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Sunday, April 27, 2008 12:00 AM

Why Jeremiah Wright is so wrong

I applaud Bill Moyers for being fair to Obama's pastor, but their PBS hour won't chase questions about his grim view of America. Plus: More Wright tapes emerge.

The letters thread is now closed.

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Sunday, April 27, 2008 07:25 PM

AKA Smith

You're absolutely right and I didn't mean to suggest that the lack of foresight/response was only due to having money and guardsmen in Iraq.

It's pretty sick, all right, and if anyone's interested in how some of the mega corps are profiting off of the disaster, check out out Naomi Klein's book Shock Doctrine...

Sunday, April 27, 2008 07:24 PM

REv. Wright speech at NAACP on CNN

I just heard the REV/ Jerimiah Wright speaking at the Detroit chapter of the NAACP. The entire speech is covered on CNN. It was a great speech. If anyone can snip this into something negative or say it bad for Obama or done for poltical purposes. I say they are very devious person.

Sunday, April 27, 2008 07:21 PM

@asher

Bill Moyers is a journalist, not Chris Wallace or George Stephanopoulis, you idiot.

Sunday, April 27, 2008 07:19 PM

Do Roland Martin and Soledad O'Brien work for the Obama campaign?

Or do they just want to?

Sunday, April 27, 2008 07:19 PM

"Finally he's saying...

...we can not be led by fear, fear can not govern our decisions."

--Michelle Obama

I, for one, reject the politics of fear.

I hope I'm not alone.

Sunday, April 27, 2008 07:18 PM

I'll Tell You Who's So Wrong

PBS for continuing to give Bill Moyers a job. You call that an interview? Where was the AIDS question, or the "why are you endorsing candidates from the pulpit and telling people to vote for Obama simply because his opponents have never been called a ______," or "where did you get the idea that the Middle East is in Africa when it's in Asia"... the guy doesn't even know what hermeneutic means. Moyers was pathetic. Wright came off very well, but anyone would when all they get asked is softballs.

Sunday, April 27, 2008 07:15 PM

problematic piece

This article was problematic on many levels, making it hard to narrow it down. But a couple points. In her update she notes that Obama agrees with her. Rhetorically, it sounds like Obama responded to the article afterwards (even though she did mention the date of the speech).

Next, Walsh probably accurately reflects how the MSM will react to the Wright interview: recycling the same complaints and worries about Obama. But what is more problematic is that Walsh laments that time is to short to begin a thoughtful national dialogue on race. But here she is with a national column and could have contributed to a better discussion on the issue.

FInally, its clear Walsh favors Clinton. Instead of revisiting the Wright issue, how about making a stronger case for Clinton or explaining the logic of some the more distasteful parts of her campaign. I personally have found her threats to bomb Iran troubling, her "misstatements" on her foreign policy experience worrisome, the strangely paternalistic gender dynamic in her ads a step backwards, her rejection of NAFTA hypocritical. I started out thinking she would not be bad, but these issues have caused me to question her leadership and character. Rather than beating down Obama, I would sincerely like to see Walsh produce a column dealing with these issues and why Clinton still deserves to be president without the distortions that Krugman resorts to. Maybe she could remind me of something I have forgotten.

Sunday, April 27, 2008 06:58 PM

My hats off to you chimpygo,

You make very good points. Just one quibble. I think part of the Bush Adminstration's failure where Katrina was concerned was due to a rather ugly lack of will. Probably partly for some pretty ugly reasons. Much of this is reflected in Barbara Bush's comment that (paraphrasing) those people were better off after Katrina due to government benefits than before. The inability of this arrogant privileged woman to understand that people are traumatized by being uprooted from their homes and their hometown galled me. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree.

There is simply no excuse for the travesty of the government's response to Katrina.

Sunday, April 27, 2008 06:55 PM

Disagree.

We are going to be known for what we do, not what we say or think about ourselves. We would like to think of ourselves as a generous, good people, but our history inconveniently disagrees. We did exterminate the Native Americans. We did enslave the blacks. We did support Suharto. We did support Saddam, before he became inconvenient. We did kill close to a million Vietnamese. We did subjugate the Filipinos for over 50 years. We did effect "regime-change" in many, many countries, often overthrowing democratically elected governments just because they did not toe our line.

We can't undo what we've done, and we can't live it down. But if we are going to claim to be redeemed, we had better show it. Because we still are at it in Iraq, aren't we? And the argument that most of us are not responsible for what our government and Mr. Bush did and does is disingenuous. We did re-elect George W. Bush, even after we knew his crimes (Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, and a never ending list of other crimes), didn't we? And don't bet that we won't elect John McCain for four more years of this crap. (Oh, yeah; he's going to be Hamas' worst nightmare. Here we go again.)

You think Wright is wrong? Let's prove him wrong! Let's get out of Iraq and pay them reparations for systematically destroying their country. Let's pay Nicaragua the reparations that are due them as a result of a World Court ruling, for ruining their country in yet another "regime-change" attempt. Let's broker a truly just peace in Palestine. Let's give back Guantanamo to Cuba, and free or try the prisoners we hold there. Let's revamp a criminal justice system that incarcerates a scandalous proportion of blacks, and maintains one of the largest prison population in the world, but does nothing about high placed criminals like Mr. Bush.

Let's put our money where our mouth is. Until we do we do not have the moral standing to judge the Rev. Wright.

Sunday, April 27, 2008 06:50 PM

burlydee really nailed it

All people have friends / pastors / acquaintances / coworkers who have weird ideas. And it sounds like Wright has indeed ignored, or partially ignored, the possibility of redemption in this country, as Obama put it. But it was Obama himself who most clearly enunciated the problem with Wrights' world view.

Obama hasn't distanced himself from the man, but has indeed distanced himself from his positions on America. I can't understand how Joan can even pretend to believe that Obama himself believes what Wright believes.

And this is why I'm so angered by so many of Clinton's supporters -- they *know* perfectly well that Wrights' positions have nothing to do with Obama's, but they keep asking him to explain them. Why the hell should he have to explain the positions of any friend of his who has the same color skin as he has? I don't have to explain the positions of every Jew, or white man who I know. I have Republican coworkers, should I leave my job because of it?

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