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Politics : The Bigot Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dale Baker who wrote (467)4/16/2005 7:53:57 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 740
 
NO KIDDING!



To: Dale Baker who wrote (467)4/17/2005 12:15:43 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 740
 
Democrats have racist history

Randall Thomason
Sidelines (Middle Tennessee State U.)

(U-WIRE) MURFREESBORO, Tenn.—Consistent readers of my column may remember my Nov. 12, 2003 piece entitled “Dems get free pass on race,” I focused on Howard Dean’s confederate flag comments, Senate Democrats’ filibustering minority court appointees and large Democrat opposition to the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

On April 1, another sterling example of the hideous double standard that exists between Democrats and Republicans arose on the Senate floor when Democrat Sen. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut spoke about his colleague from West Virginia, Sen. Robert Byrd, another Democrat.

There’s nothing politicians love more than to praise each other, and this particular speech was to honor Sen. Byrd’s 17,000th Senate vote.

Dodd stood up and said the following: “I do not think it is an exaggeration at all to say to my friend from West Virginia that he would’ve been a great senator at any moment. Some were right for the time. Robert C. Byrd, in my view, would have been right at any time.”

He went on to say that Sen. Byrd would have been right at the founding of this country and right during the Civil War. So what’s the big deal?

Here are the highlights of Sen. Byrd’s past: He was a member of the Ku Klux Klan during the 1940s; he was a staunch opponent of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, even resorting to filibustering the legislation in an attempt to kill it; he was the only senator in American history to vote against confirming Supreme Court Justices Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas, the only two African-Americans ever appointed to the nation’s highest court; he repeatedly used the ‘N-word’ in an interview with Fox News in March 2001.
So let’s imagine the firestorm that would’ve erupted if a Republican senator (say, Mississipian Trent Lott) had commented that a man with Byrd’s track record would have been right for America during the Civil War, a war fought over slavery.

Peter Jennings, Tom Brokaw, Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and all the rest of the elite liberal crowd would be banging down the door of that senator’s office, demanding he be removed from government at that very second.

So where’s the outrage now? Of course the answer lies in Dodd’s party affiliation; he is a liberal Democrat from New England, so he gets an automatic free ride on any issue dealing with race.

I’ll even take this discussion a step further. What would happen if a Republican had Byrd’s background? Every sentence in the media about that person would begin with some form of the following: “Republican (fill in a hypothetical name here), former KKK member and renowned opponent of civil rights...”

Such is not the case for Byrd, again because he’s a Democrat. A majority of people in this country probably have no clue about Byrd’s past because the elite media outlets ignore it. This type of a blatant double standard is mind blowing.

Again, let’s review. Lott said in 2002 that we may not be dealing with some of the problems in this country we have now if the late South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond had won the 1948 presidential election, a campaign in which he advocated continued segregation. Lott is subsequently removed from his post as majority leader and burned at the stake by the media.

On April 1, 2004, Dodd said that a man who once wore the white robes of the KKK would have been right for America during the Civil War. Cue media outrage now. Still waiting ... and waiting. OK, I guess it’s not coming.

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Webmaster: Aaron Vanderpoel
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To: Dale Baker who wrote (467)5/13/2005 11:58:57 AM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 740
 
alternet.org



To: Dale Baker who wrote (467)5/13/2005 12:12:02 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 740
 
Air Force Removes Chaplain From Post
Officer Decried Evangelicals' Influence

By T.R. Reid
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, May 13, 2005; A04

DENVER, May 12 -- An Air Force chaplain who complained that evangelical Christians were trying to "subvert the system" by winning converts among cadets at the Air Force Academy was removed from administrative duties last week, just as the Pentagon began an in-depth study of alleged religious intolerance among cadets and commanders at the school.

"They fired me," said Capt. MeLinda Morton, a Lutheran minister who was removed as executive officer of the chaplain unit on May 4. "They said I should be angry about these outside groups who reported on the strident evangelicalism at the academy. The problem is, I agreed with those reports."

washingtonpost.com