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Political Threads This section is for Political Threads - Enter at your own risk. If you say you don't want to see what someone posts - don't read it :hihi: |
01-19-2010, 11:29 AM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 20,441
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EarnedStripes44
Harry Reid could have articulated his point better. What a lot of critics are misundestanding is that it's not so much what is said, but how it's said. .
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Funny, because when Trent Lott and Imus said something racially stupid, no one talked about how it was said, or the context in which it was said. All anybody talked about was specifically what was said.
Democrats, it seems, can say racist things and use "context" as a shield from ramifications. Conservatives don't seem to be given that courtesy.
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01-19-2010, 09:34 PM
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#2
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: North Cambridge, MA
Posts: 1,358
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim in CT
Funny, because when Trent Lott and Imus said something racially stupid, no one talked about how it was said, or the context in which it was said. All anybody talked about was specifically what was said.
Democrats, it seems, can say racist things and use "context" as a shield from ramifications. Conservatives don't seem to be given that courtesy.
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I don't know that Trent Lott's endorsement that segregation would have served the country better is exactly the same thing. What are you asking that I read from that? It's a fairly racist thing to say, but he's from Mississippi with all its historically racial peculiarities. And referring to any woman as ho does not need context, its just disrespectful - black rapper or white talk show radio host.
Harry Reid certainly said something "racially stupid" and demeaning. And he apologized, just like Imus and Lott. But it does not change that the most successful national black politicians, are those that have command over their "blackness". They can turn it off, and then turn it on. Obama has a pretty good handle over this. In colonial New Orleans, light skinned blacks were practically treated as a separate class from the thousands of black Africans arriving on auction blocks. Light skinned blacks, on the plantation house, during those days, were the buffer between masters and black field hand masses. It was in the master's security interest to have a light skinned black who could cross that line into the field and, if not carry out the master's will, inform him of the goings on. There are reams of literature on this subject. Perhaps this will shed a little light on the historical appeal of the "light-skinned negro."
And Harry Reid, in all his chump splendor, recognizes this, even if it is through his own datedly racist veil. Personally, I'd like to see him go.
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01-20-2010, 06:18 AM
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 12,632
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[QUOTE=EarnedStripes44;740533]
But it does not change that the most successful national black politicians, are those that have command over their "blackness". They can turn it off, and then turn it on. Obama has a pretty good handle over this. In colonial New Orleans, light skinned blacks were practically treated as a separate class from the thousands of black Africans arriving on auction blocks. Light skinned blacks, on the plantation house, during those days, were the buffer between masters and black field hand masses. It was in the master's security interest to have a light skinned black who could cross that line into the field and, if not carry out the master's will, inform him of the goings on. There are reams of literature on this subject. Perhaps this will shed a little light on the historical appeal of the "light-skinned negro."
QUOTE]
WOW, obsessed with color right down to the tint....geez...this is disturbing...we've gone from salvery...to...dreams of a color blind society.... to...success is determined(historically proven) by shades of black supposedly.....?????
so if we were to pay out reparations, I imagine darker folk would be entitled to larger checks than the lighter folk?...right? someone will need to invent a black-o-meter to make this fair...I know...Al Gore...he's a World-Class Inventor
you claim that what Harry said was "racially stupid" and then proceed to claim that it is historically accurate...
which is it?? stupid or accurate?
Last edited by scottw; 01-20-2010 at 07:15 AM..
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01-20-2010, 02:26 PM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Mansfield, MA
Posts: 5,238
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim in CT
Funny, because when Trent Lott and Imus said something racially stupid, no one talked about how it was said, or the context in which it was said. All anybody talked about was specifically what was said.
Democrats, it seems, can say racist things and use "context" as a shield from ramifications. Conservatives don't seem to be given that courtesy.
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Public forum vs. private conversation.
Nappy-headed hoes vs. older person saying negro
Publicly supporting a racial segregationist vs. stating his race will be an advantage
Racist vs. Realist
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01-20-2010, 03:24 PM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnyD
Public forum vs. private conversation.
Private conversations tend to reveal who one is more than do public forums.
Nappy-headed hoes vs. older person saying negro
More or less stupid joke vs. insensitive comment.
Publicly supporting a racial segregationist vs. stating his race will be an advantage
Racist vs. Realist
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Harry Reid saluted Trent Lott when the latter retired by saying "I am proud to have worked side-by-side with such a distinguished public servant as Trent Lott".
If Lott's salutation of Thurmond at the latter's 100th birthday party makes him a racist, does Reid's salute to Lott make Reid a racist?
And is racism a matter of degree--a little bit is okay, just don't go too far?
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