It’s been a little over
a year since my column
“Obamination” originally appeared in this space, but the disturbing
nature of Democrat presidential hopeful Barack Obama’s relationship with
his pastor Reverend Jeremiah Wright finally made it into the mainstream
press last week. Several video excerpts of Wright’s sermons were aired
in which the Reverend called upon God to damn America (using the common
distasteful colloquialism), strongly intimated that the United States
“deserved” 9/11 as a consequence of its foreign policy, and made claims
that ours is a nation controlled by “rich white people” who engineered
the AIDS virus to kill blacks and markets narcotics to blacks in order
to keep them incarcerated.
That individuals who
subscribe to such insanity not only breed but vote is one of the most
frightening concepts I can bring to mind at present.
For those who could do
with a refresher:
Early in 2007 I was
indirectly approached by journalists in the Chicago area who were
terribly concerned that this man who appeared poised to make a serious
run for the Presidency (Obama) attended Chicago’s Trinity United Church,
an outfit headed up by a seething, anti-American black nationalist
(Wright), with whom he was very close. They were also
experiencing vexation due to the fact that they’d had no success
whatever in getting the word out.
Enter resident
race-traitor black conservative columnist, Yours Truly. “Obamination”
ran on February 20, 2007, and was followed up later that month by (among
other things) my appearance on Fox News’ Hannity and Colmes. The
only upshot of this occurrences was that:
1) Obama publicly
distanced himself from Wright – which no doubt incensed the Reverend,
2) Trinity United
Church removed (and later relocated) its core doctrine, the
Twelve Point Black Value System from its website, and
3) Wright posted a
“F*** Erik Rush and everyone who looks like him”
screed thereupon.
Since Obama began
having success in the primaries, I’ve received increasing numbers of
emails from Americans who – in their search to learn more about the
candidate – came across the Hannity and Colmes interview,
Wright’s abysmal rebuttal on March 1, 2007, as well as subsequent
columns I penned on the subject. Most have been shocked, and many have
been grateful.
Obama’s initial
assertions that Wright was akin to the opinionated but harmless uncle
who occasionally goes over the top is a major sleeve-snicker if one has
researched the issue at all or knows the history of Obama, Wright and
Trinity United. Wright (by his admission) preaches
Black Liberation Theology, which (not by his admission) is a
Marxist-influenced, racist brand that arose during the 1960s, and is
about as “Christian” as certain white supremacist “churches.”
Liberal pundits (both
black and otherwise) and callers to radio talk shows flooded venues
insisting that Wright’s comments had been taken out of context. This is
patent delusion; the context was all there, and Wright’s sentiments are
evident. He adheres to insane racist conspiracy theories and the worst
far Left dogma on the market.
At first, Obama’s weak
response was accepted at face value. Some members of the press however,
recognized the serious implications and media stories proliferated. On
Friday afternoon, “M.C. B-Bo” denounced Wright’s words, calling the
sermons in question “inflammatory and appalling.”
A bold, decisive move?
Perhaps some expected that he should say: “I stand by every word
Reverend Wright said. America is indeed a damnable nation, a hotbed of
controlling, rich white filth. If elected President, I shall do
everything in my power to raze it to its foundation. Furthermore, I
think that whites in America might benefit immensely in the long run
from 400 years of enslavement. So there.”
He wants to be President. Like so many before him, he’ll say anything he has
to say.
On Friday evening,
Obama spoke with Fox News’ Major Garrett, who did not softball the
Senator. This columnist’s assessment is that Obama did not acquit
himself well. Although he adhered to earlier claims that Wright’s words
were unacceptable and that he did not share his views, Obama was
evasive, equivocal and even a tad (Bill) Clintonesque regarding
Garrett’s questions and took on the role of an apologist for Wright. He
was on the spot and he knew it. Most telling was his use of the term
“social gospel,” which gives an indication that he is far more familiar
with and accepting of Wright’s sickening philosophy than he admits.
Nothing Obama said on
Friday vis-à-vis this controversy addressed his view of Reverend Wright
in light of it, his 20-year relationship with him, or clarified his own
religious beliefs. His claims of “plausible deniability” (“I never heard
the statements while I was sitting in the pews”) are incredulous at
best, outright lies at worst. Wright only spoke to him about Jesus, love
and helping people. Besides, he’s retired now.
Are Americans that
gullible? We shall certainly see.
Despite Obama himself
having wisely refrained from making race an issue, the hypocrisy
surrounding the topic in this campaign has been appalling. When former
Vice-Presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro couched the idea that
America was ready for a black president in verbiage deemed unacceptable
by the Obama-struck, she was branded a racist. Only the dullest
individual would deny that had a white candidate been aligned as closely
with a white racist pastor, they would have been shot from a cannon
within hours. Their campaign would be over no matter what they said.
In the end it’s going
to come down to the fact that no one can definitively ascertain what is
in Barack Obama’s heart, and whether his actions and associations will
speak louder to the American voter than his seductive rhetoric.
For my part, I have no
doubt that Obama adheres to the canon of Reverend Wright and Trinity
United Church. One simply doesn’t sit in a pew for twenty years and
listen to that sort of swill unless they are in agreement with it. A
pastor who holds such opinions doesn’t conveniently veil them for the
sake of one parishioner, unless we are now expected to believe that
Wright possesses acute precognitive abilities and thus held himself in
abeyance for years in Obama’s presence because he knew all of this was
coming.
Like former Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle (who was one man in his home state of South
Dakota and a far Left moonbat in the Senate), Obama has been playing two
politicians. His persona of the charismatic, unifying orator who would
usher in a bright new era in American politics and social development is
but a mask. Underneath lies a far Left black nationalist who identifies
completely with such as Jeremiah Wright, Louis Farrakhan, their
acolytes, and the acerbic black talking heads who materialized to defend
Obama and Wright on the airwaves.
“Who are you to
question his [Obama’s] Christianity?” Alan Colmes asked me on-air a year
ago. I stand by what I said: Black Liberation Theology is not
Christianity, Trinity United Church is a cult, and neither Jeremiah
Wright nor Barack Obama are Christians in the biblical sense.
In Wright’s March 2007
rebuttal, he stated that members of Trinity United Church consider
themselves Africans. This means that it is quite likely we may wind up
with a president who doesn’t even consider himself an American.
Forget the political Right and Left. Don’t you think that America’s
first black president ought to be someone who dearly loves this country
and at least respects everyone therein, rather than a closet black
militant with a historical perspective that resides in the 1950s, who
was mentored by a foul-mouthed, bitter old fool with a historical
perspective that resides in the 1930s, hates more than half of all
Americans, and calls upon the Almighty to damn America?