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ULTRAMAN VH
10-27-2006, 08:07 AM
Hey, Liberals, Lecture Me About Racism When You've Stopped Creating More of It
By Mary Katharine Ham
Friday, October 27, 2006







Rep. Harold Ford Jr., D-Tenn., right, embraces a voter in Franklin, Tenn., June 17, 2006. Thought Tennessee hasn't elected a Democrat to the Senate since 1990, and the contest should be relatively easy for opponent former Chattonooga mayor Bob Corker, the charismatic Ford, a 36-year-old centrist Democrat and five-term congressman, has waged a nearly flawless campaign, and is trying become the first black senator elected in the South since Reconstruction. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey/File) This election cycle has sounded like a sicko version of that old Dr. Pepper ad. So many people are racists, it’s hard to keep up!


Let’s take a look at this week’s charges of racism, which come from the Left. They focus on two ads in the Tennessee Senate race. This race features Republican Bob Corker and Democrat Harold Ford, Jr. Corker is a white, former mayor of Chattanooga, and owner of a successful construction business. Ford is a black Congressman from a prominent political family in the state.


Here’s the TV ad in question. Go ahead and watch it. I’ll be here when you get back. The alleged racism lies in the fact that a white, blonde woman says, “I met Harold at the Playboy party,” and entreats him to call her at the end of the ad. The theory of those crying racism is that the idea of a white woman fraternizing with a black man was meant to conjure up some good Old South feelings about interracial dating.


It’s a serious reach to assume that was the intent of the Republican National Committee. Had they featured a black woman asking him to call her, I’m sure there would have been some coded message there as well, like, “Harold Ford should stick to his kind.” I don’t know how the liberal mind works, but I’ve gotta believe if it weren’t this racial overreach, it would have been another one.


People disagree with me on this. Republicans disagree with me on it. Ken Mehlman said he understands the other side’s point of view and Corker disavowed the ad on the grounds that it was “tacky.” Others have told me it was a Republican gaffe, racist or not, because it could be read as racist. Well, frankly, if we limit our political advertising things that won’t offend liberals, we will have no political advertising.


Try the other one on for size. It’s a radio ad, once again anti-Ford. Listen to it, here.


Now, the “racist” story behind this one is that there are drums as soundtrack to the parts of the ad that talk about Harold Ford. Liberal blogs have referred to them as “tom-toms” and “jungle drums,” and suggested that they’re meant to evoke images of Africa, the Dark Continent, thus turning off lily white Southern voters. Of course, it’s hard to make the argument that the anti-Ford ad is accentuating Ford’s ethnic “savagery” when the ad copy refers to his prep-school education and Northeastern roots.


Is it just me or does it feel more likely that the people who see and hear these innocuous ads and immediately jump to accusations of racism are the ones with the racial hang-ups, not Republican Southerners?


All of their theories, of course, are predicated on the idea that Tennesseans, and all Southern conservatives, are trogolodytic racists who are boorish enough to vote against a man because he’s black and simultaneously sophisticated enough to pick up on very subtle coded political messages about his race.


I just don’t buy it. Listen, I understand that white Southerners are not wholly undeserving of such suspicions. Neither, certainly, are Republican operatives. I’ve lived in the South my whole life. I have seen much racial strife. But I’ve also seen much racial strife overcome.


The South is a resilient place full of warm people who don’t spend all their time thinking about race. It’s a place where black and white people live side by side, in greater percentages than any other region in the country, and where peace between them is the rule, not the exception.


Tennessee, in particular, was the first former Confederate state to ratify the 14th amendment and it had an anti-Klan law as early as 1868. It elected its first black member of the state General Assembly in 1873—Sampson W. Keeble.


More recently, the state has also elected Harold Ford, Jr. and his father before him to represent the 9th Congressional District from 1975 until now. Those are just a few things you can learn about Tennessee from a quick Google search. The same can be done for any Southern state. The South and its people are not the caricatures the Left makes them out to be.


Do we have a dark history? Yes, of course, but we’ve also proven surprisingly good at overcoming that history, and it never sits right with me when people ride into the South calling out racism where it doesn’t exist, creating more problems, sowing mistrust, and making it harder and harder for people suffering real racism to be taken seriously.


Some people criticized me a month ago for not being sufficiently quick to condemn both George Allen and Jim Webb as racists because of allegations that they had both used the n-word in the past. The allegations are a concern, to be sure, but I’m willing to listen to denials and apologies they offer now for 30-year-old offenses. Why? Because if you can’t believe that men can genuinely change their hearts on matters of race, then you cannot believe the South I love exists.


Sadly, many liberals don’t believe it does, so it’s easy for them to assume the worst of ads like the ones run for Corker in Tennessee this week.


Frankly, I get a little sick of being lectured on race issues by the same people who give a pass to Steny Hoyer for using the word “slavish” in reference to black Maryland Senate candidate Michael Steele. These are the same people who didn’t really mind that Democrat Sen. Robert Byrd used the n-word twice in a 2001 TV interview and didn’t squeal much at all when California Democratic Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante dropped the n-bomb during a speech in 2001. They’re the same folks who tolerate blackface Photoshops of Joe Lieberman and thick-lipped, offensive cartoons of Condi Rice.


The Washington Post has printed 168 references to Allen’s questionably racial “macaca” incident, and devoted but one reference to the fact that Webb used the word “towel-heads” in an interview last week.


It’s pretty clear that, for the media and liberals, condemnation for racism is not based on the credibility of the accusations. Instead, it’s handed down based largely on party affiliation. Racism becomes acceptable when perpetrated by a Democrat or a minority. It makes you wonder how serious they are about actually tackling the problem. I happen to dislike racism in all its forms.


Just today, I had to ban a commenter on my blog. It’s the first time I’ve ever done it. He was a liberal and a minority who had taken to using derogatory racial terms for white people. I have a blanket rule against racial slurs and he violated it. When I banned him, he wrote me an e-mail to tell me he was just “showing White people how it feels to be derided.”


Uh huh. He and the rest of the liberals like him can come back and lecture me when they’ve got another idea for fighting racism than creating more of it.





Mary Katharine Ham is the managing editor for Townhall.com.

Be the first

Townhall.com

Sarge's Little Helper
10-27-2006, 08:07 AM
Hey, Liberals, Lecture Me About Racism When You've Stopped Creating More of It
By Mary Katharine Ham
Friday, October 27, 2006







Rep. Harold Ford Jr., D-Tenn., right, embraces a voter in Franklin, Tenn., June 17, 2006. Thought Tennessee hasn't elected a Democrat to the Senate since 1990, and the contest should be relatively easy for opponent former Chattonooga mayor Bob Corker, the charismatic Ford, a 36-year-old centrist Democrat and five-term congressman, has waged a nearly flawless campaign, and is trying become the first black senator elected in the South since Reconstruction. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey/File) This election cycle has sounded like a sicko version of that old Dr. Pepper ad. So many people are racists, it’s hard to keep up!


Let’s take a look at this week’s charges of racism, which come from the Left. They focus on two ads in the Tennessee Senate race. This race features Republican Bob Corker and Democrat Harold Ford, Jr. Corker is a white, former mayor of Chattanooga, and owner of a successful construction business. Ford is a black Congressman from a prominent political family in the state.


Here’s the TV ad in question. Go ahead and watch it. I’ll be here when you get back. The alleged racism lies in the fact that a white, blonde woman says, “I met Harold at the Playboy party,” and entreats him to call her at the end of the ad. The theory of those crying racism is that the idea of a white woman fraternizing with a black man was meant to conjure up some good Old South feelings about interracial dating.


It’s a serious reach to assume that was the intent of the Republican National Committee. Had they featured a black woman asking him to call her, I’m sure there would have been some coded message there as well, like, “Harold Ford should stick to his kind.” I don’t know how the liberal mind works, but I’ve gotta believe if it weren’t this racial overreach, it would have been another one.


People disagree with me on this. Republicans disagree with me on it. Ken Mehlman said he understands the other side’s point of view and Corker disavowed the ad on the grounds that it was “tacky.” Others have told me it was a Republican gaffe, racist or not, because it could be read as racist. Well, frankly, if we limit our political advertising things that won’t offend liberals, we will have no political advertising.


Try the other one on for size. It’s a radio ad, once again anti-Ford. Listen to it, here.


Now, the “racist” story behind this one is that there are drums as soundtrack to the parts of the ad that talk about Harold Ford. Liberal blogs have referred to them as “tom-toms” and “jungle drums,” and suggested that they’re meant to evoke images of Africa, the Dark Continent, thus turning off lily white Southern voters. Of course, it’s hard to make the argument that the anti-Ford ad is accentuating Ford’s ethnic “savagery” when the ad copy refers to his prep-school education and Northeastern roots.


Is it just me or does it feel more likely that the people who see and hear these innocuous ads and immediately jump to accusations of racism are the ones with the racial hang-ups, not Republican Southerners?


All of their theories, of course, are predicated on the idea that Tennesseans, and all Southern conservatives, are trogolodytic racists who are boorish enough to vote against a man because he’s black and simultaneously sophisticated enough to pick up on very subtle coded political messages about his race.


I just don’t buy it. Listen, I understand that white Southerners are not wholly undeserving of such suspicions. Neither, certainly, are Republican operatives. I’ve lived in the South my whole life. I have seen much racial strife. But I’ve also seen much racial strife overcome.


The South is a resilient place full of warm people who don’t spend all their time thinking about race. It’s a place where black and white people live side by side, in greater percentages than any other region in the country, and where peace between them is the rule, not the exception.


Tennessee, in particular, was the first former Confederate state to ratify the 14th amendment and it had an anti-Klan law as early as 1868. It elected its first black member of the state General Assembly in 1873—Sampson W. Keeble.


More recently, the state has also elected Harold Ford, Jr. and his father before him to represent the 9th Congressional District from 1975 until now. Those are just a few things you can learn about Tennessee from a quick Google search. The same can be done for any Southern state. The South and its people are not the caricatures the Left makes them out to be.


Do we have a dark history? Yes, of course, but we’ve also proven surprisingly good at overcoming that history, and it never sits right with me when people ride into the South calling out racism where it doesn’t exist, creating more problems, sowing mistrust, and making it harder and harder for people suffering real racism to be taken seriously.


Some people criticized me a month ago for not being sufficiently quick to condemn both George Allen and Jim Webb as racists because of allegations that they had both used the n-word in the past. The allegations are a concern, to be sure, but I’m willing to listen to denials and apologies they offer now for 30-year-old offenses. Why? Because if you can’t believe that men can genuinely change their hearts on matters of race, then you cannot believe the South I love exists.


Sadly, many liberals don’t believe it does, so it’s easy for them to assume the worst of ads like the ones run for Corker in Tennessee this week.


Frankly, I get a little sick of being lectured on race issues by the same people who give a pass to Steny Hoyer for using the word “slavish” in reference to black Maryland Senate candidate Michael Steele. These are the same people who didn’t really mind that Democrat Sen. Robert Byrd used the n-word twice in a 2001 TV interview and didn’t squeal much at all when California Democratic Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante dropped the n-bomb during a speech in 2001. They’re the same folks who tolerate blackface Photoshops of Joe Lieberman and thick-lipped, offensive cartoons of Condi Rice.


The Washington Post has printed 168 references to Allen’s questionably racial “macaca” incident, and devoted but one reference to the fact that Webb used the word “towel-heads” in an interview last week.


It’s pretty clear that, for the media and liberals, condemnation for racism is not based on the credibility of the accusations. Instead, it’s handed down based largely on party affiliation. Racism becomes acceptable when perpetrated by a Democrat or a minority. It makes you wonder how serious they are about actually tackling the problem. I happen to dislike racism in all its forms.


Just today, I had to ban a commenter on my blog. It’s the first time I’ve ever done it. He was a liberal and a minority who had taken to using derogatory racial terms for white people. I have a blanket rule against racial slurs and he violated it. When I banned him, he wrote me an e-mail to tell me he was just “showing White people how it feels to be derided.”


Uh huh. He and the rest of the liberals like him can come back and lecture me when they’ve got another idea for fighting racism than creating more of it.





Mary Katharine Ham is the managing editor for Townhall.com.

Be the first

Townhall.com

Oops. I wasn't paying attention. Tell me again why Lounge or Nick haven't dumped this troll's latest op-ed spam. It seems Ms. Cartoon Network is unable to post ANYTHING other than right-wing shit.

Nickdfresh
10-27-2006, 08:27 AM
Dude, are you seriously incapable of posting a link to your D-level right wing writers (that don't even believe their own bullshit) trying to eek out a living as an op-ed'ists?

Even BigJamie'sCryin' could post links...

And BTW, the Democrats that were really racists defected to the Republican Party in the South. They were once called "Dixie'crats." Another fact the Rep's try to hide and distract you from with this typical, cherry-picked crap...

DEMON CUNT
10-27-2006, 08:41 AM
Look up in the sky... hilariously mistaking opinion for fact... it's ULTRADOUCHE!

Dang Ultra, you really done stuck it to us Liberals this time!

ULTRAMAN VH
10-27-2006, 08:51 AM
http://www.townhall.com/
Here ya go Nick!!! and Demon Cunt, go blow yourself!!! Whoops, sorry I forgot you can't, you have a pussy.

DEMON CUNT
10-27-2006, 09:03 AM
Originally posted by ULTRAMAN VH
you have a pussy.

And it's attached to you. I hope you are keeping it clean!

LoungeMachine
10-27-2006, 10:08 AM
Originally posted by ULTRAMAN VH
http://www.townhall.com/
Here ya go Nick!!! and Demon Cunt, go blow yourself!!! Whoops, sorry I forgot you can't, you have a pussy.


Wow, this must be some of that high level debate without name calling you are searching for......:rolleyes: :rolleyes:


No opinion of your own on this thread you started?

It gets dumped.

fast.

ULTRAMAN VH
10-27-2006, 10:56 AM
Hey its Friday
Originally posted by LoungeMachine
Wow, this must be some of that high level debate without name calling you are searching for......:rolleyes: :rolleyes:


No opinion of your own on this thread you started?

It gets dumped.

fast.
HEY!!! ITS FRIDAY, what the heck. I did say I do my fair share of name calling and verbal jabbing. Go ahead and dump it, Mighty Moderator (aka) Adolf Hitler. The article must have some validity for your liberal ass to get rid of it.

LoungeMachine
10-27-2006, 11:02 AM
Just as I thought........

You couldn't form your OWN opinion on any of your own threads if your cartoon life depended on it.....

You would rather me dump it.

Then you can bitch and whine about me, rather than face the TRUTH you can't bring anything to the table that isn't already written for you.....


You do understand even the Cons in here think you're a joke, right?

ULTRAMAN VH
10-27-2006, 11:03 AM
While you're at it Adolf, you can start dumping FORDS bullshit conspiracy threads and don't forget the Top TEN Conservative Idiots thread. Thanks, and have a great Friday.

DrMaddVibe
10-27-2006, 11:14 AM
So am I the only one that watched the tv ad?

Its a s-t-r-e-t-c-h to try to claim racism in that one!

With the hay being made about it, hell he's gotta be gay then!

ULTRAMAN VH
10-27-2006, 11:15 AM
Originally posted by LoungeMachine
Just as I thought........

You couldn't form your OWN opinion on any of your own threads if your cartoon life depended on it.....

You would rather me dump it.

Then you can bitch and whine about me, rather than face the TRUTH you can't bring anything to the table that isn't already written for you.....


You do understand even the Cons in here think you're a joke, right?

Gosh Golly, Lounge I haven't seen any of your personal missives on the current political landscape lately?

EAT MY ASSHOLE
10-27-2006, 11:32 AM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
So am I the only one that watched the tv ad?

Its a s-t-r-e-t-c-h to try to claim racism in that one!

With the hay being made about it, hell he's gotta be gay then!

You watched the ad? Why? Did Bo Bice make a cameo?

Kidding. But seriously, the ad DOES walk the line, and the connotations are there to be made - the same as Santorum's current ad linking his opponent to North Korea, Iraq, and China (how the fuck did CHINA get in there anyway??? They've been this country's personal mortgage lenders for the past six years!). Somehow Santorum says this guy would cause all this damage...when all the damage happened on santorum's watch!

This ad is also in the tradition of one back in 2002 that "linked" max Cleland and Bin Laden. Did it outright say "Cleland and Bin Laden play poker"? No...but the way the ad was presented made it easy enough to draw that conclusion - - -the same as the Harold Ford ad.

To his credit, Ford had a great one-liner in response: "You know my opponent is running scared when the biggest attack they can make on me is "My opponent likes girls".

I would really like to see Ford win this race, but not nearly as much as I'd like to see that blonde from that ad eating my asshole.

DrMaddVibe
10-27-2006, 12:08 PM
<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/cWkrwENN5CQ"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/cWkrwENN5CQ" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object>

FORD
10-27-2006, 12:28 PM
This is one Hell of an election season when I'm forced to defend DINO's like Maria Cantwell and Harold Ford (no relation).

But in any event, the ad is racist. Not blatantly racist as in "let's string up that ni**er from the nearest oak tree", but subtly racist in its implication that Ford (no relation) is a "race mixer" who likes to mess around with white women.

It's the same tactic they used against John McCain in 2000 by implying that he had an "illegitimate black child" when the reality was he had an adopted Bangladeshi child.

"Race mixing" is still the number one fear of southern racists, who believe that the existence of "White Christian America" is in great danger every time someone looks at another person whose level of skin pigmentation is different from theirs. And there are lots of people who hold this fucked up belief whom you would never see burning crosses or wearing bedsheets in public, yet they bel;ieve this bullshit all the same. And the Republican party is well aware of this fact, and will exploit it anytime they get a chance. Nixon called it his "Southern Strategy" and the BCE wing of the Republican party has used it ever since.

As for Harry Ford (no relation), a lot of people wouldn't even guess he was African American if you hadn't told them....

http://artstreetdesign.com/wmy/images/harold_ford.jpg

DEMON CUNT
10-27-2006, 12:48 PM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
So am I the only one that watched the tv ad?

Its a s-t-r-e-t-c-h to try to claim racism in that one!

With the hay being made about it, hell he's gotta be gay then!

Yeah, I watched the add.

I find it to be amusing and very well done.

That being said, I do find it to be in poor taste. But this is politics, so fuck it.

The final stretch is here and daggers are drawn.

DrMaddVibe
10-27-2006, 02:31 PM
Did you find it racist?

DEMON CUNT
10-27-2006, 02:59 PM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
Did you find it racist?

No. Although, it does elude to him banging a white chick. Which was probably deliberate.

DrMaddVibe
10-27-2006, 03:21 PM
What's the percentage of black women in Playboy?

I thought it was a jab at the adult industry.

Sex...the new racism!

DEMON CUNT
10-27-2006, 03:42 PM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
What's the percentage of black women in Playboy?

I thought it was a jab at the adult industry.

Sex...the new racism!

Not sure, don't read Playboy anymore. I do remember seeing black ladies in some issues, though.

You have a different interpretation of the clip. No surprise there.

You are probably more inclined to overlook any racist content for the sake of your argument.

DrMaddVibe
10-27-2006, 03:49 PM
No, there's where you're wrong. There isn't anything racist about me. I'll joke around like the next guy, but there's no room for that kind of crap in my world.

DEMON CUNT
10-27-2006, 04:24 PM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
No, there's where you're wrong. There isn't anything racist about me. I'll joke around like the next guy, but there's no room for that kind of crap in my world.

I didn't accuse you of being a racist.

I feel that every second of that political add (including the casting selections) was engineered to present some sort of message.

Nickdfresh
10-27-2006, 04:26 PM
There's definitely an element designed to highlight the whole "miscegenation" phobia still present in the South. Certainly very subtle though, and this ad could almost be seen as pro-Ford in some circles, as if he's a big stud-muffins or something. Is this cat not married or something? Seems like they're working over time to turn him into a playa'. Well, they would not want to waste time and ad space by talking about things like actual issues I guess...

Nickdfresh
10-27-2006, 04:42 PM
http://www.homevideos.com/freezeframes10/BlazeSaddle141.jpeg

New GOP Ad. (http://wilstar.com/midi/whitewomen.wav)

EAT MY ASSHOLE
10-27-2006, 07:40 PM
The ad also seems to have caused a stir with and offended our neighbors up north.

A spokesperson for the canadian Embassy said that canada's ambassador to the US spole with an official at the White House to officially express canada's displeasure with the line "

At one point during the ad an actor says "Canada can take care of North Korea. Thye're not busy." What the connectio is and what the intent is supposed to be is anyones guess. Idiotic. Vote Ford.

FORD
10-27-2006, 08:38 PM
Right wing groups are going out of their way to trash a candidate who votes their agenda 75% of the time anyway. I don't see how anyone could see any motive BUT racism in this, because they certainly shouldn't have a problem with Ford's politics.

EAT MY ASSHOLE
10-28-2006, 08:52 PM
Originally posted by FORD
Right wing groups are going out of their way to trash a candidate who votes their agenda 75% of the time anyway. I don't see how anyone could see any motive BUT racism in this, because they certainly shouldn't have a problem with Ford's politics.

Interetsingly, the RNC have produced ads claiming that Ford is pro-gay marriage.

He's voted aginst it. Twice.

(which actually draws my fears that the right is infiltrating the DLC. Again.)

Nickdfresh
10-28-2006, 09:09 PM
And shows what liars the "Christian" Republicans are...

Angel
10-29-2006, 03:36 PM
Originally posted by EAT MY ASSHOLE
The ad also seems to have caused a stir with and offended our neighbors up north.

A spokesperson for the canadian Embassy said that canada's ambassador to the US spole with an official at the White House to officially express canada's displeasure with the line "

At one point during the ad an actor says "Canada can take care of North Korea. Thye're not busy." What the connectio is and what the intent is supposed to be is anyones guess. Idiotic. Vote Ford.

I think the intent is the same shit I hear from many on these boards. That you guys are busy defending our asses. How many Americans are aware of the fact that Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan are at greater risk than US soldiers in Iraq? We're pretty much doing it all at the moment, some of course because of the fucking idiotic European members of NATO that are too chicken to send their soldiers into the most dangerous areas of the country.

EAT MY ASSHOLE
10-30-2006, 11:30 AM
I still say this is all canada's fault.

LoungeMachine
10-30-2006, 01:09 PM
I'm still waiting for the thread starter to weigh in with his own opnion of the op-ed's topic....

Not insult other posters.

Speak on the topic.

???