SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TideGlider who wrote (156313)3/4/2009 1:53:26 PM
From: Skywatcher1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Top Republican's Groveling Apology to Rush Limbaugh Is a Media Disaster
By Max Blumenthal, The Daily Beast
Posted on March 3, 2009, Printed on March 4, 2009
alternet.org

Former Maryland Lieutenant Governor Michael Steele assumed the Republican National Committee's chair a month ago with great fanfare. The first African American elected to the position, Steele triumphed over a candidate who once belonged to a whites-only country club, and another who had distributed a CD that included the song, "Barack, the Magic Negro." Days after taking over the party's moribund infrastructure, Steele promised an "off the hook" PR campaign to apply conservative principles to "urban-suburban hip-hop settings"--offering the GOP a much-needed image makeover for the dawning of the age of Obama.

Hip-hop legend Russell Simmons hailed Steele's election in an open letter, assuring his friend, "The hip-hop community remains eager to hear the views of national leaders like you" But Simmons added a warning: "Don't let those who are angry in your base guide your choices or let the people to the left of President Obama push your buttons."

Of course, many of those to "the left of President Obama," including members of "the hip-hop community," greeted Steele's election with a collective yawn. Meanwhile, the RNC chairman made little noise at the 2009 Conservative Political Action Conference, with one exception that occurred only after he finished addressing a dinner banquet. He turned the mic over to Representative Michele Bachman of Minnesota. "You be da man! You be da man!" Bachmann repeatedly shouted to him. The awkward incident was among the evening's top stories on cable news shows, while Steele's jeremiad against Obama's stimulus package went almost unnoticed.

When Rush Limbaugh basked in the CPAC spotlight for more than an hour and a half on February 28, drawing boisterous, sustained applause from conference attendees with a stemwinding speech reiterating his desire to see Obama "fail," Steele took action. The following evening, on CNN's D.L. Hughley show, Steele attempted to reassert control over the party. When Hughley referred to Limbaugh as "the de facto leader of the Republican Party," Steele shot back, "No, I'm the de facto leader of the Republican Party!" And he mocked Limbaugh as an "entertainer" whose behavior was "incendiary" and "ugly."

Almost as soon as the broadcast ended, a firestorm of criticism erupted on the right-wing blogosphere. "It's not easy watching a black guy stumble around in the dark, but really, I'm trying," wrote Dan Riehl, a marketing manager who hosts the popular conservative blog, RiehlWorldView.com, in posting widely circulated on the right.

While conservative bloggers and radio talkers piled on, Limbaugh lashed out at Steele with a condescending on-air rant, barking at the chairman "to go behind the scenes and start doing the work that you were elected to do." Finding himself under fire from Rush's army of self-proclaimed "Dittoheads," Steele immediately sued for peace. "I went back at that tape and I realized words that I said weren't what I was thinking," Steele whimpered. "It was one of those things where I thinking I was saying one thing, and it came out differently. What I was trying to say was a lot of peoplewant to make Rush the scapegoat, the bogeyman--and he's not."

Steele's apology recalled a similar incident from late January, when Republican Representative Phil Gingrey of Georgia attacked Limbaugh for "throwing bricks" without paying the consequences. As I reported for the Daily Beast, Gingrey invited himself on Limbaugh's radio show the following day to grovel before the host. "I clearly ended up putting my foot in my mouth on some of those comments," the penitent congressman said.

But given Limbaugh's well-documented history of racial controversy, and Steele's position as the Republican Party's first African American chairman, his apology is more significant than Gingrey's. Limbaugh has, for example, mocked Obama as a "Halfrican-American" who should "become white;" he has called for a "posthumous Medal of Honor" for the assassin of Martin Luther King, Jr., James Earl Ray, and told an African American caller, "Take that bone out of your nose and call me back."

Steele's "off the hook" PR campaign is now off the rails. Within days, he has gone from being "da man" to just another "Dittohead."

Max Blumenthal is a Puffin Foundation writing fellow at the Nation Institute based in Washington, DC. Read his blog at maxblumenthal.blogspot.com.



To: TideGlider who wrote (156313)3/4/2009 2:15:39 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 173976
 
Steele's comment on Rush wasn't his biggest mistake. He let Hughley call the Republican party Nazi-like with no challenge.

Polls show most blacks support school choice and are against illegal immigration but they support the party that is against them on those issues. Issues which hold poor blacks down.

Does Hughley have kids in a public school? Why didn't Steele bring this up and ask him that?

Yesterday on Bennett's morning radio show he had the lady behind DC's school choice program. Limited in size, its still allowed 1700 kids to escape failing schools. She spoke of her motivation from seeing how those kids are doing so much better. And the Democrats are going to kill that program and bat those poor 1700 kids down, put them back in their place - the Democratic Congress is pure EVIL.

----------------------
D.C. parents said Thursday that they are prepared to rally against a Capitol Hill proposal to end a voucher program that helps 1,700 students from low-income families attend private schools.

"With all the programs that don't work, we're frustrated that this - one that does work - is being proposed to end," said Virginia Walden Ford, executive director of D.C. Parents for School Choice. "Right now, we're preparing to fight and we're hoping not to fail."

The $410 billion spending bill that the House passed Wednesday states that federal money from the Opportunity Scholarship Program will end in 2010 and should be used only for students now in the program. It also instructs D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Michelle A. Rhee to "promptly take steps to minimize potential disruption and ensure smooth transition" for returning students - unless Congress and the D.C. Council reauthorize the program.
....
Officials from the mayor's office and the Washington Teachers Union did not return calls for comment.

Reauthorization of the five-year, Republican-sponsored program is unlikely because Democrats control the White House and Congress.

Archdiocese of Washington spokeswoman Susan Gibbs expressed little hope that Congress would reconsider.

....
washingtontimes.com

Profile: Virginia Walden Ford
School choice activist blazes trail for other parents in D.C.
School Reform News > May 2005

How did Virginia Walden Ford, executive director of D.C. Parents for School Choice, follow up her successful legislative efforts? By writing a book to help other parents fight for school choice.

Ford, a mother of three, didn't know a lot about school choice options before 1996, but "became more disturbed each year" by the public school system and its "lowered expectations" for academic achievement.

"I was a single mom, poor, just trying to make a living," she said. "I lived the life that the families I serve live."

Starting at Home

By the time Ford's youngest son, William, entered his freshman year of high school in 1996, he was performing poorly and in trouble--in class and out.


"I'd always seen the potential in my son, but it seemed no one else did," Ford said. "A neighbor saw that potential and offered to help us, and it was a blessing."

The neighbor paid for William to attend a parochial school; the change in him, Ford said, "was dramatic"--something that was accomplished in weeks, not months.

"The chance to go to a private school turned his life around," she explained. "Before, he was struggling to fit in, like a lot of urban kids without fathers do. It isn't necessarily to their benefit to act smart. You have to change their environment. For the first time, my son felt people cared if he learned, and he felt safe."

William's story has a happy ending: He graduated from high school in 2000 and is currently serving in the U.S. Marine Corps. He returned from Iraq in late March and is now back at the Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, in San Diego, California.
Ford believes that without their neighbor's help, things might not have turned out so well.

Getting Involved

Not long after William transferred to the parochial school, Ford decided she "had a responsibility to help other parents." A longtime community activist with an interest in education, she had been tutoring high school students in math and elementary school students in reading since the mid-1990s. In addition, she said, "I have a gift for talking to others, and I believe that if you see something happening, you have a responsibility to do something about it."

She started by volunteering at the Center for Education Reform in 1997, then founded D.C. Parents for School Choice a year later. She calls 2003 an "incredible year" because her organization's legislative efforts were recognized when Congress passed the D.C. School Choice Incentive Act.

The nation's first federally funded scholarship program, it earmarked $14 million in grants for low-income children to attend private schools in the District. The first of several analyses to be conducted by the Georgetown Public Policy Institute was released April 5, 2005 ... and the authors found students in the D.C. program are on track to achieve the same positive results as those enrolled in voucher programs in Cleveland, Milwaukee, and New York City, according to a Heritage Foundation report.

Inspiration

That led to Ford's newest project--her self-published memoirs, titled Voices, Choices, and Second Chances: How to Win the Battle to Bring Opportunity Scholarships to Your State.

Ford's friends encouraged her to write her story after the campaign. Though she says she's not a writer and "it was hard," she's glad she did it.

"I'm really pleased with it, but I did it kicking and screaming," she said with a laugh.

Her inspiration came from the parents involved in the D.C. campaign. "Their story needs to be told," she said. "The press never mentioned them. History needs to know they were involved. This book is a testament to their empowerment.

"I think people will read it, and it will give them confidence to get out and fight."

Excitement about Future

With a successful campaign and a new book behind her, Ford is "excited about the future." She is optimistic that school choice efforts continue to head in the right direction.

"Most people look to lead a life of value," Ford said, and her continuing advocacy gives students the chance to do just that.

"I want to help parents see that every child can be directed to a place that will work for them," she said, pointing out that it takes research to find the best fit, "but that's why we support alternatives." Though she realizes most of the nation's schoolchildren will continue to be educated in public schools, she doesn't mind as long as they're getting the education they need.

"Low-income parents need to make their voices heard," she said. "If you are going through challenges, sometimes you don't raise your voice, but you have to. You can't just say to the school system, 'Educate them.' You have to get involved."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sarah Faulkner (scummings12002@yahoo.com) is an adjunct fellow with the Milton & Rose D. Friedman Foundation.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For more information ...

The April 6, 2005 Heritage Foundation report, "A Promising Start for the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program," by Kirk A. Johnson, Ph.D., is available online at heritage.org.

For a copy of Virginia Walden Ford's book, Voices, Choices, and Second Chances, download the order form from heartland.org.

heartland.org