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Not Even Funerals Are Sacred to Liberals
GOPUSA/The Loft ^ | Feburary 8, 2006 | Bobby Eberle

Posted on 02/08/2006 9:20:47 AM PST by yoe

At the funeral of Coretta Scott King, President Bush said her dignity was a “daily rebuke to the pettiness and cruelty of segregation.” The president, with class and compassion, spoke at New Birth Missionary Church in Atlanta, Georgia, to honor the wife of civil rights icon Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Unfortunately, there were others who spoke and turned what should be a sacred ceremony into an opportunity to engage in left-wing attacks.

As noted in the story Political Posturing at King Funeral Draws Cheers, Jeers, liberal activists used the funeral of Coretta Scott King to demean President Bush and attack the Republican Party. In a setting that should have brought people together, so-called leaders such as former President Jimmy Carter and Rev. Joseph Lowery chose instead to engage in racial politics and left-wing talking points.

Stoking anger about the federal response to Hurricane Katrina, former President Carter said, “The struggle for equal rights is not over. We only have to recall the color of the faces of those in Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi, those who were most devastated by Katrina, to know that there are not yet equal opportunities for all Americans.”

Carter also alluded to President Bush’s current NSA surveillance program but noting the “’secret government wiretapping’ of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. many years ago.”

Carter failed to mention that the wiretapping of the Rev. King was ordered by then Attorney General Bobby Kennedy.

Rev. Joseph Lowery felt it appropriate to focus on Iraq during Mrs. King’s funeral. In his comments he said, “She deplored the terror inflicted by our smart bombs on missions way afar. We know now that there were no weapons of mass destruction over there, but Coretta knew, and we know, that there are weapons of misdirection right down here.”

The antics bring back memories of the funeral of the late Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone. During that funeral in 2002, which was held just prior to the November elections, Democrats such as Harry Reid turned the solemn event into a left-wing political rally.

Reid said during his comments, “The people of Minnesota are going to have to decide who they want to represent them in the United States Senate, whether they want someone who has the legacy of a Hubert Humphrey and a Paul Wellstone or whether they want somebody that is conducting polls while somebody is taken out of the woods, having been killed in a plane crash.”

President Bush left politics out of the ceremony and, instead, focused on honoring the Mrs. King for her strength and achievements.

In that life, Coretta Scott King knew danger. She knew injustice. She knew sudden and terrible grief. She also knew that her Redeemer lives. She trusted in the name above every name. And today we trust that our sister Coretta is on the other shore — at peace, at rest, at home.

There is a time and place for politics, and there is a time and place for honoring loved-ones as the pass from this world. Funerals are not political rallies, and the comments from the likes of Carter only provide further evidence that the left knows no bounds from which to attack.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: crass; posturing
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To: Digger
So why then if it's only extremist do they get 48% of the vote? The whole democrate party is a total loser & anyone who would place their vote with them is a loser.

Everday Democrats regularly write letters to the editor in my local newspaper. They hate Bush, and they're out of control.

21 posted on 02/08/2006 9:47:19 AM PST by Dr. Scarpetta (Democrats would vote against Jesus Christ for the Supreme Court.)
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To: stocksthatgoup
But many are now discovering the Republican Underground Railroad.

You mean more like this:


22 posted on 02/08/2006 9:50:47 AM PST by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: yoe
Rejoice!

Icons of the Left are dying!
Icons of the Left are all OLD!
Icons of the Left still have no IDEAS!
Icons of the Left are objects of derision!
Icons of the Left are going insane with frustration!
Icons of the Left will ALWAYS embarrass themselves in public!
Icons of the Left continue to expose themselves as corrupt feckless imbeciles...

Rejoice!!!!

Semper Fi
23 posted on 02/08/2006 9:54:17 AM PST by river rat (You may turn the other cheek, but I prefer to look into my enemy's vacant dead eyes.)
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To: yoe
Man, oh man ... if the black community could just understand how they are being used by the dems ... they would be very sad that they have fallen for it for so many years.
24 posted on 02/08/2006 9:55:53 AM PST by zeaal (SPREAD TRUTH!)
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To: RexBeach

Another book....awwww good, more toilet paper....


25 posted on 02/08/2006 9:57:40 AM PST by HarleyLady27 (My ? to libs: "Do they ever shut up on your planet?" "Grow your own DOPE: Plant a LIB!")
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To: beansox
Did Robert KKK Byrd attend? Did he wear his hood?

Sheets was heard saying ni****S on the Tony Snow Program, but no one asked him about {Not a chance son, he ain't a republican}.

26 posted on 02/08/2006 10:01:24 AM PST by USS Alaska (Nuke the terrorist savages - In Honor of Standing Wolf)
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To: yoe
I have been wondering about these sicko jerks politicizing funerals.

Do the rat speakers get together and work up their common talking points? Or, is it the inherent demonic mindset of the individuals which prompts them to sally forth with such like minded drivel?
27 posted on 02/08/2006 10:01:36 AM PST by Ursus arctos horribilis ("It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees!" Emiliano Zapata 1879-1919)
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To: yoe

The lefties dictating terms to the Democratic Party care about nothing but politics and getting their way. They care nothing for God, or a person's non-political thoughts.


28 posted on 02/08/2006 10:15:52 AM PST by Democratshavenobrains
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To: Ursus arctos horribilis

Only a Democrat could stand on a coffin and be even smaller that before.


29 posted on 02/08/2006 10:21:39 AM PST by talleyman (Kerry & the Surrender-Donkey Treasoncrats - trashing the troops for 40 years.)
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To: Lexington Green

"They dishonored Coretta.. crapped in her casket.. lowest of the low."

And those living on the plantation will vote for the RATS again in 2006.


30 posted on 02/08/2006 10:22:54 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz ("We don't need POLITICIANS...we need STATESMEN.")
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To: yoe

Wow. Juan Williams on Fox now and even he's saying Carter was over the line.


31 posted on 02/08/2006 10:23:59 AM PST by half-cajun
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To: scooter2
This is one of those times where I'm a bit out of step with the opinion of most posters here - sometimes, I think, we can get too partisan, and forget that a President has responsibilities that transcend day to day politics and political disagreements, and that these responsibilities sometimes need to be honored even if this makes a President and his supporters uncomfortable.

ML King was a Civil Rights Leader and and “anti-war” leader”, and toward the end of his life he had make it clear that he considered the latter as or more important than the former.

This was uncomfortable to many who – then as now - wish to embrace the former while ignoring or downplaying the latter, but his anti-war beliefs were an integral part of King’s life and King’s message, and it’s not surprising that one of his associates from that era would cite both parts of Kings message in a eulogy – in fact, it would have dishonest to Kings memory and his principles to soft-pedal this fact aspect of his life and work because prominent members of the audience might not have agreed with them.

The way I see it the President attended this event not in his role as representative of his party or philosophy, but rather as a sort of “official” representative of an American Public that’s deeply divided and conflicted about many of these same issues, he knew he was choosing to attend an event honoring individuals who espoused values and polices with which he in part disagrees; and he knew that those disagreements would likely be voiced.

In such a situation IMO a President's role is to honor by their presence that part with which they agree, and to react with the class and restraint befitting their role as President of all the people when the part with which they disagree is valorized. Which is exactly what this President did.

But this was an event honoring ML and Coretta Scott King, and as they attempted to honor King’s memory the speakers chosen by the Family owed no responsibility to tailor their comments to insure the comfort of anyone present – even the President of the United States – just as the eulogists at the Funeral of a Ronald Regan would have no responsibility to downplay his opinions and polices for the comfort of Democrats present.

32 posted on 02/08/2006 10:28:54 AM PST by M. Dodge Thomas (More of the same, only with more zeros at the end.)
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To: scooter2
This is one of those times where I'm a bit out of step with the opinion of most posters here - sometimes, I think, we can get too partisan, and forget that a President has responsibilities that transcend day to day politics and political disagreements, and that these responsibilities sometimes need to be honored even if this makes a President and his supporters uncomfortable.

ML King was a Civil Rights Leader and and “anti-war” leader”, and toward the end of his life he had make it clear that he considered the latter as or more important than the former.

This was uncomfortable to many who – then as now - wish to embrace the former while ignoring or downplaying the latter, but his anti-war beliefs were an integral part of King’s life and King’s message, and it’s not surprising that one of his associates from that era would cite both parts of Kings message in a eulogy – in fact, it would have dishonest to Kings memory and his principles to soft-pedal this fact aspect of his life and work because prominent members of the audience might not have agreed with them.

The way I see it the President attended this event not in his role as representative of his party or philosophy, but rather as a sort of “official” representative of an American Public that’s deeply divided and conflicted about many of these same issues, he knew he was choosing to attend an event honoring individuals who espoused values and polices with which he in part disagrees; and he knew that those disagreements would likely be voiced.

In such a situation IMO a President's role is to honor by their presence that part with which they agree, and to react with the class and restraint befitting their role as President of all the people when the part with which they disagree is valorized. Which is exactly what this President did.

But this was an event honoring ML and Coretta Scott King, and as they attempted to honor King’s memory the speakers chosen by the Family owed no responsibility to tailor their comments to insure the comfort of anyone present – even the President of the United States – just as the eulogists at the Funeral of a Ronald Regan would have no responsibility to downplay his opinions and polices for the comfort of Democrats present.

33 posted on 02/08/2006 10:28:57 AM PST by M. Dodge Thomas (More of the same, only with more zeros at the end.)
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To: M. Dodge Thomas

(Sorry for the double post - no idea why that happens sometimes....)


34 posted on 02/08/2006 10:30:00 AM PST by M. Dodge Thomas (More of the same, only with more zeros at the end.)
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To: yoe

When one has no spiritual sense a dead body is just so much trash.


35 posted on 02/08/2006 10:30:23 AM PST by null and void (If the Muslim world can be brought to its knees by 12 cartoons, let's give them a whole comic book!)
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To: M. Dodge Thomas

And do you think the slightly 'muted' reaction by the MSM would be the same TODAY........had two ex-REPUBLICAN Presidents and a Pat Robertson/Jerry Falwell type demeaned and belittled a sitting Democrat President present at a born again Christian funeral church service for RONALD REAGAN?


36 posted on 02/08/2006 10:41:35 AM PST by PISANO (We will not tire......We will not falter.......We will NOT FAIL!!! .........GW Bush [Oct 2001])
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To: yoe

The problem is that President Bush has never been a full-fledged racist who therefore can repudiate and be forgiven for a past history of pure evil against their neighbors of different color (like Jimmy Carter did in 1975, or Sheets Byrd, or even George Wallace--that's him above holding hands with Bush basher Joseph Lowery). Old racists, it seems, really appeal to the leftist DUmmies because saying "sorry" always forgives a wrong doing. I just wonder why Adolph Hitler didn't discover this magical political principal before the world came tumbling down on him in 1945 < /sarc >

37 posted on 02/08/2006 10:44:01 AM PST by meandog (For lurking Moo-slew-ems: Sahada: "That which Islam calls "Allah" is Satan and Mohammad is his pig!)
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To: M. Dodge Thomas
Politically, the President of the US, regardless who he was, had to attend.

Ethically, those giving eulogies should have made this an event to honor Mrs. King. and Mr. King. They deviated from that path for political purposes. Period.

I cannot imagine MLKing being a man who would tolerate the subjugation of a nation to the whim of a tyrant. In order to politicize the Iraq war, one has to ignore his crimes against innocent humans. Would King do that? No.

He had dreams that transcended politics. He used positives to make his point, not political attacks. His so-called followers do not have his spirit, his aims, his hopes, or his good nature.
38 posted on 02/08/2006 10:47:58 AM PST by Loud Mime (Republicans protect Americans from terrorists, Democrats protect terrorists from Americans)
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To: M. Dodge Thomas
he knew he was choosing to attend an event honoring individuals who espoused values and polices with which he in part disagrees; and he knew that those disagreements would likely be voiced.

He was not attending an "event". He was attending a funeral! It was about Coretta Scott King! Not about Katrina! Not about Wiretapping! Not about the Iraq war! Not about the poor! It was supposed to be to about her and to remember her and her contributions (whatever they were). This was disgusting as hell! How many funerals (other than Wellstones) do you know of where the person in the coffin was not the main reason of the event? Maybe I'm old fashioned. I just don't believe in speaking ill of the dead or ill of the person eulogizing her!

39 posted on 02/08/2006 10:48:17 AM PST by Bommer (Ted Kennedy - Fat, drunk and stupid is no way to go through life!)
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To: M. Dodge Thomas
...just as the eulogists at the Funeral of a Ronald Regan [sic] would have no responsibility to downplay his opinions and polices for the comfort of Democrats present.

And yet, one searches their memory in vain to recall any partisan political vitriol being spewed at Reagan's funeral.

Oh, that's right there was some vitriol. From Ron Reagan, Jr. who decided to seize the opportunity of a public gathering to celebrate the life of his father and take a cheap shot at President Bush's religious observance.

Look, those who want to claim some "middle ground" on this incident should save themselves the effort and embarrasment. The left acted like an ass at Wellstone's memorial and they did it again at Mrs. King's and there's no two ways about that. Regardless of speculation about where Martin would have stood on Iraq or Bush's domestic policies.

That this needs to be pointed out is another road sign on the highway to hell that our politics is clearly on.

40 posted on 02/08/2006 10:48:54 AM PST by borkrules
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