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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

To the superdelegates, in case you haven't figured it out yet

Many blacks are aghast that their extraordinary support of Bill Clinton in the past would be repaid by the Clintons with racial innuendo (in a Times/CBS News poll after the salacious 1998 Starr report was released, his unfavorable rating among whites climbed to 52 percent; among blacks it was only 10 percent). Some who stood by him then now apparently feel betrayed.

A Blacklash?
By CHARLES BLOW

Since January, the Clintons have pummeled Barack Obama with racially tinged comments and questions about his character.

Hillary Clinton has questioned why he didn’t walk out on the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr.; why he “denounced” but didn’t “reject” Louis Farrakhan; and whether he is too chummy with the former radical Bill Ayers. She chastised his characterization of white working-class voters as being highfalutin and chided him for not agreeing to a street-fight-style debate.

Bill Clinton has called Obama’s stance on the war a fairy tale, dismissed an early primary win as mere Jesse Jackson redux and recently claimed that Obama was playing the race card against him. Some of this is valid, the result of Obama’s own missteps, but some of it is baffling.

The rhetoric appears to be trafficking in old fears and historic stereotypes. The unspoken (and confusing) characterization of Obama is that he’s militant yet cowardly; uppity yet too cool for school.

The question is this: Have white Democrats soured on Obama? Apparently not. Although his unfavorable rating from the group is up five percentage points since last summer in polls conducted by The New York Times and CBS News, his favorable rating is up just as much.

On the other hand, black Democrats’ opinion of Hillary Clinton has deteriorated substantially (her favorable rating among them is down 36 percentage points over the same period).

While a favorable opinion doesn’t necessarily translate into a vote, this should still give the Clintons (and the superdelegates) pause. Electability cuts both ways.

If Hillary Clinton should defy the odds (and the current math) and secure the nomination, she would be hard-pressed to defeat John McCain without the enthusiastic support of black voters, stalwarts of the Democratic base.

Getting that support could now be tricky.

Many blacks are aghast that their extraordinary support of Bill Clinton in the past would be repaid by the Clintons with racial innuendo (in a Times/CBS News poll after the salacious 1998 Starr report was released, his unfavorable rating among whites climbed to 52 percent; among blacks it was only 10 percent). Some who stood by him then now apparently feel betrayed.

It is no wonder then that McCain is making a place at the table for possible defectors, however unlikely. He began his “forgotten places” tour in Alabama’s Black Belt by literally dancing into the arms of an elderly black woman as she sang the gospel hymn “Do, Lord, Remember Me.”

Remember that moment if you ever see a bumper sticker that reads, “Repulsed into voting Republican.”

I just came to tell you about this.

A blogger from The Field calls it Operation Anti-Chaos

http://ruralvotes.com/thefield/?p=1144

Operation Anti-Chaos: The Narrative on 'White Voters' is FICTION

I'm trusting you, rik.

I'm trusting you, rik.

P6 and I were just

P6 and I were just discussing Francis Holland yesterday. Cool I am not surprised and P6 probably isn't, either. 

We need to be clear about this notion of "disrespect." Hillary Clinton's criticism of Obama's position on various policy issues is not a sign of disrespect. Hillary Clinton declaring, for example, that she and John McCain are qualified to be commander-in-chief (keep in mind this title only refers to the president's role vis-a-vis the military, not the sovereign civilian people of the United States) but Obama is not is profoundly disrespectful.  

 

"If there are three people in a room, one of them is probably a spy." 

Look, I can only take Francis' devolution away from Hillpatine

at his word. He hasn't written a positive word about her since Billy Shaheen in December. If he's still in the tank for her, he's going about it oddly, considering that he's been blistering towards her. He's not Earl Ofari Hutchinson, that's for damn sure, who, by the way, attacks Color of Change in his latest posting.

 

 

Point taken. That's two

Point taken.

That's two points I've acknowledged without reservation in the last 15 minutes. I must be getting soft. 

Barack campaigning his heart out for Hillary?

I truly fear the prospect of Mr. Obama being forced to campaign for Mrs. Clinton, I can't imagine he'd be enthusiastic about it. The fear is that Mr. Obama will be able to influence more than enough black people to vote for Hillary, and that she'd win. Don't forget the "spadework" remark either. The evidence is overwhelming. This kind of conduct cannot be rewarded.

So sall, yu think Hillary

So sall, you think Hillary will be given the Democratic nomination?

sall, spadework has been duly noted

at the ClintonAttacksObama Wiki Incident Page.

sall wants you to vote for

sall wants you to vote for McCain.

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