Regardless of what Sen. Obama said in his speech, his long time association with this minister is hurting him. Two points I would like to make: 1) I, like Juan Williams, don't buy the attempted parallel between the minister and his white grandmother. It is one thing for a white women to express her fears to family members in private but something else completely for a someone to preach hate from the pulpit. 2) This minister is not some crazy, old uncle. He is a person of power who has the opportunity to preach to a congregation of people looking to him for guidance.
Sen. Obama should have left that church long ago. Too plead ignorance at this point is highly disingenuous and makes him just like any other politician. Wasn't he supposed to be different? Weren't we supposed to look past his inexperience because he was bringing "change"? I'm sorry but I think that the congregation might be buzzing after a sermon that claimed that white people created AIDS and Sen. Obama must have heard about it even if he wasn't there. If your pastor says things you don't agree with you go to a different church. Let me yield the floor to Mo Dowd for a minute:
Obama's naïve and willful refusal to come to terms earlier with the Rev. Wright’s anti-American, anti-white and pro-Farrakhan sentiments — echoing his naïve and willful refusal to come to terms earlier with the ramifications of his friendship with sleazy fund-raiser Tony Rezko — will not be forgotten because of one unforgettable speech.
He now admits that he had heard the Rev. Wright make “controversial” remarks in church, and that he had a “lapse of judgment” when he let the much-investigated Rezko curry favor by buying the plot of land next to his and selling a slice back so Obama could have a bigger yard. Newly alert to the perils of not seeming patriotic enough, he ended a speech in Pennsylvania the other morning with “God bless America!”
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/19/opinion/19dowd.html?_r=1&ref=opinion&oref=slogin
On a side note, after all of the grief that has been heaped on W for his Evangelical ways, I'd love for someone to educate me as to the difference between his church and Obama's. I heard some interesting stuff on NPR from the leadership of Trinity United Church of Christ and it all sounds just like the born again rhetoric that has been used by the left to bash Bush for the last 8 years.
This mess is already eroding Sen. Obama's support. He is now behind Sen. McCain in the most recent Rasmussen poll and he has fallen behind among white independent voters (saw it on MSNBC this morning while waiting at the dentist). This has to be enormously troubling for Democrats taken with the current disenfranchisement of their voters in Michigan and Florida. If you go even further and look at his Senate voting record (shouldn't take long) you see that he is consistently to the left of the base of the Democratic Party. This will not help him with independents or even moderate Democrats. It will be interesting to see the play that McCain's upcoming domestic policy campaign will get and how that affects the numbers.
Unfortunately for Obama supporters, this is only going to get worse. The media's love affair with the Senator is over and they are going to really start doing some digging and hard hitting analysis of his rhetoric. High flying oratory is great but you have to back it up.
While I'm not confident about November, I think that Howard Dean, Sen. Clinton, and Sen. Obama among others have done a mighty fine job of turning a Democratic slam dunk into a real horse race.
Cliff Stryker Buck, Ph.D.
Department of Oceanography
Florida State University