Spike Lee gives Bernie Sanders yet another endorsement from the Black community

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Black lives like my father’s should matter. That’s why I’m endorsing Bernie Sanders.
I want a leader who truly cares about justice for my family, for black people and for all Americans.


When I talk to other black voters about this year’s presidential election, some seem ready to dismiss it. Why, they ask, should we continue to put our faith in a system that continues to fail us? And why trust leaders who don’t care about our lives?

I understand.

A year and a half ago, New York City police officer Daniel Pantaleo barbarically choked my father, Eric Garner, on a Staten Island sidewalk in broad daylight. My father died that day. His death was ruled a homicide. Despite viral video footage of the incident, international media attention and widespread protests, our justice system failed to find Officer Pantaleo guilty of any crime. In fact, until a few weeks ago, the only person indicted in relation to the case was Ramsey Orta, the man who filmed it all.

As a daughter, I was devastated. As a citizen, I remain outraged — my father’s death was an absolute injustice, but not an uncommon one. By now, we know many of the other names all too well: Sandra Bland, Freddie Gray, Laquan McDonald, Tamir Rice, Mike Brown, Rekia Boyd. But it’s only thanks to the tireless work of organizers and protesters, who take to the streets and disrupt business as usual, that we know their names at all.

That’s why I resent politicians who speak their names without confronting the underlying problem: a banned chokehold was used on my father, several officers on the scene let it happen, my father is dead and Pantaleo is still on NYPD’s payroll because black lives don’t necessarily matter to everyone in America.

If our lives really mattered, we’d have equal access to decent jobs, good schools and affordable housing. If our lives mattered in this country, we’d have equal access to clean air, clean water and real investment in black neighborhoods. If black lives mattered in America, those who routinely brutalize us wouldn’t be the ones paid, with our tax dollars, to keep us safe.

I trusted establishment Democrats who claimed to represent me, only to later watch them ignore and explain away the injustice of my father’s death. I trusted the system; then I watched as politicians on both sides of the aisle — from Chicago’s Democratic Mayor Rahm Emanuel to Michigan’s Republican Gov. Rick Snyder — disregard the will of the people they were elected to represent and abdicate their responsibility to protect them. I’ve watched as our system criminalizes blackness while allowing Wall Street to bilk the American people with impunity.

Even with my own heartbreak, when I demand justice, it’s never just for Eric Garner. It’s for my daughter; it’s for the next generation of African Americans. When I think about this presidential election, I’m not just thinking about the next four years — I’m thinking about the next 40.

Who will address the criminalization of our people? Who understands that we’re experiencing an economic crisis made worse by structural barriers to jobs and education? Who will bring us closer to real safety, freedom and power? Who has clearly shown us where they stand?

The answer is someone who started this work well before campaign season, who understands our deaths as tragedies — not political talking points — and someone who will speak out against the wars being waged against our communities. Not someone who only pays attention to our concerns when it’s time to collect our votes. Not someone who gives us bread crumbs and expects us to be full.

Black Americans — all Americans — need a leader with a record that speaks for itself. And to me, it’s clear. Of all the presidential candidates, Sen. Bernie Sanders is our strongest ally.

When protesters challenged Sanders last summer, that relationship was tested. They publicly questioned whether the most progressive candidate in the field viewed racial justice as a nonnegotiable demand. The optics were messy, but he heard us. He prioritized a racial justice platform. He spoke out,in speeches and debates, about Sandra Bland and declared that black lives do matter. He heard us, and I believe he’ll continue to listen.

We aren’t the first generation of black Americans to rise up and demand our human right to life, and we won’t be the last. But I know a better world is possible. I know that once we come together, we are powerful beyond imagination. Sen. Sanders knows this too. He’s learning from us, working with us and respecting the power of we, the people, over the established political machine.

I remember another candidate who dared me to believe in hope and change. His opponents said he wasn’t ready for leadership. They said he couldn’t win. He said, “Yes, we can.” And we did.

I still believe we can. That’s why I endorse Bernie Sanders for president.

Black lives like my father’s should matter. That’s why I’m endorsing Bernie Sanders.
 

88m3

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how is that moving the goal post? you TRIED to attack bernie with something he has no control over. then you tried to prop up Hillary as if she had control over her state. BUt since you brought her state up, lets talk about it. YOU moved the goal post by shouting out Hillary and the clintons. I bet you wont do that again will you

We were talking about private prisons and I told you they were banned in NYS. You then brought up stop and frisk another now banned practice. You were trying to move the goal posts and you got called out on it. Bernie could be a force for change in the private prison monopoly in Vermont but he has remained indifferent. Hillary hasn't been a senator for sometime now and private prisons were banned in NYS in 2000.
 

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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: This is the difference between Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders
Watch how they conduct their campaigns.


By Kareem Abdul-Jabbar September 2, 2015

Republican presidential contender Donald Trump said that Hillary Clinton got "schlonged" by then-Sen. Barack Obama in the 2008 Democratic primary. Here are other times he's insulted women, from Rosie O'Donnell to Megyn Kelly. (Sarah Parnass and Nicki DeMarco/The Washington Post)
Later, after Trump had blamed her attitude on her menstrual cycle, Kelly went on what Fox says was a planned vacation. Nevertheless, Trump suggested he may have been the cause. What kind of candidate takes credit for bullying the media? And last week, Trump allowed Univision reporter Jorge Ramos to be ejected from a press conference for asking questions about immigration without being called upon. Ramos was later readmitted and permitted to ask about immigration, during which he said Trump could still deport immigrants compassionately. “I have a bigger heart than you do,” Trump replied. Trump’s non-specific answer to the question ended with a personal insult directed at the reporter.

Trump’s vendetta against the press extended to the Des Moines Register. When the paper issued an editorial calling for Trump to withdraw from the campaign, he refused to give the paper’s reporters credentials to attend his campaign event in Iowa in July. He also called the paper “failing” and “very dishonest.” Other journalists he thinks have treated him harshly he refers to as “losers” or unintelligent, as if the definition of lack of intelligence is to not agree with him.

Attempting to bully the press to silence criticism of him is anti-American. He followed up this salvo on the First Amendment with a strike at the 14th Amendment, asserting that he’d like to deny those born in the country their citizenship. The biggest enemy to the principles of the Constitution right now is Trump.

Trump’s rationale for avoiding Kelly’s debate question – that neither he nor America has time for “political correctness” – taps into a popular boogeyman. The term “political correctness” is so general that to most people it simply means a discomfort with changing times and attitudes, an attack on the traditions of how we were raised. (It’s an emotional challenge every generation has had to go through.) What it really means is nothing more than sensitizing people to the fact that some old-fashioned words, attitudes and actions may be harmful or insulting to others. Naturally, people are angry about that because it makes them feel stupid or mean when they really aren’t. But when times change, we need to change with them in areas that strengthen our society.

It’s no longer “politically correct” to call African Americans “coloreds.” Or to pat a woman on the butt at work and say, “Nice job, honey.” Or to ask people their religion during a job interview. Or to deny a woman a job because she’s not attractive enough to you. Or to assume a person’s opinion is worth less because she is elderly. Or that physically challenged individuals shouldn’t have easy access to buildings. If you don’t have time for political correctness, you don’t have time to be the caretaker of our rights under the Constitution.

It’s easy to buy into the Trump mirage because his rising poll numbers indicate he’s actually doing well. But polls are historically misleading, and his supporters will eventually desert him. Many, such as Tom McCarthy in the Guardian, have laid out the statistical reasons Trump can’t win, complete with graphs that show polls from past presidential candidates who were doing even better than Trump at this stage of an election, only to fade into political irrelevance, like Rudy Giuliani, Howard Dean and Ross Perot. In 2008, Hillary Clinton was also a front-runner who unexpectedly got beat for the nomination by Obama.

Americans may flirt with the preppy life of the frathouse partier because he’s poked sacred cows, said stuff we all wish we could say (except that reason keeps us from doing it), and acted buffoonishly entertaining. But when you wake up the next morning and he’s saying you’re now in a four-year relationship, reason comes rushing in, and it is time for the “it’s me, not you” speech. With over a year until the elections, there are too many Republican hopefuls that dilute the polls. Once the herd thins out (Rick Perry seems out of money; Bobby Jindal out of breath; Huckabee out of touch), other candidates with more substance will have their voices heard. And when it comes down to just three or four candidates, Trump’s blustering inarticulation and dodging of questions will seem untrustworthy.

Although each absurd, uninformed or just plain incorrect statement seems to give Trump a bump in the polls, there are only so many times supporters can defend his outrageous assault on decency, truth and civility. Yes, a few will remain no matter what. (One 63-year-old woman told CNN that the Republicans were out to discredit Trump: “They twisted what the words were, because they’re trying to destroy him.” No one has to twist his words because what he says is twisted enough. He speaks fluent pretzel.) But voters will eventually see the light.

Meanwhile, Bernie Sanders faced his own challenge at a political event last month, when two African American women pushed in front of him to use the microphone to demand four and a half minutes of silence to honor the death of Michael Brown. Sanders left the stage and mingled with the crowd. Later, Trump criticized Sanders as being “weak” for allowing them to speak, but truly he showed grace under pressure by acknowledging their frustration and anger. Instead of bullying their voices into silence or ridiculing them as losers, pigs or bimbos, Sanders left. After all, it was not his event; he was a guest. Besides, his voice was not silenced, but came back booming even louder: The next day, Sanders posted a sweeping policy of reform to fight racial inequality. (The timing coincided with Michael Brown’s death and had nothing to do with the two women.)

The two approaches reveal the difference between a mature, thoughtful and intelligent man, and a man whose money has made him arrogant to criticism and impervious to feeling the need to have any actual policies. Trump threatens to run an independent campaign (he won’t; that’s a negotiating ploy). Trump is a last-call candidate who looks good in the boozy dark of political inebriation.

There’s a lot of complaining about the lengthy process in the United States of winnowing candidates, but this year has shown its great strength. It gives a wide variety of people the chance to have their voices heard, and it gives voters a chance to see the candidates over a period of time when their political masks slip. Some rise to the challenge, others deflate under the pressure of nothing to say.

Two roads diverged in a political wood, and one man took the road of assaulting the Constitution and soon will be lost forever. The other will be a viable candidate who, regardless of whether he wins the nomination, will elevate the political process into something our Founding Fathers would be proud of.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: This is the difference between Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders
 

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Killer Mike Is Bernie Sanders’s Unofficial Campaign Adviser
ASAWIN SUEBSAENG
02.23.1610:31 AM


The hip-hop star is more than a hype man: He’s a critical part of the 74-year-old socialist from a lily-white state’s outreach to communities of color.

When rapper Killer Mike calls the Bernie Sanders campaign to pitch ideas or make suggestions, they pay attention, he says.

“I think more rappers need to endorse [Bernie Sanders],” Killer Mike told The Daily Beast. “I’ll suggest some rappers who are incredibly brilliant…and I’ll get those [phone] numbers and pass those onto [Sanders’s] press secretary. When it comes time to organize hardcore events on the ground that will mobilize the young black vote, I’ll reach out to the appropriate contact in the campaign.”

Killer Mike, who belongs to the hip-hop group Run the Jewels, has emerged as Sanders’s most prominent, and perhaps most passionately committed, celebrity endorser (one of many “Artists for Bernie”) as the senator fights his uphill battle against Hillary Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Together, Killer Mike and Sanders have formed what has to be one of the odder — or at least more unexpected — pairings of the 2016 campaign. The Atlanta rapper has been a diehard fan at least since June, when he first tweeted his endorsement. “It’s official,” Mike wrote on Twitter over the summer. “His call [for] the restoration of the voters rights act sealed the deal for me.”

And Sanders is only Killer Mike’s latest beacon of political hope. He has been participating in campaigns ever since he was 8, when he was pounding the pavement with his family. Killer Mike says he knew the late civil rights activist and pastor James Orange, who he considers a mentor.

“He taught me how to organize,” he said. “This is what I do, this is what I’ve always done: volunteer. Ever since I was a kid, if a politician jumps out, I give it a try, hit the streets — harass people into voting.”

Mike has tried to “harass” citizens into voting for candidates such as Jesse Jackson, Barack Obama, Walter Mondale, Bill Clinton, and former Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin. In the past eight months, all of the organizing chops that he has honed over the decades have been devoted exclusively to Sanders.

Both Killer Mike and Sanders’s team are well aware of the major difficulties the senator has had in capturing enough of the black vote. Last month, his campaign held a press call to discuss the menu of specific initiatives related to their African-American outreach. This game plan included embarking on tours of barbershops and beauty salons where Sanders could reach black working-class communities.

The idea for Bernie’s barbershop tour actually stemmed from a brief moment of casual conversation between the lawmaker and the rapper, the latter of whom operates a barbershop in Atlanta.

“The barbershop tour was my idea that I brought to him,” Mike said. “In terms of the organizing, what I claim responsibility for...is the barbershop tour. That is the industry I'm in. It’s an industry where you can engage working class men, and puts them directly in Sanders’s face…It's safe to talk in a barbershop. You're not going to be judged by religious dogma, or anything else.”

So far, the political bromance between Mike and Sanders has demonstrated a loyalty that works both ways. As other celebrities such as Will Ferrellget cold feet and defect from Sanders to Clinton, Killer Mike is staying put. (He is still not sure if he will support Clinton in the general election, should she lock up the party’s nomination.)

And when Mike took some heat for repeating a quote that having a “uterus doesn't qualify you to be president” (referring, of course, to the former secretary of state), the Sanders campaign went to bat for him, and dismissed the controversy as petty "gotcha politics."

"If you wanna ask me about uteruses, I’m not going to talk about that,” Killer Mike told The Daily Beast, simply stating that he was “sick of that stuff,” and that the degree to which his comment was amplified over the past week was a symptom of “part of what's wrong with this country.”

And as the rival campaigns head into Super Tuesday, Killer Mike is digging in to do whatever he can to help the cause. But he’s not delusional: he see the same delegate math everyone else does, and knows that Sanders’s path to the nomination is steep. Regardless, he is keeping the faith.

“I’m just gonna maintain hope, I really am,” he said, saying that Sanders has been performing much better than observers previously anticipated. “I’m like the guy at the horse race with a ticket in his hand.

“As long as he’s in the race, the policies that matter about people are going to be talked about,” he continued. “And that’s what I talk in my music. That’s what I talk about on my Twitter feed. That’s what I talk about in real life.”

Killer Mike Is Bernie Sanders’s Unofficial Campaign Adviser
 

wire28

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Yeah, but you're entirely disingenuous. You don't like Sanders and want Hillary to win but hide behind liking him in spirit. You would garner more respect if you just admitted. Your biggest backers on here are a center-right dude in ATLRocafella and 88m3 who is a corporatist Democrat. Basically, non-progressives are riding with your troll game. That is why I said every one sounds unhinged. Bernie supporters are angry and everyone else is suffering from cognitive dissonance.
Thank you for your psychological evaluation :ohhh: is that similar to how you say you are unbiased but write 2-3 paragraphs in defense of Bernie at every corner? You've been coming at me sideways because I've been willing to evaluate Hillary in an objective manner and not hopped on the bandwagon of calling her the devil :mjlol:

I've said it over and over I prefer Bernie. It just won't be the end of the world for me if Hillary wins like it would for you and other Bernie stans who would rather risk the chance of Trump or Cruz winning because Bernie lost (except now it seems like all Bernie stans on this site reside in states that are strongly red or blue so they can afford to not vote for Hillary, how convenient :sas2: )

Honestly the Bernie stans are horrible so I've had to go extra hard on y'all. That ain't stopping until he's out the race. The Ron/Rand Paul stan comparisons are spot on.
 

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That's literally what @Jello Biafra said in a thread a while ago and I think basically everyone agrees with that :mjlol: your stans take that as an assault on Bernies campaign platform when it's just reality.

It's Bernies fault the black community doesn't know him, that's why he has to scramble for every picture from 1960 he can find to try and win them over. If he had some pictures when trayvon was laid out in the street or when garner was laid out or when Sandra was laid out etc etc (as one would expect since he is this ultra warrior for social justice) he wouldn't have this problem. And the "he's from Vermont so what do you expect" excuse doesn't fly. If he was as passionate about the dead black bodies when they were still warm, as he is Wall Street, the black vote would be his.

my boy @wire28 is looking at this from a non-stan point of view. When you look at things objectively, these are the types of facts you get :whew:
 

wire28

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my boy @wire28 is looking at this from a non-stan point of view. When you look at things objectively, these are the types of facts you get :whew:
:yeshrug: I mean you can't have it both ways. The stans beat us over the head with how staunch he is in his ideals. Cool. His vigor would have been appreciated when Zimmerman was prancing out the court room. Don't be mad Hillary been playing the game for years and Bernies team has to scramble for pictures from over 40 years ago as the last time he out right stood up for black people.

Simply pointing out this fact enrages his stans, but if he did he would be winning the race and black vote handily.
 

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they should get Ja rule to support bernie maybe then the community would rally behind him :mjlol:
 

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Like Michelle Alexander noted of Hillary Clinton: "In her support for the 1994 crime bill, for example, she used racially coded rhetoric to cast black children as animals. "

They are not just gangs of kids anymore. They are often the kinds of kids that are called ‘super-predators.’ No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel.


THAT's the woman you claim has been playing the game for years? Calling Black children animals that need to be brought to heel? That's your queen?



Don't be mad Hillary been playing the game for years and Bernies team has to scramble for pictures from over 40 years ago as the last time he out right stood up for black people.

:dahell:

Go ahead, show the Hillary pictures from the last 40 years where she's marching with Black people, getting arrested for Black people, etc.

Show where she's ever put herself on the line for Black people.

I'm not talking about getting their votes for her own ends. I'm talking about being willing to stick up for Black people despite the costs. It ain't in her history.



]Bernie Sanders went to the 40-year-old pictures to prove that he's ALWAYS had these feelings.

While at the University of Chicago, Sanders joined the Young People's Socialist League, the youth affiliate of the Socialist Party of America, and was active in the Civil Rights Movement as a student organizer for the Congress of Racial Equality and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Under Sanders's chairmanship, the university chapter of CORE merged with the university chapter of SNCC. In January 1962, Sanders led a rally at the University of Chicago administration building to protest university president George Wells Beadle's segregated campus housing policy. "We feel it is an intolerable situation when Negro and white students of the university cannot live together in university-owned apartments," Sanders said at the protest. Sanders and 32 other students then entered the building and camped outside the president's office, performing the first civil rights sit-in in Chicago history. After weeks of sit-ins, Beadle and the university formed a commission to investigate discrimination. Sanders once spent a day putting up fliers protesting against police brutality, only to eventually notice that a Chicago police car was shadowing him and taking them all down.

Sanders attended the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, where Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his "I Have a Dream" speech. That summer, he was convicted of resisting arrest during a demonstration against segregation in Chicago's public schools and was fined $25.

Merging with SNCC, leading rallies, leading sit-ins, protesting police brutality, marching on Washington, getting arrested and resisting arrest....and it's no show. He didn't even run for an office until the 1970s and he didn't hold office until 1980, and back in the early 1960s the shyt he was doing would make someone LESS likely to win office, not more.



And it's not like it ended then - that was just the period of arrests. As Ben Jealous points out in his endorsement:

Today, as a Senator…. he has an A+ rating from the NAACP.

As a candidate for president, he has the best plan for ending mass incarceration and improving community policing.

And—lest we forget the special tragedy that is the wrongful execution of the innocent (almost always from low-income families and usually black) like Troy Davis— he is the only remaining candidate who opposes the Death Penalty.

As a young man, he opposed the war in Vietnam.

As a US Senator, he voted against the war in Iraq.

And throughout his life he has been a fearless, tireless, and trustworthy champion for the right of all our nation’s children to have full and unfettered access to the American dream.



And as Shawn King pointed out in his endorsement:

I didn't know that he went against the Democratic establishment and endorsed Jesse Jackson for President in 1984 and 1988.

Jackson actually won Vermont in ’88 with Bernie's help.

No presidential candidate has been as clear on what happened to Sandra Bland as Bernie. In addition to meeting with her mother, he came out in December and flat out said “Sandra Bland should not have died while in police custody. There's no doubt in my mind that she, like too many African-Americans who die in police custody, would be alive today if she were a white woman.” He gets it. Race is not a coincidental factor in police violence, but is a central, determining factor in much of the brutality. This must be acknowledged and Bernie has done so repeatedly.

Instead of simply saying "Black Lives Matter" here and there, he released the most comprehensive, thorough, specific plan of any candidate on either side to address police brutality, economic inequality, voting rights, education, health care, gun safety and more.

It shocked me, actually. I had grown used to politicians shrugging off the pain and pleas of black folks and just assuming we'd vote for them anyway. Bernie didn't do anything like that.

He hired Symone Sanders, a black woman who has fought for juvenile justice issues her whole life, not as his juvenile justice liaison, but as his national press secretary.


It ain't like he just did one march and then lost his feelings.
 
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wire28

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^ its never that serious breh lol, hopefully someone blesses you with daps for your hard work, even though you missed the point which was

hillary has been rubbing elbows with "prominent black leaders" (or whatever else the media calls them) for decades to cash in her chips this election cycle. bernies message + any vigor similar to the one he is displaying this election cycle during any of the times young black people were killed in the past few years would have him allowed him to lock up the black vote.

that was the point, but i know you'd all rather take that statement of facts as an endorsement of hillary / bashing of bernie, so i eagerly await your next long winded, un needed defense of bernie
 

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hillary has been rubbing elbows with "prominent black leaders" (or whatever else the media calls them) for decades to cash in her chips this election cycle. bernies message + any vigor similar to the one he is displaying this election cycle during any of the times young black people were killed in the past few years would have him allowed him to lock up the black vote.


Yeah, the bullshyt is strong with you. For Clinton, when push comes to shove, her and her allies have thrown Black people under the bus over and over again:

Like, do you even understand how fukking that quote was?

They are not just gangs of kids anymore. They are often the kinds of kids that are called ‘super-predators.’ No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel.


It's wasn't just calling Black kids animals to get the crime bill passed. The Clinton administration was all about tossing Black people to the side during the first go-round.

Just weeks before the critical New Hampshire primary, Clinton proved his toughness by flying back to Arkansas to oversee the execution of Ricky Ray Rector, a mentally impaired black man who had so little conception of what was about to happen to him that he asked for the dessert from his last meal to be saved for him for later. After the execution, Clinton remarked, “I can be nicked a lot, but no one can say I’m soft on crime.”

When Clinton left office in 2001, the true jobless rate for young, non-college-educated black men (including those behind bars) was 42 percent. This figure was never reported. Instead, the media claimed that unemployment rates for African Americans had fallen to record lows, neglecting to mention that this miracle was possible only because incarceration rates were now at record highs.

During Clinton’s tenure, funding for public housing was slashed by $17 billion (a reduction of 61 percent), while funding for corrections was boosted by $19 billion (an increase of 171 percent), according to sociologist Loïc Wacquant “effectively making the construction of prisons the nation’s main housing program for the urban poor.”



And you don't remember what her and her surrogates tried to do to Obama?

Hillary Clinton used racist code words against Obama

The dark heart of the Clinton campaign: a strategy designed to make race THE issue

Group: Tell Clinton to stop race-baiting

Racial tensions roil Democratic race


It all started after Obama’s big Iowa win, when Bill Shaheen, Clinton’s New Hampshire campaign manager, openly speculated about whether Obama had once been a drug dealer...

The Clinton campaign kept saying, “He’s black, black, black,” as author and South Carolina activist Kevin Alexander Gray pointed out on Jesse Jackson’s “Keep Hope Alive” program Sunday morning. And Bill Clinton used coded language, like the “old okie-dokie,” which served to remind whites of Obama’s blackness, Gray added. That’s like saying don’t fall for the old “shuck and jive.”

And speaking of “shuck and jive,” that’s exactly the phrase Andrew Cuomo used to disparage Obama in New Hampshire, saying he can’t use that “shuck and jive” at press conferences.

Obama’s black, get it.

The comments, which ranged from the New York senator appearing to diminish the role of Martin Luther King Jr. in the civil rights movement — an aide later said she misspoke — to Bill Clinton dismissing Sen. Barack Obama’s image in the media as a “fairy tale” — generated outrage on black radio, black blogs and cable television.

Louis Farrakhan, the head of the Nation of Islam, endorsed Obama in a sermon. In a debate a couple days later, moderator Tim Russert repeatedly pressed Obama on the issue, who responded with repeated reassurances that he did not ask for the endorsement, did not accept it, and in fact was not a deranged anti-Semite. That wasn't enough for Clinton, who demanded that Obama "denounce" Farrakhan

About the same time, a picture of Obama in traditional Somali garb (from an official trip) then appeared on the Drudge Report, and Matt Drudge claimed he got it from the Clinton campaign.

Later, a media firestorm blew up when it was discovered that Obama's Chicago pastor Jeremiah Wright once delivered a sermon containing the words "God damn America." In response, Obama gave a deft, nuanced speech on racial issues, but Clinton kept the issue alive by insisting she would have long ago denounced the man.

The group cited Mrs. Clinton’s remarks published in an interview in USA Today on Thursday, in which she said: “I have a much broader base to build a winning coalition on,” she said in the interview, citing an article by The Associated Press that “found how Senator Obama’s support among working, hard-working Americans, white Americans, is weakening again, and how whites in both states who had not completed college were supporting me.

Bill Clinton dismissed Obama’s landslide in South Carolina as a function of demographics by pointing out that in 1988 the state was won by Jesse Jackson, whom he clearly viewed as a marginal black candidate. (In fact, Jackson won 11 states in 1988, and for a while had considerable support from white voters until he was purposefully beaten back by the Democratic Leadership Council, the party’s centre-right ).

"A few years ago, this guy would have been getting us coffee," Mr Clinton was quoted as saying in Game Change, by John Heilemann and Mark Halperin.



Or the famous 3am ad:

I have spent my life studying the pictures and symbols of racism and slavery, and when I saw the Clinton ad's central image -- innocent sleeping children and a mother in the middle of the night at risk of mortal danger -- it brought to my mind scenes from the past. I couldn't help but think of D. W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation," the racist movie epic that helped revive the Ku Klux Klan, with its portrayal of black men lurking in the bushes around white society...

Mr. Clyburn added that there appeared to be an almost "unanimous" view among African-Americans that Mr. and Mrs. Clinton were "committed to doing everything they possibly can to damage Obama to a point that he could never win.



There's Clinton using right-wing racist codewords and images to get the White vote out.

There's Clinton disparaging the Black candidate and Black voters.

There's Clinton going out of her way to take a shot at every Black leader that can possibly be associated with Obama.


Yeah...she's been "playing the game for years", all right.
 

wire28

Blade said what up
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yeah i think we're done here. if you convert your anger to energy to campaign for bernie im sure he'd appreciate that alot

:salute:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Thank you for your psychological evaluation :ohhh: is that similar to how you say you are unbiased but write 2-3 paragraphs in defense of Bernie at every corner? You've been coming at me sideways because I've been willing to evaluate Hillary in an objective manner and not hopped on the bandwagon of calling her the devil :mjlol:

I've said it over and over I prefer Bernie. It just won't be the end of the world for me if Hillary wins like it would for you and other Bernie stans who would rather risk the chance of Trump or Cruz winning because Bernie lost (except now it seems like all Bernie stans on this site reside in states that are strongly red or blue so they can afford to not vote for Hillary, how convenient :sas2: )

Honestly the Bernie stans are horrible so I've had to go extra hard on y'all. That ain't stopping until he's out the race. The Ron/Rand Paul stan comparisons are spot on.
I could honestly let you handle all my talking points until november :wow:
 
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