jimmydanger wrote:
But he did not address the issue of why he would attend a racist church for twenty years.
(snip)
If it was revealed that a white candidate attended KKK meetings for twenty years he would be finished.
Church Attendance:
He attended that church, and accepted some of the harsher rhetoric for two reasons:
1) Rev Wright led Obama to faith in Christ. This point cannot be diminished. For those than believe in Jesus, the person who witnessed to you, will hold a very special place in your heart. Additionally, he testifies that before Wright led him to faith in Christ, church was largely a ceremonial exercise to him. AFTER coming to faith in Christ, suddenly religion comes alive for him, and he realizes that it is indeed REAL and meaningful. It is this pastor and this church, which had a huge hand in changing his life spiritually. When you love someone or something, it creates a vast ability to find tolerance, where otherwise you may not. This is what his analogy of his grandmother was intended to show. His own white grandmother has made insensitive comments about blacks, and being black, ordinarily, he may have had little to do with someone like that, on a personal level. Being his grandmother though, and knowing that she loves him, gives him room for forgiveness for her inappropriate comments. It is much the same with Wright and Obama's church family.
2) Being black, Obama is aware of something that most whites were not, until recently. Namely, that not just Wright, but MANY blacks share the same distrust of government and resentment for the white rich elite who "DO" still control the VAST majority of wealth in this country. Obama understands that Wright is only one of many blacks who believe such things, and were he to disown Wright, he would end up having to disown a large segment of the black community with him. Rather than accept that, he took it as an opportunity to address the deeper issues and concerns (on both sides) for understanding and a chance to reconcile races, rather than try and placate EITHER side. I think that took some courage.
KKK:
This is not even close, as a fair analogy. This church DOES NOT promote black supremacy, as the KKK promotes white supremacy. And they do not espouse violence as the KKK does. They are encouraging blacks to assert their identity in self-governance. To be proud of who they are, not accept the status quo, and take control of their own destinies. Not through violencem but through improving their own condition and communities.
It is easy for us as whites, to misconstrue the inflamatory rhetoric in our own terms, rather than allowing them to define it themselves. What appears to us as "black separatism" is to them, not separatism, but asserting their own idetity and claiming their own stake in the American dream. Nothing I have seen in church videos, or news reports or explanations of their theology, supports the idea that they believe in purity of race, or separatism, or black supremacy. It is simply NOT THERE.
Understanding black anger and resentment, requires stepping out of our own skin temporarily, and walking in their shoes and seeing through their eyes, at least intellectually, because we cannot do so substantively.
Let's examine just two of Rev. Wright's remarks, which I confess, pissed me off to no end at first, but when I re-xamined them objectively, I find I still disagree with them, but it took MUCH of the heat away, and I find that white pastors have said the same thing, with little attention from the media, and certainly, little scrutiny.
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"Our foreign policy caused the anger that led to 9-11"
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This is Wright's position on 9-11. The words he used are "The chickens have come home to roost" This country colloquialism means simply "You reap what you sew"
This continually, has been exageratted beyond recognition, to where people are saying "Wright believes that the murder of thousands on 9-11 was justified."
That is NOT what he said. He is simply laying the blame for 9-11 on our foreign policy. Pat Robertson believes something VERY similar. Pat Robertson also believes that 9-11 was karmic in nature, only Robertson believes the sin in question, is not foreign policy, but homosexuality and abortion. So here is a black minister and a white minister BOTH claiming that 9-11 was something we brought upon ourselves, they merely disagree on what the reason for it was. And in all honesty, Wright's conclusion is much more rooted in reality than Robertson's is. But Wright gets labelled as the nut. I have seen whites here on these boards, Irminsul is one, and there have been many others, who also believe, as Wright does, that our foreign policy faux pas have caused the hatred that resulted in 9-11. They are only partially correct about this, in my assessment, as the issues are FAR deeper than foreign policy alone. But why does Wright get lambasted for his more realistic view, and Robertson, most certainly, has pastors across the nation agreeing with him?
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"God damn America"
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For God to "damn" something, is to "curse" it. Robertson and MANY other white ministers have said that America "is" being cursed by God (damned by God) or "will be" damned by God, rather than continue to receive his blessings, because we have legalized abortion and tolerated homosexual behavior in our nation.
When Wright says "It's in the Bible" he is saying "The Bible says that God will withold his blessing and curse (damn) the nation, that turns from his commandments and forgets God. For whites, this is biblical, only the supposedly deserved curses, are due to abortion and homosexuality, whereas Wright is more concerned with the sins against blacks, like our history of slavery and separatism, and even in the modern era, keeping them out of traditionally white bastians of power. It was only a short time ago that Augusta allowed blacks to compete in golf there. Since then, Tiger Woods, a black man, has won it many times. Why has there never been a black President or Vice President of this country? Are there no smart ones? None qualified? Why are we STILL , every year, seeing black firsts? The first black secretary of state, the first black whatever? We still have not had a black vice president or president, nor even, if I am not mistaken, a black speaker of the house. No black chief justice on the supreme court.
When Wright charges that "rich white people" control this country. Is he wrong? The first black billionaire in history occured as recently as 2001. Oprah is the first black female billionaire in history.
Some "RECENT" black firsts...
First black cabinet member - 1966
First black supreme court justice - 1967 (only one other - 2007)
First black mayor - 1967
First black female television host - 1986
First black woman mayor - 1991
First black elected governor - 1990 (only one other - 2007)
First black woman senator - 1992
First black nobel prize in literature - 1993
First black Masters golf winner - 1997
First black secretary of state - 2001
First Ivy league president - 2001
First black female oscar winner - 2001
First black gold medalist in winter games - 2002
First black billionaire - 2001
First black woman billionaire - 2003
First black solo flight around the world - 2007
Think about these things for a moment. Only 2 black elected governors in ALL of American history. Only 2 supreme court justices in ALL of American history. Only 5 black senators in ALL of American history.
Were no others qualified?
It has been a slow, arduous and even torturous journey, for African Americans to "begin" to realize equality in this country. Equal opportunities have been hard to come by. And because black advancement has been so blocked historically, there are limited role models for young black children to aspire to.
Can you trace your family history as immigrants? Many Americans, to some degree can, but ONLY blacks have the burden of knowing "Mine was forced to come here in chains on a slave ship"
How do you pride yourself as a man? Strong? Self sufficient? A go-getter? You can look to numerous icons in history for motivation and encouragement. What about black men? They were slaves. Their women were often mistresses for slave owners, and bore children to them. They could accept it or be strung up in trees. Black men have been emasculated throughout American history. That is the legacy they are escaping from. They were not even given the 40 acres and a mule they were promised. Slavery ends, and what happens? They either continue working for the slave owners, at a pay that kept them enslaved, or as many, if not most did, they gravitate toward the major cities for work, but still enduring racism and being held back.
Bro, as recently as the 1960's (and I was born in the sixties) blacks in many places were still made to drink from separate water fountains or ride at the back of the bus.
It has been in MY OWN LIFETIME that serious progress has only BEGUN to occur.
It is the height of selfishness for whites to proclaim "Get over it!"
But many still do.