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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (34890)7/21/2010 2:18:42 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Official Ousted From Agriculture Department Had Taken USDA to Court, Won

FoxNews.com
Published July 20, 2010

The Agriculture Department has a lengthy history with the official forced to resign Monday over a controversial YouTube clip -- it turns out she and a group she helped found with her husband won millions last year in a discrimination suit settlement with the federal government.

The information about the suit only thickens the plot that has evolved seemingly by the hour since Shirley Sherrod resigned late Monday as the department's Georgia director of rural development.

She claims the video clip, which showed her telling a story about how she withheld her full assistance to a white farmer, omitted key details, and she argues she was pushed out by the Obama administration without getting a chance to tell her side. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack is standing by his decision.

But it's not the first time Sherrod faced off against the federal government. Days before she was appointed to the USDA post last year, her group reportedly won a $13 million settlement in a longstanding discrimination suit against the USDA known commonly as the Pigford case.

The Rural Development Leadership Network announced last summer that New Communities Inc. -- a group Sherrod formed with husband Charles, who is a civil rights activist, and with other black farmers -- had reached the agreement. The RDLN said the USDA had "refused" to offer new loans or restructure old loans to members of New Communities, leading to the discrimination claim.

The announcement said that in addition to the $13 million to New Communities, Shirley and Charles Sherrod would each get $150,000 for "pain and suffering."

A USDA official told FoxNews.com on Tuesday that the settlement had "nothing to do with" Sherrod's hiring last year -- likewise, the official said her resignation was only the result of her comments in the video.

"This is all about her comments," the official said.

Sherrod's settlement was a drop in the bucket in terms of the money the federal government has paid out in Pigford claims to other black farmers over the years. The suit claimed the USDA racially discriminated against black farmers by not giving them fair treatment when they applied for loans or assistance. The case was first settled in 1999, resulting to date in more than $1 billion in compensation payments from the federal government.

In addition, the Obama administration has called for another $1.15 billion to settle claims for other black farmers -- Congress has not yet granted the money.

However, the case has attracted some scrutiny.

Former Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer told Fox News that while those who were discriminated against "should be reimbursed," there are other hangers-on trying to game the system.

"The problem you have with the class-action lawsuits is a lot of people jump in that may be on the fringe, that maybe don't deserve it, that sounded good because their neighbor got a check ... (It) is very expensive, very time consuming," Schafer said. "It probably in the long run is going to be cheaper just to settle the whole thing -- so some people will get paid that probably don't deserve it. And to me, I don't like that kind of thing. I like to settle it on merit."

Vilsack appeared to reference the Pigford case, or the backstory behind it, in his statement Tuesday defending his decision to effectively dismiss Sherrod.

"Yesterday, I asked for and accepted Ms. Sherrod's resignation for two reasons. First, for the past 18 months, we have been working to turn the page on the sordid civil rights record at USDA and this controversy could make it more difficult to move forward on correcting injustices. Second, state rural development directors make many decisions and are often called to use their discretion," he said.

Sherrod claims the administration never bothered to find out "the truth" about the video clip. She says she was telling a story about something that happened more than two decades ago when she was working for a local nonprofit group. She ended up helping that farmer and says she was, in recalling the story, trying to impart a lesson about the importance of looking beyond race.

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To: Sully- who wrote (34890)7/21/2010 2:28:04 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
USDA Reconsiders Decision to Oust Official Over Race Comments

FoxNews.com
Published July 21, 2010

WASHINGTON -- Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said Wednesday he will reconsider the department's decision to oust a state program director over racially tinged remarks after learning more about what she said.

Vilsack issued a short statement early Wednesday morning after Shirley Sherrod, who until Tuesday was the Agriculture Department's director of rural development in Georgia, said she was pressured to resign because of her comments that she didn't give a white farmer as much help as she could have 24 years ago.

Sherrod said her remarks, delivered in March at a local NAACP banquet in Georgia, were part of a larger story about learning from her mistakes and racial reconciliation, not racism, and they were taken out of context by an edited video posted Monday that showed only part of her speech.

Vilsack's statement came after the NAACP, which initially condemned Sherrod's remarks and supported her ouster, posted what was believed to be the full video of Sherrod's comments Tuesday night.


Click here to watch the video.

"I am of course willing and will conduct a thorough review and consider additional facts to ensure to the American people we are providing services in a fair and equitable manner," Vilsack said.

A White House official on Wednesday said the White House initiated the conversation with the USDA about revisiting the decision.

"The White House called USDA last night and agreed that the matter should be reviewed," the official said.

That was after an official on Tuesday said Obama was briefed on the circumstances behind Vilsack's decision to fire Sherrod after the fact and fully supported the move.

Vilsack announced Monday night that Sherrod had resigned based on the release of the shorter video, saying the department has "zero tolerance for discrimination."

Sherrod said in an interview Wednesday morning that she's not sure she even wants her job back given how she was treated.

But subsequent news reports in which Sherrod explained the full context of her remarks -- later substantiated by the wife of the white farmer in an interview with FoxNews.com -- sparked growing calls for the administration and Vilsack to reconsider the decision.

In the earlier version of the video Sherrod, then Georgia director of rural development, is seen telling a story about assistance she provided to a white farmer 24 years ago.

The video released by the NAACP on Tuesday night shows Sherrod explaining how she initially didn't help the farmer with "full force," but realized she was wrong and went on to help him save his farm.

Sherrod, who is black and was working at the time for a nonprofit group, said she learned that the plight of poverty goes beyond race.

"When I made that commitment I was making that commitment to black people and to black people only," she said in the video released Tuesday. "But you know, God will show you things. ... You realize that the struggle is really about poor people."

The video excerpt published Monday online by the website Biggovernment.com, which is run by Andrew Breitbart, focused on Sherrod's admission that she was reluctant to help the white farmer in part because so many black farmers were suffering.

The Monday excerpt excluded the end of Sherrod's story, seen Tuesday, in which she talks of helping save the white farmer's property from foreclosure.

"Working with him made me see that it's really about those who have versus those who don't," she said later in the video. "And they could be black, they could be white, they could be Hispanic -- it made me realize that I needed to help poor people."

NAACP CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous originally released a statement calling Sherrod's comments "shameful" and saying the group was "appalled by her actions." But the NAACP later said Tuesday it would conduct an "investigation" and review the full tape, which was shot for the NAACP by media company DCTV.

Late Tuesday, Jealous effectively retracted his earlier statement and blamed the media for the confusion.

"With regard to the initial media coverage of the resignation of USDA official Shirley Sherrod, we have come to the conclusion we were snookered by Fox News and Tea Party activist Andrew Breitbart into believing she had harmed white farmers because of racial bias," he said.

"Having reviewed the full tape, spoken to Ms. Sherrod, and most importantly heard the testimony of the white farmers mentioned in this story, we now believe the organization that edited the documents did so with the intention of deceiving millions of Americans."

FoxNews.com was among several media organizations that carried the story of the initial video released Monday.

It remains unclear who edited and released the shorter video.

Breitbart, who initially reported the story on Monday, said in an interview Tuesday with Fox News' Sean Hannity, that he received the video from "an individual in Georgia." He said he decided to post it on his website as an example of hypocrisy at the NAACP, which recently condemned racism within the conservative Tea Party movement.

Sherrod, in a TV interview Tuesday morning, said she lost her job because the Obama administration overreacted to the original story.

"They were not interested in hearing the truth. No one wanted to hear the truth," she said.

As for the white farmer Sherrod helped, his wife told FoxNews.com on Tuesday that there was no discrimination. She said the administration should not have forced out Sherrod. "She'll always be my friend," Eloise Spooner said.

She said the incident Sherrod was referring to happened more than two decades ago and that she and her husband Roger worked together closely to keep the farm out of foreclosure.

"I don't think they gave her a chance to tell really what happened," Spooner said. "I don't think they'll find anybody that can fill the job any better than she did. That's my opinion."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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To: Sully- who wrote (34890)7/22/2010 11:30:08 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
This Story Is Like Skinny-Dipping in the Gulf: Nobody Comes Out Clean

NRO Newsletters . . .
Morning Jolt
. . . with Jim Geraghty

On Wednesdays, schedule permitting, I appear on Ed Morrissey's web-radio program, an appointment I've tried to keep since about 2007 or so. At one point early on, feeling particularly gloomy about the prospects for conservatism, Republicans, and the country as a whole, Ed said we should call it "The Ledge Report." (Lest anyone take the name too seriously, I'm not even near the window when I appear.)

This Wednesday was a Ledge Report kind of day. At best, Andrew Breitbart got hoodwinked, conned into releasing a portion of a videotape edited to so that Shirley Sherrod's speech to the NAACP appeared to come to the exact opposite conclusion that it in fact did. Her story of overcoming suspicion, distrust, and race-based judgment was twisted to appear to be an endorsement of suspicion, distrust, and race-based judgment. (Breitbart said he posted the video in the exact form he received it from his source.)

Then there's the NAACP, which denounced Sherrod without bothering to look at the complete video in their possession.

Then we have the administration that took three days to issue a presidential statement on an attempted bombing of a plane over Detroit, ten days to publicly comment on the oil spill in the Gulf, three months to review the policy in Afghanistan, and fourteen months to respond to a request from governors for U.S. troops on the southern border suddenly managing to move fast as lightning on Sherrod. It's surreal.
ABC News's Jake Tapper, a night ago:

<<< "Last night, an Obama administration official called Sherrod in her car and demanded she pull over and type a resignation letter in her Blackberry. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a statement that 'There is zero tolerance for discrimination' at his agency. None of them bothered to learn that the incident in question happened 24 years ago when Sherrod worked for a nonprofit." >>>

Van Jones didn't get this treatment.

I am not always the biggest fan of Politico, as you know, but credit former NR guy Jonathan Martin for this keen observation:


<<< "President Barack Obama has made a mantra out of insisting he and his White House won't get caught up in 'cable chatter,' with aides proudly insisting they don't let 24-hour news outlets drive decision-making. But this week's forced resignation of a previously obscure Agriculture Department employee is just the latest example of Obama officials reacting to a cable news-driven obsession of the right." >>>

Except that Fox News hadn't even aired the videos of Sherrod yet; as Allahpundit notes,

<<< "Unless I've missed something, there was no Fox-driven furor that forced Vilsack's hand -- which, ironically, only buttresses Shep's point about how paranoid the White House is about FNC. Merely the prospect of them airing something politically damaging is enough to send the administration into crisis mode, firing people in order to put out the fire before it gets started. No wonder Jim Messina was congratulating people on Tuesday morning." >>>


But don't worry, this already-depressing story has a way of making everyone associated look worse -- late Wednesday, Mediaite revealed that Sherrod was burning through her sudden vast reservoir of public sympathy:


<<< "She also accused Fox News of racism, telling Strupp that 'they are after a bigger thing, they would love to take us back to . . . where black people were looking down, not looking white folks in the face, not being able to compete for a job out there and not be a whole person.' And -- surprise, surprise -- she wants to sue, but isn't sure who to attack legally yet:
'I don't know enough to know. I wish I did. I would love to sue. I am going to talk about it.' Sherrod has a lot to be angry about, and given the number of frivolous lawsuits filed in this country, she probably has legitimate ground to stand on against, at the very least, the USDA for using this video to fire her. The most striking thing about this interview is how aggressively Sherrod takes on Fox News, so much so that it eclipses her rebukes of Breitbart, who originally ran the video. As Bret Baier argued yesterday, Fox News didn't cover the story before her resignation (aside from a few comments in their primetime opinion hour). What's more, the day after her resignation, Fox News' opinion hosts covered the story in a light favorable to Sherrod and unfavorable to the NAACP and the White House." >>>

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To: Sully- who wrote (34890)7/22/2010 4:43:06 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Ms. Sherrod's Speech Was Most Certainly Not About Transcending Racism

By: Andy McCarthy
The Corner

I've been too busy to get into this, but I finally watched the unabridged Shirley Sherrod speech this morning. I also listened to Mark Levin's interview of Brent Bozell (the "audio rewind" can be accessed here; Mark's interview of Brent is the second and third segment of last night's show (i.e., click on July 21)).

It's all well and good to say Andrew Breitbart should have done more due diligence, or that his source should not have edited out important parts of the tape. As I've noted before, when taped or transcripted statements get presented to juries in litigation, we rely on the "rule of completeness": if one side plays or reads a part of the statement that the other side claims is misleading, that other side gets to present whatever parts of the full statement are necessary for context. This way, the jury has an accurate sense of what the speaker was saying. Clearly, there were parts of the tape left on the cutting room floor that should have been considered in conjunction with the parts Andrew published — and knowing Andrew, he would have published them if he'd had them. (By contrast, the NAACP did have the full speech, but threw Ms. Sherrod under the bus anyway.)

All that said, I don't understand the sudden pendulum swing in the other direction. Now, in Take Two, we are to understand that Ms. Sherrod was not exhibiting racism. Instead, "taken in context," we're told, she is actually a heroic figure who has transcended the racist views that, given the terrible things she saw growing up in the South, were understandable.

Okay, but how come it is not incumbent on the folks who are pushing the revised narrative (and slapping Andrew around over the old one) to account for the Sherrod gem below
(which begins a little after the 22 minute mark in her speech)?

For context:
She is talking about how the evil "people with money," beginning in the 17th and 18th centuries (i.e., around the founding of our republic), created a still existing system designed to institutionalize racism against black people while simultaneously keeping poor whites and poor blacks divided. All highlighting is mine:

<<< So that's when they made black people servants for life. That's when they put laws in place forbidding them [i.e., blacks and whites] to marry each other. That's when they created the racism that we know of today. They did it to keep us divided. And they — It started working so well, they said, "Gosh, looks like we've come upon something here that could last generations." And here we are, over 400 years later, and it's still working.


What we have to do is get that out of our heads. There is no difference between us. The only difference is that the folks with money want to stay in power and whether it's healthcare or whatever it is, they'll do what they need to do to keep that power, you know. [Applause] It's always about money, ya'll. [Applause and murmurs of agreement.] You know. I haven't seen such a mean-spirited people as I've seen lately over this issue of health care. [Mumurs of agreement.] Some of the racism we thought was buried — [someone in the audience says, "It surfaced!"] Didn't it surface? Now, we endured eight years of the Bushes and we didn't do the stuff these Republicans are doing because you have a black president. [Applause]

I wanted to give you that little history, especially the young people, I want you to know they created it, you know, not just for us, but we got the brunt of it because they needed to elevate whites just a little higher than us to make them think they were so much better. Then they would never work with us, you know, to try to change the situation that they were all in. >>>


So, in Sherrod World, mean-spririted, racist Republicans do nasty things that "we" would never do because we have a president who, being black, is above that stuff. Still, we have-nots need to band together for "change" because a cabal of haves, desperate to keep their power, is still imposing their centuries old capitalist system of institutionalized racism — the same racism that courses through the Republican Party and surfaces on "us versus them" issues like healthcare.

Pardon me, but I think I'll stay off the Canonize Shirley bandwagon. To me, it seems like she's still got plenty of racial baggage. What we're seeing is not transcendence but transference. That's why the NAACP crowd reacted so enthusiastically throughout her speech.

With an ever-expanding federal bureaucracy assuming overlord status in what used to be private industry and private matters, are we supposed to feel better that this particular bureaucrat's disdain, though once directed at all white people, is now channeled only toward successful white people ... most of whom — like successful black people — worked very hard to become successful? Are we supposed to forget that when the Left says, "It's always about the money," you don't have to have a whole lot of money to find yourself on the wrong side of their have/have-not equation? Are we supposed to take comfort in having our affairs managed by bureaucrats who see the country as a Manichean divide beset by institutionalized racism?


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To: Sully- who wrote (34890)7/22/2010 5:15:26 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Shirley Sherrod — My Take

Jonah Goldberg
The Corner

I think she should get her job back. I think she's owed apologies from pretty much everyone, including my good friend Andrew Breitbart. I generally think Andrew is on the side of the angels and a great champion of the cause. He says he received the video in its edited form and I believe him. But the relevant question is, Would he have done the same thing over again if he had seen the full video from the outset? I'd like to think he wouldn't have. Because to knowingly turn this woman into a racist in order to fight fire with fire with the NAACP is unacceptable. When it seemed that Sherrod was a racist who abused her power, exposing her and the NAACP's hypocrisy was perfectly fair game. But now that we have the benefit of knowing the facts, the equation is completely different.

In one of the recent Journolist belches we saw how creatures like Spencer Ackerman see nothing wrong with randomly charging innocent conservatives with racism in order to send a message. This is a deplorable tactic conservatives regularly and rightly deplore when used by liberals (we usually have less proof than we have in Ackerman's confession). I see no reason to emulate this tactic and I very much doubt that was Andrew's intent. Some emailers on the other hand seem to come close to making the case for this kind of thing. As I've argued countless times before, this sort of politics is almost always counter-productive and quite often grotesque. Embracing the tactics you condemn in others requires, at minimum, that you stop condemning it in others. It also has the potential to sell your soul on layaway.

Meanwhile, as a matter of politics, I think this episode demonstrates that this White House is a much more tightly wound outfit than it lets on in public. The rapid-response firing suggests a level of fear over Glenn Beck and Fox that speaks volumes.

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To: Sully- who wrote (34890)7/22/2010 5:16:31 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
     It's as simple as two wrongs don't make a right. That the 
liberal and mainstream press routinely demonizes
conservatives unfairly isn't a writ to do likewise.

Tu Quoque Or Not Tu Quoque

Jonah Goldberg
The Corner

I've gotten a lot of email like this re my post yesterday:

Mr. Goldberg,

<<< I sent you one of the many emails that I am sure you received about the Sherrod speech and your statement that she is owed an apology from Mr. Breitbart. The goal on the left is going to be to use this discredit Mr. Breitbart and say that anything that he posts can't be trusted. It is going to come up now everytime he exposes some liberal shenanigans. "Well, he can't be trusted. He posted that Sherrod video and that turned out to be a hoax."

Plus, I still stand by my argument that if that had been a tea party guy who told some story where he says he used to be a real racist, no one would give him the benefit of the doubt. Let's say he told how back when he was starting out as a public defender and he thought that blacks were criminals and drug dealers and he had his first young black defendant and he admitted that he was sure this guy was guilty and a typical black guy and maybe he shouldn't do his best for him and it would be better if he did go to jail. And then the tea party audience started laughing and saying "Yeah, they are just like that." Of course, then the speaker goes on to tell how he did find some evidence that this guy wasn't guilty and he changed his ways. How do you think that this would be handled in the media? Do you think that this guy would be showing how he can overcome his racism? I don't think so. And if Politico put out this video and just put out the part about how this guy thought he shouldn't do his best for him, what would the coverage be? Would this make the evening news? And then if the whole video came out, what would the coverage be of that?

Fundamentally, this is just a White House screw up for firing her. Obama and his crew are the only people who should be apologizing. >>>

There's a great deal I agree with here. I do think that a lot of folks are trying desperately to discredit Andrew. I am not one of them. Again, Andrew is both a friend and, I think, a valuable force on the right. If you look at the astounding catalog of far worse offenses by The New York Times, The New Republic, CBS and other establishment outlets in recent years, the idea that the Sherrod video discredits Breitbart or Big Government is absurd.

I agree entirely that the air is thick with invidious double-standards for conservatives. It's been that way my whole life and, I fear it will be that way not only until I die but even after my head is thawed and attached to my kick-ass android body.

But what's the upshot of that? I know that many folks want to always fight fire with fire. And sometimes I do too, when I think it's warranted. But I don't see the logic here.

It's one thing if you don't think Sherrod was being treated unfairly. But if you agree that the upshot of that video, as initially edited, is to unfairly tar Sherrod with being a racist (as opposed to having a lot of "racial baggage" as Andy writes below), then I am at a loss to understand how it's justified to stand by it out of some "never give an inch" policy. It's as simple as two wrongs don't make a right. That the liberal and mainstream press routinely demonizes conservatives unfairly isn't a writ to do likewise.

And for those of you about to send me another thousand emails about how such alleged prissiness and squeamishness on my part amounts to tactical surrender, let me respond with one more entirely tactical point. Your tactic won't work! If conservatives stuck to their guns and, in lockstep, insisted that Sherrod deserves everything she got because she is an obvious racist, that wouldn't lead to any kind of "victory." That would lead to lots of Americans thinking conservatives are being mean and unfair (particularly among the squishy independents and swing voters the GOP needs for crushing victory this November). Watch the Today Show or Good Morning America, read the non-conservative press. Conservative solidarity won't convince millions of Americans that conservatives are right. It will convince millions of Americans that conservatives can't admit it when they are wrong. Does anyone doubt this has been a P.R. debacle for conservatives? Would you do this exactly the same way again if you could?

Just for kicks, here's how I would have responded (or how I like to think I would have responded) once I knew the edited video was misleading: "Look, we should have watched the whole video. But we were responding to yet another deplorable and unfair attack on conservatives in general and the Tea Party in particular by the NAACP which is, once again, behaving as an arm of the Democratic Party. We responded in haste to an attack that was made not in haste but with careful deliberation and malice aforethought which was then magnified by a mainstream press that has been unfairly hostile to the Tea Parties from day one. Ms. Sherrod clearly has views many people can disagree with, but the edited video was misleading and unfair and for that I am sorry. Why the NAACP and the White House acted so rashly and unfairly is something you will have to ask them about."


Update: From a reader:

<<< Jonah,

I'm generally a big fan, but I find your position sickening.

I'm so tired of conservatives having to play by different rules. And why? Because people like you say that's how it needs to be.


<<< "That would lead to lots of Americans thinking conservatives are being mean and unfair (particularly among the squishy independents and swing voters the GOP needs for crushing victory this November)." >>>

Are you kidding me? Most of the "squishy independents" think that anyhow! We've been saddled with that reputation precisely because the left is shameless in their attacks. We might as well get the benefit of it by sometimes actually being mean and unfair (although Breitbart was neither). But few think the left is mean and unfair, because we're to polite to point that out.

We continue to settle for asymmetrical warfare at a cost of struggling to reach 50% in every election. We do this so you can hold your head high. If we fought dirty, as the left does, we'd get 65%.

This is a P.R. debacle, yes, but the reason is because our conservative defenders immediately fall to the turtle position.

Guess what Jonah. The "squishy moderates" don't listen to high minded discussions that you are so interested in having. They see a narrative, and that narrative is Democrat self righteous condemnation and conservatives like you standing by looking guilty, which simply confirms that you deserve to be punished. >>.

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To: Sully- who wrote (34890)7/22/2010 5:20:21 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Re: Breitbart in Perspective

By: Jonah Goldberg
The Corner

Hear, hear Kevin. The sanctimony from many liberal media quarters is really too much. Here's The Atlantic's Josh Green, who I think is normally a pretty reasonable guy:


<<< But what's galling to me--gut-wrenching, really, like watching old news footage of blacks being beaten and clubbed at lunch counters--is that Breitbart obviously understood the powerful effect his tape would have, posted it anyway, and then assumed the role of ringmaster, expertly conducting the media circus, fanning the flames. It's hardly the first time. But the moral ugliness of what's just happened is glaring, and it's hard for me to see how the media can justify continuing to treat Breitbart as simply a roguish provocateur. He's something much darker. >>>



Really? It's like watching blacks being beaten at lunch counters? Really? I think Green has it wrong about Andrew's intent. But even if I'm wrong, this is crazy over the top
(perhaps even by the standards of Green's gynecological sleuthing colleague).

I think I've belabored my position on all this already, but I think the liberal piling on over what I do see as Breitbart's mistake overlooks the fact that mainstream journalism's credibility is in tatters. The same week that we learn folks over at Journolist casually debated whether to knowingly slander conservatives as racists just to send a message, we're told Breitbart's behavior is as morally ugly to behold as beating blacks at lunch counters? Come on. Instead of this kind of sanctimony, liberal journalists might actually try asking themselves how much responsibility they have for creating the climate we have now. Conservative media hardball is hardly unprovoked.


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To: Sully- who wrote (34890)8/14/2010 1:05:03 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Race Card Payment Coming Due

Predictably, racial gerrymandering has led to corruption.

Jonah Goldberg
National Review Online

‘The race card is maxed out.”

That was the punch line for a recent hilarious exchange on The Daily Show in which Larry Wilmore, the faux news program’s “senior black correspondent,” reported that the race card is not only over its credit limit but is in fact “void during a black presidency.” This discovery came in the wake of Maxine Waters’s allegation that her political problems stem from a racially biased congressional ethics investigation.

Wilmore said he should have seen this coming, given that “the Congressional Black Caucus has been overusing the race card for years.” Like when it circled the wagons around Rep. William Jefferson. The CBC in effect argued it’d have been no big deal if a white congressman had been videotaped receiving a $100,000 bribe and if the FBI then found most of it in his freezer. Singling out a black congressman for this sort of thing, Wilmore joked, amounts to punishing Jefferson for “Legislating While Black.”

Of course, Wilmore (a great comic talent) is joking, but not everyone is laughing. Waters, the representative for South Central Los Angeles since 1991, is one of America’s premier racial hucksters. A notoriously nasty piece of work, she sided with the murderous rioters in what she called the post–Rodney King–verdict “rebellion” and danced the Electric Slide with the Crips and the Bloods. (Who says she’s not bipartisan?) So it’s hardly surprising that she’d lump all of her problems on Whitey.

In Aesop’s Fables, the scorpion must sting the frog because that is what scorpions do. In real life, Waters must blame her problems on, well, you know who.

Waters is alleged to have offered special help for OneUnited, a minority-owned bank where her husband served on the board until April 2008. Her husband owned roughly $350,000 worth of OneUnited stock. If it hadn’t gotten bailed out by the Treasury Department, the bank would have gone under. Waters told Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, about the potential conflict of interest, and Frank — not everyone’s idea of a scrupulous ethicist to begin with — told her she should stay clear of it. She ignored his advice and allegedly helped secure OneUnited $12 million in TARP money, saving the value of her husband’s bank shares. Waters says it’s all a misunderstanding since she was barely involved. She merely outsourced most of the work to her chief of staff, a.k.a. her grandson.

She insists she won’t be anyone’s “sacrificial lamb” and points to the fact that eight members of the Congressional Black Caucus have been subject to ethics investigations — which she and many in the CBC suggest is no coincidence.

And they’re right.

But the culprit here isn’t racism, it’s the corruption that is almost inevitable when any politician — black or white — is given a job for life. Charlie Rangel, the 80-year-old deposed chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, is also in ethical hot water for a list of reasons too lengthy to recount here (but they include failure to pay taxes on unreported income — awkward, given that he was, until recently, in charge of writing the tax laws). Rangel, one of Washington’s most charming characters, ran his office like a pasha — because he could.

Indeed, that’s long been the problem with the CBC: its scandalous lack of accountability. Because of racial gerrymandering (cynically abetted by the GOP in the 1980s), black representatives have been insulated, even more than other incumbents, from democratic competition. Worse, the older generation of CBCers in particular actually believes this claptrap about being the “conscience of the Congress” (the Caucus motto). This has put the CBC to the left not just of the average voter but of the average black voter. Less than 10 percent of the CBC voted to ban partial-birth abortion in 2003, even though a majority of blacks support the ban. A majority of blacks oppose racial quotas and support school choice, but the CBC claims to speak for them when taking the opposite positions.

Caucus members pulled this off by invoking racial solidarity and Tammany Hall tactics in their districts, while maxing out the race card with the media and their non-black colleagues in Congress. And that’s what Waters and Rangel are doing now, the former explicitly, the latter implicitly. Both are demanding an immediate trial, before the November elections, which would hammer even more nails into the Democratic coffin. In effect, they’re saying, “Let us off the hook or we’ll take you all down with us in a racial spectacle.”

Meanwhile, Republicans are laughing. Even the ones who don’t watch The Daily Show.


— Jonah Goldberg is an editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. © 2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.