chonguey wrote:ozemc wrote:Interesting.
I'm a white man from the old south, and I could care less about the color of his skin.
I think he's divisive, inexperienced, and way too socialistic.
I look for what the candidate's position's are, not the color of his, or her, skin.
No patriotic American could hope for any more when others enter the ballot box. If you believe that way about Obama, I don't regret your lack of support. Policy is the driving force in politics, not race or other superficial issues.
You say Obama is divisive but seem to deny the possibility that this "divisiveness" might have anything to do with White Racism in the GOP strongholds of the south. It is true that he might be divisive in many ways. I'm just saying any idiot who allows his divisness opinion to be driven by Obama's skin is the true bigot in all this. If you are implying that millions of whites won't vote for blacks or vice a versa and only support their own skin tone is an idea as outdated as slavery or segregation.
Of course, racism exists. Always has, always will. Hopefully, people get past their own race issues and vote on the issues.
I'm just not sure how committed conservatives really are to the vision of the civil-rights movement when a large bit of anti-Obama rhetoric plays on the race issue, both subtly and overtly. I'd like to hear a conservative voice the opinion that it IS possible for an African American to win the presidency, that there is nothing about Obama as a man that should stop him from gaining the political support he so clearly is gaining.
Apparently, you didn't read the part of my post where it was the
Democrats that voted against the civil-rights legislation. It wouldn't have passed without Republican votes.
It was Abraham Lincoln, a Republican, that freed the slaves.
It was George Bush, a Republican, that appointed the 1st 2 black Secretaries of State.
It's really hard sometimes, I guess, when history doesn't fit your worldview.
If you don't think that's possible, then you don't share Obama's vision of the 21st Century, or mine either for that point.
No, I don't share his vision. I think it is bad for America.
From the Chicago Tribune a while back:
"U.S. Senate candidate Barack Obama suggested Friday that the United States one day might have to launch surgical missile strikes into Iran and Pakistan to keep extremists from getting control of nuclear bombs."
Does he not realize that Pakistan is an ally? And they have their
own nuclear bombs?
That was the move of a very inexperienced one-term Senator.
As far as the race issue from a conservative standpoint, I think it is extremely possible and, hopefully probable, that a black man (or woman) can win the Presidency.
In my particular case, I would vote for any of the following:
Colin Powell
Clarence Thomas
Condoleezza Rice
Of course, I would not vote for any of these:
Cynthia McKinney
Jesse Jackson
Al Sharpton
It has nothing to do with race, it is idealogy and issues.
EDITED TO ADD:
for what it's worth, I voted for Alan Keys in the last two elections, and probably will again, at least while I can, in the primaries. in my opinion, he is the smartest, most articulate, experienced candidate for President out there. Why don't the media say anything about the fact that the
Republicans are running a black candidate?
Would YOU vote for this black man for President?
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