporters: it's time to deal with REALITY.  Barack is applying for the highest office in the land, not the local PTA president.  This tape and many others are out there and I suspect there will be others.  The Republicans will not hesitate to play these on loop on FOX News and on talk radio for months so be ready to be extremely outraged if Obama still somehow gets the nomination.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 09:27AM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn

What does the pastors statement that we should be saying "God Damn America" have to do with race? It is just a stupid thing to say and the Republicans will be playing it night and day along side Michelle Obama's quote that she is "for the first time, I'm really proude of America".

Many Democrats will give Obama a pass, but Independents and Republicans along with a significant portion of Democrats will vote for McCain. I guess the vetting process is just getting started.

by mmorang 2008-03-13 01:14PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'God damn
Correction:
I suspect the vetting of Obama is pretty close to over.  
by grassrootsorganizer 2008-03-14 03:27AM | 0 recs
Sinking to new depths every day.

You're a scumbag, and this diary is trash.

by goodnbad 2008-03-13 09:22AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Pat Robertson says the same types of things...  What's the difference?  Well, he's white and not portrayed by the media as "different" and "scary".  This smear attempt will hit home, I'm afraid.  It's not fair, but when has life ever been fair to minorities.

Six weeks to go and the gutter level politics has gotten this bad.  I realize that this was a media creation designed to prolong the primary season, however, we shouldn't be repeating GOP talking points here.  There are plenty of others able and willing to do that for us.

Do not forget that we are democrats first, candidate supporters, second.

by LordMike 2008-03-13 09:33AM | 0 recs
no way , but nice try

robertson would not be allowed to say racist things like this.

second, robertson is a rightwing nut and everything thinks so.

by yellowdem1129 2008-03-13 09:36AM | 0 recs
Re: no way , but nice try

Robertson has blamed 9/11 on gay people!  He blamed Hurricane Katrina on gay people!  He may be a right wing nut, but no right wing nut is afraid of his endorsement!

by LordMike 2008-03-13 10:02AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Pat Robertson ran for President and he was SOUNDLY defeated by voters in the USA.

by Abe 2008-03-13 12:32PM | 0 recs
Can you account for EVERYBODY you associate with?

My mother is a die-hard Roman Catholic who thinks abortion is wrong and that divorce should be illegal.  I obviously disagree with her on these things

Would I need to disown, reject, and renounce my mother so that I can run for political office?  Or perhaps there are some personal things in my life that should be deemed "out of bounds" were I ever to run for office.

I've lost my patience with the Clintonistas around here.  Absolutely disgusted.  You're truly dredging the lowest, dirtiest muck.  You should be ashamed.

Who needs Republicans with Clintonistas around?

by goodnbad 2008-03-13 09:36AM | 0 recs
if you are a white american

and can listen to obama's minister and say, "that's ok".

I don't believe you.

I'm an A.A. and I'm ashamed as an American that someone so radical and full of hate is the mentor to the leading candidate for POTUS.

by yellowdem1129 2008-03-13 09:38AM | 0 recs
Re: if you are a white american

Well I am a white American.  I believe that Preachers, Pastors and Priests have the freedom in America to say whatever they damn well please and I don't find it offensive, because I don't have to agree with what anyone says.  It's their right to say it and my right to ignore it.

What I do find offensive is that people like you feel so free to condemn someone else's right to free speech and yet you still call yourself a Democrat.

THATS offensive.

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 12:36PM | 0 recs
Re: if you are a white american
Do you afford that same kind of freedom to Geraldine Ferraro?
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 01:01PM | 0 recs
Re: if you are a white american

Absolutely.  And I afford the same right to the Nazi's who march through Skokie and the anti-war protesters who march down Market St and First avenue.

Let each person be responsible for their own words actions.  When we condemn freedom of speech we destroy it.  Remember though, while I may believe the nazi's have the right to march in Skokie, I still think they are bigoted fools, and I choose to ignore them.  And while Ms Ferraro is free to say whatever she pleases, I am free to consider her remarks racist and ignore them.

You might note my signature line.  It seems pretty clear that I believe "Monster", "As far as I know" and "Hussein" are made issues only by those who WANT to divide and defeat us.  To me anyone who promotes the use these types of smears as real issues, is, well,.. since we are in reasonably polite company I can't tell you what I would call them, but trust me if i could, your ears might burn for a year.

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 01:59PM | 0 recs
awesome sentiment

Obama is still unelectable.  

by grassrootsorganizer 2008-03-14 03:23AM | 0 recs
Re: awesome sentiment

Perhaps he is unelectable in your eyes, but just about every real measure of his campaign seems to indicate just the opposite.

I used to believe he was unelectable too.  I was a dedicated Edwards guy, because I believed that America was just too racist and too sexist to elect an African American man or a Woman as President.  But then some funny things began to happen. In primaries and caucuses all over the country people came out to vote, and vote in record numbers, two, three, and four times greater than in previous elections. My guy, the white guy lost, and the African American and the Woman were the ones winning.  

My own friends, relatives and business associates who happen to call themselves Republicans or Conservatives  began confiding in me that they found Obama to be a refreshing change, perhaps even a true statesman in the mold of Eisenhower.  It was obvious to me that even Republicans are tired of corruption and dysfunction.  They want to leave the days of Abramoff, Cunningham and Delay behind them, and they actually see in Obama a way out of that era.  

Whether they are right or wrong about Obama, is meaningless, what matters is that they are willing to vote for him.  So I have to disagree with your premise that he is unelectable.  Quite the contrary, I believe he has proven to me that he is imminently electable.

And to me, the fact that even Mark Penn has said Obama is too liberal, makes him more acceptable in my eyes.  If Hillary's own campaign manager says Obama is the more liberal of the two, well that seals the deal for me.

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-14 10:41AM | 0 recs
Re: Can you account for EVERYBODY you associate wi

she also raised foul mouthed rude son.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:06PM | 0 recs
As a minister myself...

I'm an ordained Baptist minister. I firmly believe in the separation of church and state. I think that it was unwise for Jeremiah Wright to speak politically from the pulpit regarding Senators Clinton and Obama, and I object to that, just as I would if any pastor stood behind a pulpit and made comments supporting or opposing a candidate or political view.

That said, as a person in the majority who has taken special interest in the plights of minorities throughout America, whether African-American, Hispanic, handicapped, GLBT, or whatever, I think that Jeremiah Wright has the right to say many of the things that people here are complaining about. Martin Luther King, Jr., Fred Shuttlesworth, and a number of other civil rights leaders said similar things about our country. And I agree with them. A country should be judged on how it treats the least among us.

As many people have said, it has been very difficult for many of us to say or sing "God Bless America." For those of us with a theological slant, it is like us asking God for something that we know our country does not deserve.

Constitutionally, there is no religious test needed to be elected into public office, and I really wish that these kinds of attacks would not be used in the course of an election, especially in the course of a primary. There are far too many Democrats who are mad at other Democrats right now, and the last thing we need is four more years of, well, what we have now.

Peace.

SEC

by ScottEmerson 2008-03-13 09:41AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...

If you are a minister, and can listen to this and not be offended. I don't know what to say.

To talk about the bible in racial terms, to talk about Obama and Hillary in racial terms, to speak about being "victims" in 2008 when every measure of life has improved for A.A.'s in the last 40 years.

This is unbelievable to me.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/03/13 /jeremiah-wright-obamas-_n_91312.html

by yellowdem1129 2008-03-13 09:47AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...

I guess it's because I live in the South, and I see that African-American men and women are still seen by far too many people as "lower than." Just because someone has had their life improved over the past forty years does not mean that we as a nation have achieved true equality. I love reading about the civil rights movement in the 50's and 60's and have read a myriad of biographies and historical books documenting the process of striving for equality. I understand where Jeremiah Wright and a large number of African-Americans, especially over the age of 50, come from. As I said, I'm a white, middle-class, man, so not too much about me is in the minority. And I don't have a problem with the minority being vocal about what they go through.

There are times when I preach in which the message is radically offensive to various people. As a Christian, I cannot turn a blind eye to various things. There were times in which Jesus was equally offensive. Even the idea of the Son of God coming down to earth as a peasant, a Jew whose whole culture was being subjugated by the Romans, a rabbi persecuted by the learned Phariseesm, to die for the sins of humanity - that's not just bizarre, that's offensive. That is how he relates Obama to Jesus. I disagree with his analogy, but I am not offended by it. Had I lived his life, I may have felt very similarly.

I believe what I believe, and I have very good reasons to believe what I believe. And I live in a country where the freedom of speech that protects me from speaking out also protects people like Jeremiah Wright.

by ScottEmerson 2008-03-13 10:14AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...

You clearly have absolutely no understanding of the Black church or it's history.  The presentation of the bible and it's teachings in racial terms is what got us through slavery.  It's what got us through a century of Jim Crown and lynchings.  It's what gave birth to the civil rights movement which is responsible for the improvements you mention.

These are the kind of sermons that you hear all over the place in any of our churches that come out of that tradition.  In fact, I wouldn't be surprised at all to find that Bill and Hillary had shown up a Sunday or two to a church who's Reverend used this kind of language.

by Brillobreaks 2008-03-13 11:17AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...
Don't you think it's about time they stop this kind of stuff in black churches?
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 11:25AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...

Yes, racism is clearly dead, it doesn't exist anymore.  It's time for Black folks to just shut up and quit whining about it.  It's not like we're being sprayed with fire hoses and shit anymore.  Blacks are just trying to continue to be victims of the White man.  We need someone else to blame for all our problems so we don't have to take any responsibility for them ourselves.  Also, I hear we're stuck in an affirmative action mentality.  In fact, it seems to me that's the entire basis of Obama's campaign.  Just one big ol' piece of affirmative action.  

Seriously though, I love this new meme you all have going on here.  It's quite appropriate that Rush Limbaugh is now going around hailing Geraldine Ferraro as a fellow victim of the PC Police.  These are the kind of attacks on Blacks and race baiting that the right wing has engaged in for years, and which most Dems have seen right through.  I guess it's easier to see them for what they are when they're coming from right wingers.

by Brillobreaks 2008-03-13 11:33AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...
Yesterday, some Obama supporter very politely told me that younger Americans, those that supposedly support Obama in huge numbers, no longer accept the politics of racial division. That's why I asked the question. The kind of remarks on Rev Wrights' video seem a very divisive. I just don't see the purpose for them anymore.
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 11:44AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...

As soon as equality is reached, sure.

by ScottEmerson 2008-03-13 11:34AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...

You clearly have absolutely no understanding of the Black church or it's history.  The presentation of the bible and it's teachings in racial terms is what got us through slavery.  It's what got us through a century of Jim Crown and lynchings.  It's what gave birth to the civil rights movement which is responsible for the improvements you mention.

These are the kind of sermons that you hear all over the place in any of our churches that come out of that tradition.  In fact, I wouldn't be surprised at all to find that Bill and Hillary had shown up a Sunday or two to a church who's Reverend used this kind of language.

by Brillobreaks 2008-03-13 11:18AM | 0 recs
Re: As a minister myself...

he said at Howard that the government started aids.

does that sound like Dr King too?

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:10PM | 0 recs
2 articles on Obama & Jeremiah Wright :

Here are selected paragraphs from 2 articles on Obama & Jeremiah Wright :

=========

CHICAGO -- Members of Trinity United Church of Christ squeezed into a downtown hotel ballroom in early March to celebrate the long service of their pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. One congregant stood out amid the flowers and finery: Senator Barack Obama...

...

Few of those at Mr. Wright's tribute in March knew of the pressures that Mr. Obama's presidential run was placing on the relationship between the pastor and his star congregant. Mr. Wright's assertions of widespread white racism and his scorching remarks about American government have drawn criticism, and prompted the senator to cancel his delivery of the invocation when he formally announced his candidacy in February.

Mr. Obama, a Democratic presidential candidate who says he was only shielding his pastor from the spotlight, said he respected Mr. Wright's work for the poor and his fight against injustice. But "we don't agree on everything," Mr. Obama said. "I've never had a thorough conversation with him about all aspects of politics."

It is hard to imagine, though, how Mr. Obama can truly distance himself from Mr. Wright. The Christianity that Mr. Obama adopted at Trinity has infused not only his life, but also his campaign.

He began his presidential announcement with the phrase "Giving all praise and honor to God," a salutation common in the black church. He titled his second book, "The Audacity of Hope," after one of Mr. Wright's sermons, and often talks about biblical underdogs, the mutual interests of religious and secular America, and the centrality of faith in public life.

The day after the party for Mr. Wright, Mr. Obama stood in an A.M.E. church pulpit in Selma, Ala., and cast his candidacy in nothing short of biblical terms, implicitly comparing himself to Joshua, known for his relative inexperience, steadfast faith and completion of Moses' mission of delivering his people to the Promised Land.

It was a 1988 sermon called "The Audacity to Hope" that turned Mr. Obama, in his late 20s, from spiritual outsider to enthusiastic churchgoer. Mr. Wright in the sermon jumped from 19th-century art to his own youthful brushes with crime and Islam to illustrate faith's power to inspire underdogs. Mr. Obama was seeing the same thing in public housing projects where poor residents sustained themselves through sheer belief.
........
In the 16 years since Mr. Obama returned to Chicago from Harvard, Mr. Wright has presided over his wedding ceremony, baptized his two daughters and dedicated his house, while Mr. Obama has often spoken at Trinity's panels and debates.

.............
He has said that he relies on Mr. Wright to ensure "that I am speaking as truthfully about what I believe as possible." He tends to turn to his minister at moments of frustration, Mr. Wright said, such as when Mr. Obama felt a Congressional Black Caucus meeting was heavier on entertainment than substance.
.....
On the Sunday after the terrorist attacks of 9/11, Mr. Wright said the attacks were a consequence of violent American policies. Four years later he wrote that the attacks had proved that "people of color had not gone away, faded into the woodwork or just `disappeared' as the Great White West went on its merry way of ignoring Black concerns."

......
At the same time, Mr. Obama's ties to Trinity have become more complicated than those simply of proud congregation and favorite son. [....]

..... Mr. Wright's political statements may be more controversial than his theological ones. He has said that Zionism has an element of "white racism."

Such statements involve "a certain deeply embedded anti-Americanism," said Michael Cromartie, vice president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a conservative group that studies religious issues and public policy. "A lot of people are going to say to Mr. Obama, are these your views?"

Mr. Obama says they are not.

"The violence of 9/11 was inexcusable and without justification," he said in a recent interview. He was not at Trinity the day Mr. Wright delivered his remarks shortly after the attacks, Mr. Obama said, but "it sounds like he was trying to be provocative."

Despite the canceled invocation, Mr. Wright prayed with the Obama family just before his presidential announcement. Asked later about the incident, the Obama campaign said in a statement, "Senator Obama is proud of his pastor and his church."

In March, Mr. Wright said in an interview that his family and some close associates were angry about the canceled address, for which they blamed Obama campaign advisers but that the situation was "not irreparable," adding, "Several things need to happen to fix it."

Asked if he and Mr. Wright had patched up their differences, Mr. Obama said: "Those are conversations between me and my pastor."

Mr. Wright, who has long prided himself on criticizing the establishment, said he knew that he may not play well in Mr. Obama's audition for the ultimate establishment job.

"If Barack gets past the primary, he might have to publicly distance himself from me," Mr. Wright said with a shrug. "I said it to Barack personally, and he said yeah, that might have to happen."

Full article at:

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/30/us/pol itics/30obama.html?n=Top/News/Poltics/Se ries/The%20Long%20Run

=============

The Trinity United Church of Christ, the church that Barack Obama attends in Chicago [......]

The senator "affirmed" his Christian faith in this church; he uses Wright as a "sounding board" to "make sure I'm not losing myself in the hype and hoopla." Both the title of Obama's second book, The Audacity of Hope, and the theme for his keynote address at the Democratic National Convention in 2004 come from Wright's sermons. "If you want to understand where Barack gets his feeling and rhetoric from," says the Rev. Jim Wallis, a leader of the religious left, "just look at Jeremiah Wright.
[......]
Obama could have picked any church -- the spare, spiritual places in Hyde Park, the awesome pomp and procession of the cathedrals downtown. [......]
Obama chose Trinity United. He picked Jeremiah Wright.

From:

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/sto ry/13390609/campaign_08_the_radical_

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 09:45AM | 0 recs
Re: 2 articles on Obama &

I am sure that there are pictures of Billy Graham with the Clintons, and Billy Graham said many racist comments.  Johm McCain has been endorsed by a minister who hates catholics, and the pope hates homosexuals.  Also, my priest hates homosexuals.  Should I leave my church???

by Spanky 2008-03-13 10:25AM | 0 recs
Re: 2

if you dont, obviously yes you should.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 10:51AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor 'God damn America'

Is this on TV news or just online?

If Sen. Obama is the nominee, this will be plastered all over the place in the general election.

by moevaughn 2008-03-13 10:09AM | 0 recs
It was on Good Morning America...

...This morning.

by Andre Walker 2008-03-13 10:10AM | 0 recs
ABC News and FOX News are covering it

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 10:24AM | 0 recs
There are other videos.

In one of them he keeps mentioning Hillary and basically put her in league with the same white establishment that killed Jesus.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 10:24AM | 0 recs
The "Audacity of Hope" book title

Turns out that Obama couldn't even come up with his own title-- it was this pastor in the videos who came up with it and Obama used it.

The pastor was the one who married Barack and Michelle Obama and baptized their children.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 10:26AM | 0 recs
Re: The "Audacity of Hope" book title

Obama has talked about the book title and where he got it from.  It's a reference to something...

by Brillobreaks 2008-03-13 11:11AM | 0 recs
ABC News even mentioned it in the report

Wright was using that term and Obama borrowed it.  It's just fact.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 11:47AM | 0 recs
Re: ABC News even mentioned it in the report

I don't understand your point.

Thus, he shouldn't be president?

by shef 2008-03-13 12:40PM | 0 recs
Re: Right On

Except that -
Rev. Wright is right.

How many villages were napalmed in Vietnam?
How many Guatemalans and Salvadoreans were murdered by thugs trained at the School of the Americas?
How many Palestinians have lost their homes to American-made Cat bulldozers and their lives to the American-funded IDF?

Yeah, oppressed peoples throughout the world are really pissed at America.
The sooner we realize it, the better.

by johnnygunn 2008-03-13 10:42AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

I think a lot of you are forgetting the racial element to this sermons comes from a place of fighting for rights:
Black power has historically been about equality.
White power has historically been about racism.

What Rev. Wright is saying is pretty inflammatory but more so because he's yelling and screaming. This is the typical angry black man type of attack that I'd expect from the GOP tho, so I'm not surprised it's come out.
It'll be interesting to see how Sen. Obama handles this, "controversy" since he knew it was going to come out.

by hnic357 2008-03-13 11:01AM | 0 recs
Obama Has...

Spoken about the Reverend and about his comments.    If you were the least bit interested in anything other than smearing him, you'd have found those statements and included them in your diary.

by Brillobreaks 2008-03-13 11:09AM | 0 recs
Before Anybody Continues Please Watch This

So, we are at least informed.  James H. Cone is respected as one of America's greatest theologians.

http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/11232007/watch.html

by CardBoard 2008-03-13 11:10AM | 0 recs
I am disgusted!
This is racist, and I'm outraged. Outraged over the racism. Yes. Obama supporters are right. If you disagree with anything Wright said -- from "goddamn America" to "Barack is like Jesus" to "US of KKKA" to "America brought 9/11 on itself" -- you are a filthy, dirty, stinking racist. And if you're offended by any of it, you are doubleplusracist.

Let's lay out the facts here. If you don't vote for Obama, you're racist. If you don't vote for Hillary, you're sexist. Either way, you're screwed. We're all a bunch of bigots, and there's no escaping it. The only people in this nation who had a chance to be neither racist nor sexist were the good folks in TX because I guess they had the option of voting for one candidate and caucusing for the other. As for the rest of us, we're wicked and bigoted, and we'd better just accept it and ask forgiveness from Christ... er, I mean, from Barack.

(In all seriousness, is there any way we could all stop calling each other f*cking racists? It's getting old.)

by sricki 2008-03-13 11:24AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks

Are all of you Hillary supporters really repugs?  Because I gotta say I don't watch Fox News, and ABC is getting almost like Fox with Cokie Roberts and George Will as commentators on the George (Clintonista) S. show.  Also, CNN is starting to be more and more like Fox too.

by Spanky 2008-03-13 11:25AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks
Good for you for not watching Fox News. I'm not saying you have done this, but I have seen Obama supporters both denigrate and embrace Fox News. It seems to depend on whether or not the story supports Obama.
by zenful6219 2008-03-13 11:29AM | 0 recs
Bye Barack

I just sent Obama's racist preachers video to like 300 of my peeps on Myspace and Facebook. The racists are coming alright and they ain't white

by rossinatl 2008-03-13 11:26AM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

Yep, Obama is a scary scary Black man.  Run!  Hide your women!

by Brillobreaks 2008-03-13 11:35AM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

This doesn't have to do with Obama's race.  It has to do with how he views the country he plans to govern, and all the people in it.

by Scotch 2008-03-13 05:52PM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

You really should watch that Moyers interview and learn a little bit about the black community before you label everything this preacher says as, "racists"

There are white members of his congregation at Trinity. I don't like these type of preachers myself, but I find the idea that He's anti-white is pretty ridiculous. Anti-Hillary yes, which I can see would piss you off. I didn't care for any of the attacks on Hillary. They were uncalled for and as other posters have stated, Obama doesn't have to deal with sexism.

by hnic357 2008-03-13 11:36AM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

Thanks for watching that...I really hate to see Black Theology be attack for a political campaign.

by CardBoard 2008-03-13 11:47AM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

Too late, I guess. Stuff like this disgusts me, and it's clear now that this is a pattern in the Clinton campaign. I just hope more people realize that in the next six weeks.

by amiches 2008-03-13 11:53AM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

Its funny how some can look at something clearly from ABC news (not the greatest fans of the Clintons--recall the Path of Glory mini-series or whatever it was a few years back) and decide it really is from the Clintons.  What factual background/data go into that kind of calculus?  Apart from that, tho, its equally odd that I can look at the same set of facts and be offended by the racism and race-baiting emanating from the Obama camp.  My background: woman, 60, lifelong Democrat and activist, attorney, never-voted-Republican (never ever.)  So...perhaps this Rorhshach response from the two camps says a lot about the stage of our "dug in" advocacy where factual data doesn't matter much anymore???

by christinep 2008-03-13 12:41PM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

I work in PR and lucky things like this don't just "happen". Especially after the issue has been raised in multiple quarters by multiple people.

The Clinton campaign pitched this news - it's how campaigns work.

by amiches 2008-03-13 12:46PM | 0 recs
Re: Bye Barack

no, russert brought this up in the debate and brian ross investigated.

"I work in pr"....

jeesch..

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:16PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

I'm a Catholic liberal Democrat, a member of a party that has reproductive rights, separation of church and state, and pro-science planks vital parts of its  platform.

The Pope and every cardinal, bishop, monsignor and priest responsible for my spiritual well-being vehemently disagrees with those things and occasionally they make inflammatory comments concerning them. Needless to say, I don't plan on excommunicating myself anytime soon.

Bottom line: I don't go to church for politics - I have enough of that in my daily life. Let's not make equivalency arguments about the two.

by amiches 2008-03-13 11:41AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Does your priest say "God damn America"?  Does he pump his hips while saying the former President was "riding dirty"?

If so, and if you were running for President, I'd say you'd have a problem.

by Abe 2008-03-13 12:18PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

He probably would have been more correct if he said:

God damn the American government!

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 12:22PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

No, but my church leaders HAVE proclaimed Jews to be destined for Hell, among other things. I sure hope you wouldn't try to tar me as anti-Semitic for it.

by amiches 2008-03-13 12:24PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

A--f*cking--MEN !!

Sing it brother!  As a recovering catholic myself, I whole heartedly  agree if paid attention to politics in my Church, I'd be a raving Republican lunatic about now.

by Its Like Herding Cats 2008-03-13 12:21PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Im a Dorothy Day liberation theology - Labor Catholic and to me, theyre inseparable.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:19PM | 0 recs
This ain't like liberal Catholics distancing
Rev. Wright is telling the truth, period.
Maybe you should ask Prof. Michael Eric Dyson
(another prominent Obama supporter) how he
feels about anything Rev. Wright has said.
Obama has chosen to run a campaign based on
NOT telling these truths.  That isn't actually
the easiest thing for anybody who cares about
black people to do.  Obama is pandering to you.
Can't you just shut up and be grateful for once?
Can't you take yes for an answer?
Obama's decision not to base his campaign on the
issues that Rev. Wright is talking about is a good
reason for black people to desert Obama, not for
you to!
by IvoteMay6th 2008-03-13 05:01PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G
Bill Richardson likely to endorse Obama.
http://dharmafarma.wordpress.com/2008/03 13/richardson-close-to-endorsing-obama- possible-running-mate-i-hope-so
by PrinceCA 2008-03-13 12:06PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

What in this comment warranted a hidden rating?

by interestedbystander 2008-03-13 12:21PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

sorry no,he is not.

did you watch it or just not understand the words he used?

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:30PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

The biggest problem is Barack Obama sat in the pews and listened to these sermons for 20 years.  This is not just a peripheral association.

He and his wife chose to raise their daughters with these beliefs.

It's very troubling and very outside the mainstream.

by Abe 2008-03-13 12:12PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Outside the mainstream?  Have you ever stepped foot inside a Black church in your life?

by Brillobreaks 2008-03-13 12:17PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Sermonizing "God damn America", etc. is outside of mainstream America thinking.  What does being in an African-American church have to do with my comments?

by Abe 2008-03-13 12:20PM | 0 recs
it's sad that this needs to be explained at all

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 12:24PM | 0 recs
Give us a break, really. Please.

It is certainly out of the mainstream of national political life and out of the mainstream of Harvard graduates and out of the mainstream of someone who professes to believe in UNITY and Hope and transforming this country into a a "post racial" society.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 12:24PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Right, and out of 20 years, it looks like the right wingers and the Hillary supporters (never thought I'd say that in the same sentence) are able to pull maybe a handful of quotes that are controversial.

That shows you the day to day experience at the church wasn't controversial or incendiary.

by animated 2008-03-13 12:20PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

This was on "Good Morning America" ABC this morning.  Not affiliated with Hillary.  Also, not affiliated with "right wingers".

by Abe 2008-03-13 12:22PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Journalists don't just find this stuff out, dude.

by amiches 2008-03-13 12:25PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Give me a break.  Journalists all just sit around and wait for the phone to ring?!?

BTW, Sean Hannity has done a couple of reports on Rev Wright, prior to ABC picking it up.

Maybe, just maybe, it's not Hillary's fault.

by Abe 2008-03-13 12:43PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Look, there's a principle called Occam's Razor which is pretty applicable here.

Basically put, it says that the simpler explanation is generally the correct one.

Without any further evidence that HRC's campaign is responsible, it seems unlikely that this is the case.

Generally--without evidence to the contrary--if it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and walks like a duck, it probably is a duck.

In this case, it's far more simpler to take news organizations at their word and assume that, yes, journalists, you know, did their job and found the facts.

by shef 2008-03-13 05:59PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Funny you should mention Occam's razor, because it's the very principle that led me to take countless "coincidences" and "unfortunate comments" and conclude that the Clinton campaign has systematically engaged in racially-charged politics to win the election.

by amiches 2008-03-13 06:20PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

It was broken by Fox, and now it's all the rage on Taylor Marsh and Hillaryis44. Right wingers and Hillary supporters, marching in lockstep - something I think we can expect to see a lot of in the coming months.

by animated 2008-03-13 12:27PM | 0 recs
Everyone just be very, very quiet

Maybe if we just never talk about this stuff and keep it hidden, the Republicans won't notice and Obama will sail into the White House.  I'm trying to help your guy out now.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 12:34PM | 0 recs
Re: Everyone just be very, very quiet

Really? That's your goal - to help Obama?

by animated 2008-03-13 12:49PM | 0 recs
yep

I am going to advocate that no more scrutiny is placed on his past so he can coast to the nomination and election.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 12:56PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

it is outside "the mainstream" when talking about mainstream (read: white) cultural norms.

Taking these statements out of its original context, and thrusting them into the political sphere has distorted what it means. There's an intended audience and an intended context for those statements, one that follows a different set of rules than those for statements on the nightly news.

by shef 2008-03-13 12:45PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Let me explain my thinking.  There is radical right and there is radical left, in the middle is "mainstream".  As I'm sure you know, people of all colors can be anywhere on that spectrum-- though most people, you may agree, are in the middle - "mainstream".  

Those voters cannot identify with or accept Rev. Wright's comments, unlike the Obamas.  And that's a problem for Sen. Obama.  

by Abe 2008-03-13 01:59PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Okay, that's a fair point.

I would hold, however, that given the historical importance and independence of black churches--dating from the beginning of black culture in America, religion and spirituality have played an important role as the only (or one of the only) places free from white culture's control--it isn't fair to judge those statements based on mainstream norms.

If voters cannot identify or accept Rev. Wright's comments--I know I can't--I don't see how that transfers over to Sen. Obama's campaign.

Even granting that the comments demonstrate a deep dissatisfaction--or even hatred--of America, Obama clearly doesn't share that aspect of Rev. Wright's preaching.

The man is running for president and is serving in the Senate--he clearly doesn't think that blacks should sing "god damn America."

Furthermore, it's clear that Americans understand--to a point--the distinction between one's church life and one's public life. After all, people (at least the mainstream) didn't expect Kerry to be anti-choice because he is Catholic.

by shef 2008-03-13 06:33PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

EXACTLY RIGHT!

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:31PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

I've been emailing news outlets to ask them not to stigmatize black theology while running this story, and to not pass judgment on TUCC...and, strangely enough, politico and fox news reporters emailed me back, very nice notes.

by CardBoard 2008-03-13 12:50PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

What did they say?

BTW, I think it's interesting that other news outlets are not picking this up. There is obviously some trepidation there and recognition of the danger of not placing something in the proper context.

by animated 2008-03-13 12:54PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Ben Smith said he understood the concern and would tread lightly...and Fox also said he understood, and  would caveat stories with the fact the Pastor has retired and try not to highlight the "racial" elements as much as the Hillary elements

by CardBoard 2008-03-13 01:15PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Yeah,  because your acting phony and pretending to be all so concerned about fairness.

But heres you on another day.
==

More bad Clinton News - Pardons

by CardBoard, Thu Nov 15, 2007

ABC News is reporting this morning that Hillary Clinton has taking "thousand of dollars" in donations from three recipients of Bill Clinton's 11th-hour pardons.

Let me be clear about on thing.  This is not illegal.  However, it is highly inappropriate, irresponsable, and unethical and just continues to highten the image of Clinton as a candidate with a very low ethical standard.

by John Wesley Hardin was a Friend to the Poor 2008-03-13 01:41PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Because Of My Ethical Standards - How about my diary "Senator Obama End This War?"

I have not attacked Hillary for Ferraro's comments, and she has not attacked Obama for Wrights - correctly so... I do not believe the media should be engaging this story.

by CardBoard 2008-03-13 02:58PM | 0 recs
Think Olbermann will cover it?

I'll hold my breath

by internetstar 2008-03-13 02:27PM | 0 recs
Re: Think Olbermann will cover it?

  This is hate.Hate in its raw form. I challenge anyone to show me where Jesus would have preached like that.

by gunner 2008-03-13 02:54PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Sorry. No religious test for president. This cannot be submitted as evidence of anything. You are going down a pretty slippery slope here. Come back to me when you find a high ranking Obama surrogate who says:

"Hillary is lucky to be a white woman (at least one of them) whom slept with Bill Clinton. And she won't be where she is today had that not been the case"

by pitahole 2008-03-13 03:00PM | 0 recs
Anyone that keeps saying it's religion

Insisting that this controversy is about religion is trolling at this point.  The comments from the pastor go way beyond religion.

by diplomatic 2008-03-13 03:10PM | 0 recs
Re: Anyone that keeps saying it's religion

Last I checked, the pastor was making those comments in a Church - a place of worship - as part of his religious sermon. Inadmissable. When he goes on O'reilly and repeats them, let me know. I'll be brandishing a pitchfork right alongside you.

by pitahole 2008-03-13 03:16PM | 0 recs
Not Clinton's, but Ferraro's!

Come back to me when you find a high ranking Obama surrogate who says:

"Hillary is lucky to be a white woman (at least one of them) whom slept with Bill Clinton. And she won't be where she is today had that not been the case"

I like this so much that I may just steal it.
But if you're battling Geraldine Ferraro, it isn't
Clinton's advantage, but rather,
that of Geraldine Ferraro herself that is relevant!
Mondale would not have picked her in 1984 had she
not been a white woman!

I would [gear-shift, no whiplash] also
like you to see how this plays into
the gay marriage debate:
The women who  slept with Bill Clinton but are not
married to him are basically nowhere.  Given that
the Clintons have only one child, it seems entirely
likely that they were not sleeping together all that much
at some points.  Did he not in fact so testify, under oath,
when Ken Starr was [wrongly] grilling him about his sex life?

My point is (although it dilutes the punch of
the analogy) the point is not that HRC has in common
with other women that she slept with him; it is
that she alone among them is married to him.
That actually does make a difference.
Domestic partnerships and civil unions are not
the same thing.

by IvoteMay6th 2008-03-13 04:47PM | 0 recs
there is however a religious and patriotic test

for being ELECTED president.

Sorry the rest of America is not up to speed on your realities just quite yet.

Democracy can be a real bitch.

by grassrootsorganizer 2008-03-14 03:36AM | 0 recs
Re: there is however a religious and patriotic tes

Well then I guess America ain't gonna have a president come November. Cos Hillary ain't gonna get the nomination and McCain's got a Haggee little problem. Now may be a chance to opt for the parliamentary system ;) BHO for Prime Minister!!

by pitahole 2008-03-14 04:09AM | 0 recs
nope

because there's a world of difference between a crazt Hagee endorsing McCain and Obama financially supporting Wright and referring to him as his spiritual touchstone.  

Nope.  Obama cannot win in November.  

by grassrootsorganizer 2008-03-14 04:21AM | 0 recs
The pastor is telling the truth

That the US brought the hostility of the Arab world
upon itself is not even controversial.  You could
start by Googling [ Iran Mossadegh 1953 ], for
example.

Of course, the Arab world is not special in this
regard.  The US has basically gotten it all wrong
on the foreign intervention front since WW2 ended.
For the long version, click here.

Democrats are not normally supposed to need this
explained to them.  Given that Bill Clinton dodged the draft
before he un-dodged it, and we have been
supporting him all this time, we are supposed to already know
that America has been squashing democracy
(as opposed to supporting it) everywhere it reared its ugly little head
since 1946, allegedly in the name of anti- communism.
How can you possibly champion democracy "as opposed" to
socialism   in any country where the left is participating
in a political campaign and winning??
You know, VietNam in 1956, Chile in 1973, Cuba in 1959,
Nicaragua in 1978, the Dominican Republic in 1965, ad nauseam ??
It has always been a shame that Hillary was too
stupid to figure out that you cannot win a
DEMOCRATIC primary by running to the RIGHT of
your opponent.  ESPECIALLY not when HE'S the one
pulling in the independents and crossovers, and
the black left ON TOP of that.

by IvoteMay6th 2008-03-13 04:35PM | 0 recs
Obama's rhetoric doesn't match his pastor's...
...because Obama is trying to woo white voters,
whereas his pastor wants credibility with God and
black people.
This is a good reason for black people (like me)
to vote against Obama, but when the only alternative
is somebody who is Machiavellian enough to claim that
Michigan as it stands is a fair outcome....
by IvoteMay6th 2008-03-13 04:37PM | 0 recs
Re: Obama's rhetoric doesn't match his pastor's...

This spiritual view of the country is the same as political posturing?  I mean come on, the fight over Michigan and Florida are politics, something temporary.  The type of speech used by Wright is religious and spiritual direction that Obama has been taking into his subconscious if not his soul for years now.  How do the two compare? This goes to the persons outlook on life, his very core, something he will have to draw from if he is in deep crisis during a presidency or struggling to know what to do.  I would rather have someone with a more optimistic,forgiving and generous view of life with my future in their hands.

by Scotch 2008-03-13 05:50PM | 0 recs
Blacks Should Sing 'G

If I were someone who claims to be against racism and this kind of radicalism,
I think I would have found another pastor a couple of decades ago.

You are a complete racist yourself just for saying this.
America did not even start trying to do right
by black people until after WW2.  The job remains
entirely unfinished, as any number of statistical
disparities will prove.  That is not even controversial.

I do agree with you that it does indeed constitute
"radicalism", in the American context, to allege
that black Americans deserve equality.  Bill
Clinton was not serious about that but at least
he did make an effort to have dialogue (click
here
).
This is hardly enough to compensate for dumping
Lani Guinier, Jocelyn Elders, Mike Espy, affirmative action, and welfare
in the name of political expediency.  But the
point is, he wouldn't've needed to worry about
the political untenability of these black and pro-
black people and positions if Rev.Wright's criticisms of
America as a racist society had not been entirely correct.

by IvoteMay6th 2008-03-13 04:57PM | 0 recs
It's a VERY safe bet...

... that no black person on this planet gives a flying #
what you think about this question.

Should Obama's pastor, Jeremiah Wright, who is a member of Barack Obama's African American Religious Leadership Committee, resign?

by IvoteMay6th 2008-03-13 05:03PM | 0 recs
Re: It's a VERY safe bet...

So you think that every black person on the planet agrees with and approves of Reverand Wright's rhetoric?  Wow. I bet they would be grateful to you for voicing their collective opinion.

by Scotch 2008-03-13 05:20PM | 0 recs
Do you have any idea...

what it's like to be black in America?  Do you have any appreciation for that?

by jaywillie 2008-03-13 05:41PM | 0 recs
Admirable view of America for Obama. Not.

Wow.  Just Wow.

This isn't just anybody's pastor.  It's the pastor of a man who is attempting to be the President of the United States.  Should a president be taking in and digesting this negative talk and belief on a frequent basis? Seems to me, that the last person who should be condoning this type of thinking would be a president.  We should be singing, "God damn America".  That will appeal to the country in the fall.  I know it really lifts my spirits.

Do I want to be in someones hands who thinks like this and trust him to do the best for my country?  

by Scotch 2008-03-13 05:43PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor:

interesting both ABC and CBS had something on Rev. Wright,  but it was not even mentioned on NBC.

Neither ABC nor CBS played the "God damn America" part though (maybe they thought that too offensive.)

by moevaughn 2008-03-13 05:48PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

This is absolutely unbelievable.  What the hell is wrong with this country?

Why are we responsible for what others say?

I don't care what his pastor said, because it wasn't said by Obama.  The only thing that should matter is what the candidate says or doesn't say.  It's incredibly sad that people are actually trying to blame Obama (or any other politician for that matter) for what ANOTHER PERSON says.  Does this mean that I'm responsible for when my church leader says something he shouldn't?

I mean, it's outrageously stupid.  Come on, we must be better than this.

by RussTC3 2008-03-13 06:09PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Were you equally incensed over Olbermann's idiotic commentary waxing apoloplectic that Hillary merely stated her disagreement with Ferarro's remarks rather than repudiating her completely and calling her out as a stark mad racist? Obama's supporters cannot get away with these stupid double standards. If his religious observances don't matter at all, then his campaign surrogates shouldn't have screamed bloody murder when Hillary clumsily appended "as far as I know" once after stating several times that Obama was most definitely not a Muslim.

And yes, everyone is responsible for what his or her church leader says. There are always other options if you don't like what you are hearing. Obama chose his church, and if he is truly the great unifier the he claims to be, there are plenty of pastors, even AA ones, who preach in much less racially divisive terms.

And finally yes, we can do better than this, But you cannot expect good behavior to emanate from just one side in this hard-fought campaign. What goes around comes around.

by Inky 2008-03-13 08:39PM | 0 recs
Amen?

if you are sitting in a pew and saying "Amen" or tossing a couple grand in the collection plate as you can then, yes, you are affirming you believe what your pastor preaches.

And if you are interested in running for president one day and your pastor starts spewing hate speech and God damn Americaism?  IF YOU PLAN TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT you better run for that church door first, and don't let it hit you in the ass on the way out.  

by grassrootsorganizer 2008-03-14 03:34AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Was I not clear?  IT'S ALL STUPID.

by RussTC3 2008-03-14 03:59PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

20 years isn't a lapse in judgment, it's a commitment.

$22,000 dollars isn't a just a commitment, it's an endorsement.

Rev. Wright isn't just a "senior adviser", he's a long time mentor.

by autumnal 2008-03-13 06:43PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

  This is not religion,this HATE and if you can`t see that then you are part of the problem.
by gunner 2008-03-13 07:42PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Why did you put that stupid poll on an otherwise excellent post?

Resign the campaign? That solves nothing. Barack Obama has some answering to do. This isn't something that can be taken care of with a simple resignation.

This is the man who married him who baptized his children. This is Obama's church.

It's over as far as I'm concerned. If Obama is the nominee, McCain will be president.

by cc 2008-03-13 07:59PM | 0 recs
You think attacking

the pastor who perfomed Barack and Michelle's wedding and baptized their children is a winning political strategy?

by kid oakland 2008-03-14 12:18AM | 0 recs
Re: You think attacking

Yes, I do, for he attacked Hillary Clinton.

by truthteller2007 2008-03-14 12:22AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Nice try.

Your pathetic spin won't work in middle America.

They will be HORRIFIED by this. If you are too young to understand that, then you have a lot of growing up to do.

by cc 2008-03-13 08:00PM | 0 recs
This is a mistake

It is offensive to take something deeply personal, like who baptizes your child, or the church your family belongs to, and turn it into the fodder for the Hillary Clinton campaign to attack Obama.

That video comes from Fox, the person who posted the video posts GOP stuff like Huckabee speeches.

You are doing yourself no favors bringing this here to MyDD.

by kid oakland 2008-03-13 09:30PM | 0 recs
Re: This is a mistake

But Obama is the one who regularly cites his religion while campaigning.

Jeremiah Wright is fair game, for Obama embraces him.

by truthteller2007 2008-03-13 11:28PM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

Now I understand why Michelle Obama so glibly claimed she did not love her country until her husband ran for President.

by truthteller2007 2008-03-13 11:42PM | 0 recs
what's the big deal?

First, you guys tried to make Obama out to be too conservative, and now he's too radical (by virtue of the fact that he is associated with radical thinking- by white middle class standards- individuals.)

I hope you can settle on the one version of the Obama you guys want to attack...

Frankly, I don't see what's so controversial...  He preaches about social injustice in the world.  Of course he's going to step on some toes.  

I'm proud that Obama would choose such a politically charged church to be his home congregation.  

by Damien in Texas 2008-03-14 01:00AM | 0 recs
Re: what's the big deal?

Your pride in him is swell.

He's still unelectable.  

by grassrootsorganizer 2008-03-14 03:38AM | 0 recs
Re: what's the big deal?

  Then you approve of preaching hate?
by gunner 2008-03-14 04:28AM | 0 recs
Re: [VIDEO] Obama's Pastor: Blacks Should Sing 'G

no, but he sure got his ass handed to him for visiting Hanoi with Jane Fonda.  

Sorry Obama is unelectable.  This must be a painful moment for many.

by grassrootsorganizer 2008-03-14 03:37AM | 0 recs
Obama's Pastor

I saw the video yesterday on ABC in GMA program. I was shocked. I even think Barack Obama and Michelle Obama has been brain washed by hearing these hatred speeches from this pastor for 20 years. Him not wearing a US Flag Pin http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Story?id= 3690000 and Michelle's comment that she is not proud of America until now http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/el ection2008/2008-02-19-michelle-obama_N.h tm are strong evidence that the damage has been done permanently in their brains. What a shame?

by Avistan 2008-03-14 08:01AM | 0 recs

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