April 29, 2008
Obama's Un-Disownable Preacher of Hate
By
Michelle Malkin
Barack
Obama looked
pale and wan at what he called his "big press
conference" about the Rev. Jeremiah Wright on
Tuesday afternoon. Numb. Chastened. Defeated. Extolled
for his eloquence, Obama stuttered and stammered his way
through the question-and-answer session. It appeared he
was having an out-of-body experience.
Who
knew that the
greatest threat to his presidential campaign would
come from the preacher who married him, baptized him and
prayed with him?
Barack
Obama should have known. That's who. Take that judgment
and shove it on a pretty campaign poster.
"Yes, we can"?
Try "Yes, you should have."
For the
past 24 hours, Obama's campaign too slowly grappled with
how to handle the aftermath of Wright's whirlwind tour
of hatred this weekend—from Dallas, where he decried his
"public crucifixion," to Detroit, where he
entertained NAACP bigwigs with
impersonations of white people, mockeries of
classical music and "white" marching bands, and
lectures on racial brain theories, to the National Press
Club, where he preened, strutted and head-wagged his way
through an hour of bitter black liberation theologizing.
At
first, Obama downplayed Wright's public appearances. But
Obama now tells us he had to wait 24 hours to convene a
press conference to denounce Wright's National Press
Club speech because he "hadn't seen it." After
all this time on the campaign trail, we're back to the
Obama-as-clueless-naïf narrative again. When he finally
did view the Washington speech, Obama explained, he was
"shocked" and "outraged" and "saddened"
because "the person I saw was not the person that I'd
come to know over 20 years."
What a
load of pure unadulterated horse manure. Anyone with
eyes can see that
Wright's performances are finely honed, time-tested
acts. His anti-white, anti-American, "imperialist"-bashing
shtick was not developed overnight or over the past few
years. He's been peddling AIDS conspiracies for decades.
He's been grievance-mongering about
slavery for decades. He's been flirting with the
Nation of Islam, which provided security for his
speeches, for decades. He's been a
shouting left-wing radical for decades.
Obama's
best-selling
Audacity of Hope is named after the
first sermon of Wright's that he heard—decades
ago—in which the pastor of racial resentment inveighed
against an environment "where white folks' greed runs
a world in need,
apartheid in
one hemisphere, apathy in another hemisphere."
Yet, only now has Obama concluded that Wright's sermons
are "a bunch of rants that aren't grounded in truth."
Welcome
to the Jive Talk Express.
A
reader of mine who is a clergyman e-mailed after Obama's
press conference:
"As a pastor, I have this take: It is inconceivable that
Obama had no knowledge of Wright's views after 20 years
as a member of that church. As a pastor, my heart-held,
deepest beliefs and passions cannot be silenced. It is
what I am. If I were given
a microphone at the National Press Club, I would not
speak on something that I had guardedly kept secret for
most of my life. No, I would go to my main point, the
center of my ministry, the core of my passion, to speak
truth as I know it to be. How can Obama actually claim
that this is news from his pastor? His mailman, butcher
or plumber? No problem. His pastor? No way!"
It's
not Wright who has changed his loony tune.
It was
just last year that Obama was telling the Chicago
Tribune that Wright was his sounding board for
truth: "What I value most about Pastor Wright is not
his day-to-day political advice. He's much more of a
sounding board for me to make sure that I am
speaking as truthfully about what I believe as possible
and that I'm not losing myself in some of the hype and
hoopla and stress that's involved in national politics."[REV.
JEREMIAH A. WRIGHT, JR.: Pastor inspires Obama's
'audacity', By Manya A. Brachear, January 21,
2007]
It was
just this March, in his
Philadelphia racial reconciliation speech, that
Obama was
urging us not to dismiss Wright as a "crank or a
demagogue" and protesting that he could "no more
disown him than I can disown the black community."
Now,
realizing how gravely his self-serving association with
Wright has
wounded his campaign, Obama himself has attempted to
do both those things—and expects the American public to
believe him when he weakly and belatedly asserts that
"when I say I find [Wright's] statements
appalling, I mean it."
As
those of us with
non-European brains might put it: You be trippin',
Barry.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."