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General Funk And His Bass Beat Army

imageRush Limbaugh says that Colin Powell only endorsed Obama because of race.  A prominent Maine Republican calls Powell’s Obama endorsement racist.  Michelle Malkin says it’s not because of his race, it’s just because of al the black-ass liberalism they share.

Can I point out that Powell spent several years of his life working for the most despised white man in the African American community in several decades?  That he’s been part and parcel of a party for decades whose continued hostility to black people is rather legendary?  I’m sure there’s an infinitesimal chance that Powell’s deeply buried Afrocentrism reared its FUBU capped head after decades of supporting white Republican candidates for office, but it seems far more likely that for a variety of political reasons related to his built-up credibility and distance from the GOP, he chose to support the hope-and-change Democrat who’s looking like a good shot to win rather than the angry old guy with the crappy campaign. 

I don’t know what you call it when you immediately chalk up anything you dislike about someone to racial differences, but I do know there’s a word for it.  If only my coarse hair didn’t get in the way of all these big thoughts!

 

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Posted by Jesse Taylor on 06:28 PM • (18) Comments

Pat Buchanan just now called Powell “uppity”, in so many words anyway.

Comment #1: Ben D.  on  10/19  at  07:03 PM

Bah.  Powell’s been off the conserva-tard leash for awhile and if anything, this speaks more to the white boys club not really trusting anyone of color, anytime.  While there have been a few quiet “We love Condi” moments, same thing there.  Say whatever you want, the republicans are a white male club and anything else is cover for that fact.  palin, in fact, is an excellent example.  She’s no mavrik.  Listen to the Alaskan press and you’ll find a woman who ran the state with her husband in the governor’s office, like a good woman should.

I’m sure there will be a tidal wave of conservatard cluck-clucking about Powell and how “he was never one of us” anyway.

Comment #2: ice weasel  on  10/19  at  07:09 PM

As in the threads below, if most blacks vote Democratic when the candidates are both white guys, why is it suddenly racist for them to vote Democratic when the Dem candidate is black?

Most blacks still vote Democratic when the Republican candidate is black and the Dem candidate white.  Is it reverse racism or self-hate then?

Comment #3: Caren-Sun-blocking Creator of Animorphic Pancakes  on  10/19  at  07:16 PM

I sometimes think I’m the only person in the world who saw the movie Mars Attacks. (Given the box-office numbers, this may be true.) Anyway, years before Powell held up a vial of white powder at the UN, Paul Winfield played a thinly veiled parody of Powell that exactly nailed the man’s character.

“But didn’t I always tell you honey, if I just stayed in place and never spoke up, good things are bound to happen.”—Gen. “Casey,” Mars Attacks!

Comment #4: HP  on  10/19  at  07:31 PM

Most blacks still vote Democratic when the Republican candidate is black and the Dem candidate white.

No kidding.  This whole absurd meme that African-Americans are being racists because they are voting for the black guy is idiotic to the extreme.

You put John Edwards (minus the affair) up against Michael Steele in this election, and Edwards is still gonna snag the vast majority of the A-A vote.  Why?  Because for the past 50 years, Democrats far better represent the interest of the A-A community than Republicans.

Hillary Clinton would have snagged better than 90% of the African-American vote had she been the nominee.

Is it true that Obama will likely increase the A-A vote a couple points?  You betcha.  Will it increase the turnout among the A-A community?  You betcha.

I can only speak from the perspective of someone who has looked just like all 42 people who have been Presidents in our history (it’s 42, not 43 - see Grover Cleveland), but I can say unequivocally that if I had been through the shit that the African-American community (or female, for that matter) in our nation’s history, hell yeah I would be even more hyped about this election than any other.

And would you blame me?

Hell, even as a white guy, I’m extremely hyped about this election - moreso than any other in my lifetime - because the election of an African-American to the Presidency of the United States isn’t just going to be a great moment for A-A history, it’s going to be great moment for AMERICAN history, and his election will benefit people of ALL races.  It truly will be another piece of the realization of Dr. King’s enormous dream.  And hell yeah, I’ll be crying in Grant Park in downtown Chicago on Election Night in a crowd of half a million people - black, white, brown, red - when I see my country make me more proud than I have ever been of it.

I got that feeling yesterday hanging out with 100,000 of my fellow St. Louisans under the Arch listening to our next POTUS, in the shadow of the Old Courthouse in which the Dred Scott case was heard, and realized just how far we’ve come from that day nearly 150 years ago until now.

Truly amazing - a historic domed building which represented one of the most racially unjust decisions by our nation’s federal court system on one side, and a few hundred yards away, a black man mesmerizing a epic-sized throng of people with words of hope and change and what is possible for this country.  And he wasn’t talking about himself, he was talking about us… those 100,000 people between Obama and the Old Courthouse represent just how far we’ve come in this country, the change Obama is talking about.

These photos deserve awards:

http://s.wsj.net/media/obamastlouis_Q_20081018135311.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v334/muzikal203/Obama/St Louis/c98cfdad.png

Comment #5: DTG in STL  on  10/19  at  07:52 PM

Ooops… bad link on the second photo.  Here…

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v334/muzikal203/Obama/St Louis/c98cfdad.png

Comment #6: DTG in STL  on  10/19  at  07:56 PM

Do you think Powell endorsed Obama because he is hoping for a job in the Obama administration?

Comment #7: Tom  on  10/19  at  08:21 PM

I think Powell is hoping not to end up at the Hague.

Comment #8: Jesurgislac  on  10/19  at  08:38 PM

I don’t know what you call it when you immediately chalk up anything you dislike about someone to racial differences, but I do know there’s a word for it.  If only my coarse hair didn’t get in the way of all these big thoughts!

Wait a minute - you’re, uh, Nubian?

No wonder you support Obama!  I’m going to have to reassess everything you’ve ever said in light of this information.

But look on the bright side - if you announce you’re switching to Republicanism, I’m sure that lot will be happy to have you sit with- I mean, behind them on the bus…

Comment #9: Phoenician in a time of Romans  on  10/19  at  08:45 PM

My worry is that Powell has always shown an extraordinary talent for backing a losing cause, just before it becomes obvious.

Comment #10: paul  on  10/19  at  09:07 PM

Yeah. I always ask Republicans who talk about “racist blacks” to explain why when Swan, Steele, and Blackwell ran black folks voted 90% for the white guy Democrat, anyway. It’s always meant with stunned silence.

Comment #11: Ben D.  on  10/19  at  09:42 PM

Er, “met with stunned silence”.

Comment #12: Ben D.  on  10/19  at  09:43 PM

While there have been a few quiet “We love Condi” moments, same thing there.

The Freepers are expecting her to turn any day now.

Comment #13: Incertus, Nacho Daddy  on  10/19  at  09:50 PM

Powell didn’t endorse Obama so much as he reamed the McCain campaign and its Republican hangers-on. Powell said only as much about Obama as he had to for it to count as an endorsement. Powell’s announcement was really aimed at the Republicans, not at undecided voters. His message was that the Republicans have gone too far, they’ve lost sight of what was important to voters, they’ve lost him, and the Republicans need to get their collective act together. His goal was to fire the first shot in the upcoming Republican civil war. I wish him the best of luck, it’s just that the Republican Party is much more Limbaugh’s party than it ever was Powell’s party, and the end of this is that Powell finds out how little pull he actually has anymore.

Comment #14: ploeg  on  10/19  at  09:51 PM

Even Powell could not resist the mind-control powers of BLACKAZOID!!!!!1!!

Tom - no, not really. He could have refused to endorse either and it would not have hurt his job chances.

Comment #15: mythago  on  10/20  at  12:06 AM

Ploeg, you’re probably right, but it’s better for the moderate Republicans to start an open dispute, lose, and leave the party rather than that they continue semi-reluctant adherence. It doesn’t represent them anymore.

Comment #16: Samantha Vimes  on  10/20  at  02:09 AM

I used to be racist myself. I voted for Mondale, Dukakis, Clinton, Gore, and Kerry, every one of ‘em white like me.

It’ll be interesting to see how McCain enjoys serving in the Senate come January. I’m thinking his popularity will have taken a nose-dive among his own party.

Comment #17: Orange  on  10/20  at  09:26 AM

WHY ISN’T ANYONE ADDRESSING THESE RACIST VIEWS AND COMMENTS AT ANY OF THESE McCAIN PALIN RALLY’S?
IS AMERICA AFRIAD TO SHOW WHAT WHITE PEOPLE REALLY THINK ABOUT BLACK PEOPLE?
CHECK OUT YOUTUBE.COM

CONFUSED

Comment #18: confused  on  10/20  at  10:47 AM
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