Gvlax wrote:Jac Coyne wrote:Racism exists everywhere whether its overt or covert. Its naive to think that it does not.
Not true. According to our resident scholar on the "nuances of race relations," racism is not everywhere. It solely exists among those card-carrying members of "the group in power."
And how do you prove this?
I'm not trying to prove it. I was sarcastically trying to illustrate the vagaries of Steno's absolutist assertions.
yes he went to this church but for you people that feel this is horrible of Obama i want to know what you think this will affect if he is in office? Is he going to have all white people wrangled up and shipped off somewhere because he hid his true thoughts of racism?
I'm not voting for Obama because of the many planks in his platform (universal healthcare, 'immediate' withdrawal from Iraq, etc.) that I disagree with, not because of his association with a goofy pastor.
However, I would guess that many who have not made up their mind at this point would view BO's waffling about Wright as a flaw. I doubt undecided voters are worried Obama will morph into some Black Panther-esque Manchurian candidate if he becomes president, but rather they are concerned that if he is unwilling to stand up to his pastor, how will he handle many of the other tough confrontations he will face as president.
The liberals on this board will try to muddy the argument by reflexively bringing Bush into this discussion, and that's fine. They will also try to make this a religious issue, which it is not. It's one of simple association. If Obama believes what Wright is preaching, he should stand by him. If he doesn't, he should comletely disassociate himself. Right now, he is trying to toe the line between rejecting the words, but accepting the man, which smacks of indecisiveness -- never a good trait in an election.
Fortunately for BO, this issue has surfaced in March, giving him plenty of time to mitigate his stance before the convention and general election.