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Politics : John Kerrys Crimes & Lies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neeka who wrote (1650)12/6/2004 3:56:38 PM
From: Captain Jack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1905
 
NAACP Head Mfume Didn't Retire, He Was Booted Out

by Armstrong Williams
Posted Dec 6, 2004

Don’t believe the well scripted press conference where former President and
Chief Executive Officer of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People, Kweisi Mfume, announced his resignation. Mfume did not
resign from the nation’s oldest and most prestigious civil rights
organization. He was kicked out, following a long simmering feuded with
NAACP Chairman Julian Bond.

The two began feuding after Mfume nominated National Security Advisor
Condoleezza Rice for his 2003 NAACP Image Award. Furious that Mfume was
reaching out to the Bush administration, Bond responded by nominating
"Boondocks" cartoonist Aaron McGruder for his Image Award. McGruder had
ridiculed Rice in his comic strip and later caller her “murderer” for her
role in the war in Iraq.

The rift grew as Mfume continued to reach out to the Republican Party. Mfume
realized that by reflexively voting Democrat in every election, the black
voting populace has given away most of their political bartering power.
After all, what incentive is there for either party to go out on a limb for
blacks, if it is taken for granted that blacks will automatically vote
Democrat? In effect, the black voting populace has created conditions that
make it very easy for both parties to take them for granted. Mfume rightly
reasoned that by reaching out to the Republican Party on issues that they
already agree with -- like empowering faith based charities, supporting
school vouchers, etc. -- the black voting populace can send the message that
they’re no longer willing to blindly support the Democrats. Faced with the
prospect of fleeing voters, the Democrats would be forced to make new
overtures. This competition, in turn, would instill both parties with a
sense of urgency for addressing those issues that black Americans routinely
rate as their chief concerns. This competitive pressure would provide the
black voting populace with increased political options -- and increased
bartering power. Somehow this point was lost on Bond, who dug in his heels
with mind numbing intransigence. Over the next year and a half, the rift
became unmendable.

Ironically, it was Bond who handpicked Mfume to lead the organization in
1995. At the time, the NAACP was foundering amidst charges of sexual
harassment and economic improprieties. “We were four and a half million
dollars in debt. We had scandal in the organization. Our very existence was
threatened,” recalls NAACP chairman, Julian Bond. “Kweisi Mfume was the last
person we interviewed,” continued Bond. “When he walked in the room, you
could just see people thinking, we’ve got our man.”

Mfume promptly set about cutting the organization’s employee base, raising
money, and organizing overtly political coalitions. Within five years, the
debt was gone and the NAACP was widely regarded as the most powerful
political pressure group in the country. They alone had the ability to
galvanize fifty million black votes. Members of the press found it all
dazzling. “Mfume not only has righted the ship, he also has set it on a new
course,” fawned USA Today columnist DeWayne Wickam.

Bond and Mfume essentially partnered with the Democratic Party to revitalize
the organization. Not surprisingly, the rhetoric coming out of the NAACP
became increasingly partisan. During a speech before 2,000 attendees at the
Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, NAACP Chairman Julian
Bond proclaimed that President George W. Bush has "selected [political]
nominees from the Taliban wing of American politics, appeased the wretched
appetites of the extreme right wing and chosen cabinet officials whose
devotion to confederacy is nearly canine in its uncritical affection."
During a 2003 appearance at the National Press Club, Bond referred to the
Republican Party as “a crazed swarm of right wing locusts” that have sought
to “subvert, ignore, defy and destroy the laws that require an America which
is bias-free,” Later that night Bond dubbed the Republicans, "the white
people's party."

Following the event, Mfume confronted Bond with his fear that the
organization had become too outwardly political. Soon thereafter, the IRS
launched investigation into whether Bond’s remarks violated the organization
’s tax exempt status.

The final tear came after the election. Mfume suggested sending a letter to
President Bush, mapping out ways that they could work together to help the
community. Bond rejected the idea. Mfume sent the letter anyway. To Bond,
this was an unforgivable. A few weeks later, Bond had Mfume voted out. The
message was clear: There is no room within the NAACP for intellectual
diversity. Just loyal servitude to the Democratic Party.

This is a crime. This is a shame. This is the sad state of the nation’s most
storied civil rights organization.

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Copyright © 2004 HUMAN EVENTS. All Rights Reserved.



To: Neeka who wrote (1650)12/24/2004 11:13:38 PM
From: Captain Jack  Respond to of 1905
 
The Merriest Christmas and a fantastic New Year to ALL!