While everyone was recently fixated on Jesse Jackson’s expressed
interest in castrating Barack Obama almost overlooked was another
insult to Obama made by John McLaughlin, host of the McLaughlin Group McLAUGHLIN:
Question: Does it frost Jackson, Jesse Jackson, that someone like
Obama, who fits the stereotype blacks once labeled as an Oreo -- a
black on the outside, a white on the inside -- that an Oreo should be
the beneficiary of the long civil rights struggle which Jesse Jackson
spent his lifetime fighting for?
First, calling someone an
Oreo is as outdated as wearing Ivy League-pants. Second, who is
McLaughlin to reduce Obama and all that he has accomplished to a racial
stereotype? Third, Obama is not black on the outside and white on the
inside; he’s black and white inside and out. That puts him in a unique
position to help narrow the racial divide in this country. Obama has
clearly stated that he is rooted in the African-American community but
not limited by it.
While we’re on the subject Jesse Jackson,
anyone who has been around him for any length of time probably wasn’t
surprised by the coarse language he used to describe what he would like
to do to Obama. Knowing how crude Jackson can be, my first response
was: “That’s all they caught on tape?” Of course, that’s doesn’t make
Obama feel any better. And if he shows up at a future campaign
appearance with a jockey strap and athletic cup, we’ll know why. Obama
has run a successful presidential campaign without any guidance from
Jesse Jackson. I suspect that irritates Jackson and, hence, the crude
outburst. Obama frequently pays homage to civil rights warriors who
have come before him – he did that again at the NAACP convention in
Cincinnati – but that doesn’t mean he needs to win Jackson’s stamp of
approval before deciding on a course of action. This whole
notion of “Who Speaks for the Negro?” – the title of a 1965 book by
Warren Penn Warren – received a big jolt with the release of an annual
Gallup Poll. The public opinion group reported that 29 percent
of African-Americans cite Obama as the leader they would choose as
their spokesperson on racial issues. Far back in second place was Al
Sharpton at 6 percent and Jesse Jackson with 4 percent. This is the
first known national poll where Sharpton outranks Jackson. With a
sample of only 608 Blacks and a margin of error of plus or minus 4
percent, I have my doubts about the validity of this Gallup Poll,
especially when it found that Bill and Hillary Clinton, with a ranking
of 3 percent each, have three times the level of support on racial
issues than Minister Louis Farrakhan, Colin Powell and Bill Cosby, all
tied at 1 percent each. More important than polls that purport to
show “Who Speaks for the Negro?” is the way Obama and John McCain are
placed in context of their public pronouncements. Earlier in this
space, I wrote about journalists repeating McCain’s accusation that
Obama flip-flopped on whether he would accept public financing without
noting that McCain also reversed his previous position on the issue. Things haven’t gotten any better since I pointed out the uneven coverage of Obama. “In
a July 19 Washington Post article analyzing an ad by Sen. John McCain
claiming that Sen. Barack Obama ‘never held a single Senate hearing on
Afghanistan,’ media reporter Howard Kurtz wrote that the ad ‘is
accurate in saying that Obama, who has spent most of the past two years
campaigning, has not held a hearing on Afghanistan in the Senate
Foreign Relations subcommittee he chairs,’” reports MediaMatters for
America, the media monitoring group. “But Kurtz failed to note that
McCain is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, but
reportedly has not attended a single Armed Services Committee hearing
related to Afghanistan in 2007-08.” MediaMatters stated, “It turns
out that presumptive Republican nominee Sen. John McCain has attended
even fewer Afghanistan-related Senate hearings over the past two years
than Obama's one. Which is a nice way of saying, McCain, R-Ariz., the
top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, has attended
zero of his committee's six hearings on Afghanistan over the last two
years. “Meanwhile, Obama attended the full Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing on Afghanistan in March 2007, although he
used the opportunity to ask Gen. James L. Jones, then the commander of
NATO, about Pakistan. Jones also came before the Senate Armed Services
Committee that week. But McCain was a no-show.” In addition to failing to provide proper context, some news outlets state lies as though they were the truth. MediaMatters
found: “During the July 19 edition of Fox News' America's Election HQ,
anchor Gregg Jarrett falsely claimed that Sen. Barack Obama's overseas
trip, which includes planned stops in Iraq, Israel, and Jordan,
constituted his ‘first trip to the Middle East.’ In fact, as Media
Matters for America has documented, Obama made a January 2006 Middle
East trip that included stops in Iraq, Israel, and Jordan.” Who says Obama is getting more favorable media attention?
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This election season, follow the candidates on the high road
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