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It's Not Race, It's Arugula -- Obama's real electoral challenge.
Weekly Standard ^ | 06/23/2008 | Noemie Emery

Posted on 06/14/2008 8:55:10 PM PDT by Ooh-Ah

On the way to his rendezvous with destiny, Barack Obama consistently lost white voters, especially of the middle and working classes, to Hillary Clinton--voters variously known as Appalachians or Reagan Democrats, rural voters and white ethnics in the industrial states. Because of this, he lost most of the big swing states that a Democrat needs--Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia (which would have made Gore president in 2000 had he won there), that last by a staggering 41 points. Heading into the general election, in which the weight of the black vote will shrink as compared to its importance in the Democratic primaries, this weakness emerged as the prime threat to his promising candidacy and gave birth to two schools of thought on its cause.

School number one thinks it reflects racial hostility that Obama's opponents--first Hillary Clinton and now John McCain and the Republican party--are doing their best to rub raw. This is a case that Democrats have been making for the past 30-plus years, and its most recent airing came in a long piece in the May 19 Newsweek by Evan Thomas and Richard Wolffe. "The real test is yet to come," they warned. "The Republican Party has been successfully scaring voters since 1968, when Richard Nixon built a Silent Majority out of lower-and-middle-class folks frightened or disturbed by hippies and student radicals and blacks rioting. The 2008 race may turn on which party will win the lower and middle-class whites in industrial and border states--the Democrats' base from the New Deal to the 1960s, but 'Reagan Democrats' in most presidential elections since then. It is a sure bet that the GOP will try to paint Obama as 'the other'--as a haughty black intellectual who has Muslim roots."

In this view--let us call it the Newsweek Doctrine--race is the issue, and the big years in history were 1964 and 1965, when Lyndon B. Johnson did the Right Thing, signing the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts, and consigning his party to electoral darkness by losing the South for the next several eons. By these lights, bigotry and fear are the main factors, and all the others are thinly masked surrogates for them. If Obama loses, this will be the excuse of the campaign and of the press that supports it.

The second school of thought admits the presence of bias as a contributing factor, but not the most important one. The real cause, it thinks, is a cultural divide among whites that splits them on matters of worldview and attitude into hostile and competing camps. Let us call this rival approach the Barone Manifesto, after its author, political analyst Michael Barone, who crunched the poll numbers for Obama's primary battles with Hillary Clinton and discovered that while the former did exceedingly well with white voters in university towns and state capitals, he did poorly almost everywhere else. From this, Barone broke the electorate down into two large divisions--academics and state employees who live in these places, whom he calls Academicians, and Jacksonians, who live elsewhere, especially in the regions close to the Appalachian mountains.

While the term Academician explains itself, Jacksonian comes from Andrew Jackson, the first of the Democrats' warrior heroes (with an echo perhaps of Senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson, who seems now to have been one of the last). The Barone view is a close cousin to that of political reporter Ronald Brownstein, who identified a split in the Democratic party's candidates between those he described as "warriors" and "priests." In this reading of history, the critical year would be 1968, when the Democrats splintered on crime and security issues, and afterwards became the party of peace (and/or appeasement), of moral equivalence, and of aversion to force. In this reading, the Jacksonians or warriors reject Obama less because he is black than because he is a priest or academician, and they see him as "the other" not because of his name or his background but because of his ideas. "Academics and public employees .  .  . love the arts of peace and hate the demands of war," Barone tells us. "Jacksonians, in contrast, place a high value on the virtues of the warrior, and little value on the work of academics and public employees. They have, in historian David Hackett Fischer's phrase, a notion of natural liberty: People should be allowed to do what they want, subject to the demands of honor. If someone infringes on that liberty, beware."

The divisions between these two classes tend to be deep. Academicians traffic in words and abstractions, and admire those who do likewise. Jacksonians prefer men of action, whose achievements are tangible. Academicians love nuance, Jacksonians clarity; academicians love fairness, Jacksonians justice; academicians dislike force and think it is vulgar; Jacksonians admire it, when justly applied. Each side tends to look down on the other, though academicians do it with much more intensity: Jacksonians think academicians are inconsequential, while academicians think that Jacksonians are beneath their contempt. The academicians' theme songs are "Kumbaya" and "Imagine," while Jacksonians prefer Toby Keith:

Well, a man come on the 6 o'clock news Said somebody's been shot, somebody's been abused Somebody blew up a building, Somebody stole a car, Somebody got away, Somebody didn't get too far, Yeah, they didn't get too far Justice is the one thing you should always find. You got to saddle up your boys, You got to draw a hard line. When the gun smoke settles, we'll sing a victory tune, We'll all meet back at the local saloon. We'll raise up our glasses against evil forces, Singing "Whiskey for my men, beer for my horses."

Academicians don't think "evil forces" exist, and if they did, they would want to talk to them. This, and not color, seems to be the divide.

In their glory days (i.e., when they had a semi-permanent lease on the White House), the Democrats frequently sported a veneer of priesthood, but it covered a Jacksonian heart. In the beginning, Woodrow Wilson was "too proud to fight," a stance that enraged Franklin (and Theodore) Roosevelt, but in the end Wilson led his country into world leadership, and into the "war to end wars." FDR in his turn was a relentless hot warrior. Harry S. Truman--a Jacksonian, if ever there was one--bombed Japan back into the Stone Age and later drew two lines in the sand (in Berlin and Korea) against Communist powers, moves fervently backed by Congressman Kennedy, who later became JFK. Kennedy, a millionaire's son who took to the great country houses of England like a duck takes to water, scored his breakthrough primary win in, yes, West Virginia, when he sent Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. into the state to contrast his war record--and that of his brother, who died on a suicide mission--with Hubert Humphrey's draft deferment during World War II. Kennedy had no trouble in winning Jacksonians. Roosevelt and Kennedy were children of privilege who had passed through prep schools and Harvard but stayed in touch with their warrior side. In fact, so completely were Democrats linked to saber-rattling and assertion of power that as late as the 1976 election Bob Dole, a wounded World War II combat veteran, was still complaining of "Democrat wars."

It was when they lost their warrior edge that Democrats started losing the White House, winning only in unusual circumstances such as the Watergate scandal or in that brief window in history (from the fall of the Berlin Wall through September 11) when foreign threats had faded out of the picture. Reagan Democrats did resent post-1968 liberal activism--and racial preferences and busing much more than the original Civil Rights measures--but they also were drawn to the muscular foreign policy, democracy promotion, and unabashed patriotism of the FDR-HST-JFK line. When these were picked up by Ronald Reagan--who was himself an FDR fan and the very prototype of the Reagan Democrat--they quite willingly followed his lead into his new political bailiwick. When academicians insist that Republicans use fears about race and other cultural flashpoints to blind middle and lower class voters to what they call their "real interests," they forget that to most voters defense and security are often the most "real" issue of them all.

This neglect often leads to a reading of history that aligns rather poorly with the facts. It is true that Johnson lost the South in 1964 to the Civil Rights issue, but he also won almost everything else on the table. And when the Democrats fell apart in the 1968 cycle, it owed more to Vietnam and rioting students than anything else. They lost again four years later on "acid, amnesty, and abortion," but also through an isolationist nominee who ran on a platform of nonintervention and retreat in foreign affairs. Democrats won both the South and the White House in 1976 with a southern governor known as an integrationist but also as a social conservative and an ex-naval officer--a résumé that later looked misleading after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, and Iran took over the American Embassy with shockingly little resistance on his part. After 1968, Democrats would win and lose for a number of reasons, none of which seemed to touch on their civil rights stances, which did not seem to vary. On the other hand, it appears indisputable that, both before and after the Civil Rights battles, Democrats lost when they put up an anti-Jacksonian, who seemed both weak and too wordy in foreign affairs.

Adlai Stevenson, the Democrats' first major anti-Jacksonian, lost twice by large margins to General Eisenhower, the man who freed Europe. Following him, academicians such as Gary Hart, Bill Bradley, and "Clean Gene" McCarthy couldn't even get nominated, and the Massachusetts duo of Michael Dukakis and John Kerry--who in 1983 ran and served on the same ticket--lost to two Texans named Bush. Kerry, a decorated veteran of the Vietnam war, lost partly because other vets ran ads that showed him testifying before Congress as a shaggy-haired antiwar activist. Dukakis sealed his fate in the second presidential debate when, asked if he would support the death penalty if his own wife had been raped and murdered, he bloodlessly said no, and talked about his antidrug program. No less Jacksonian answer has ever been uttered.

As a political type, Barack Obama is not Middle America's idea of a "black" candidate, wholly unlike Al Sharpton (who ran briefly in 2004) or a demagogue such as Jesse Jackson, who put the fear of God into Democratic leaders when he won the Michigan caucuses in 1988. But he is beyond doubt the Academician Incarnate, heir to all of the (white) priests before him. Even some of his more notable missteps recall the gaffes that they made in the past. His complaint in Iowa about the high price of arugula at Whole Foods (an expensive grocery chain much favored by trendies) recalled Michael Dukakis's advice to Iowa farmers that they grow Belgian endive; his faux pas at a fundraiser at a millionaire's pad in San Francisco about small town residents of Pennsylvania who cling to God and guns out of sheer desperation recalled the "joke" told by Gary Hart in the 1984 cycle about toxic wastes in New Jersey while at a millionaire's pad in L.A. "Priests .  .  . write books and sometimes verse," according to Brownstein, and indeed, Obama wrote two of them. "They observe the campaign's hurly-burly through a filter of cool, witty detachment. Their campaigns become crusades, fueled as much by an inchoate longing for a 'new politics' as tangible demands for new policies," and indeed, Obama's main theme, which has listeners swooning, is an inchoate though inspiring mantra of "change." "Obama is not at all a warrior, and is something of an academic," writes Barone:

He is all college campus and not at all boot camp. He has campaigned consistently as an opponent of military action in Iraq. His standard campaign statements on Iraq seem to suggest that all honor should go to the opponents of the war and none to the brave men and women who have waged it. He clearly lacks the military expertise of John McCain or Hillary Clinton, both diligent members of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Like another eloquent little-known Illinois politician who emerged suddenly as an attractive presidential candidate, Adlai Stevenson, he seems more comfortable with the language of diplomacy and negotiation than with the words of war. Like Stevenson, he speaks fluently and often eloquently but does not exude a sense of command. He is an interlocutor, not a fighter. His habit of stating his opponents' arguments fairly and sometimes more persuasively than they do themselves has been a political asset among his peers and press but not among Jacksonians, who are more interested in defeating than in understanding their enemies.
And he is up against John McCain, a true Jacksonian if ever there was one. Of course, he dispatched another Jacksonian in Hillary Clinton, who, against all expectations, emerged as a lower-to-middle-class spokesman, and all-purpose warrior queen. As a feminist and graduate of Wellesley and Yale, she was an unlikely choice to appeal to Jacksonians, but she won them over by her grit and tenacity and her stubborn refusal to give in to pressure. Like McCain, she gave the impression that she would never stop fighting, while Obama, as Barone puts it, gave "the impression, through his demeanor and through his statements that he would never start." Obama may be the first nonwhite with a serious chance of reaching the White House, but he is also the latest in a long line of anti-Jacksonians who have tried, and have failed, to win the office of president. The second obstacle may prove more formidable than the first.

In 1984 and 1988, Jesse Jackson, the first black candidate to compete seriously in the national primaries, won the black vote in them by huge nine-to-one margins, but carried virtually nobody else. Historically, priest-like white candidates win the upscale white vote and the students, but tend to do poorly elsewhere. As the first black candidate to run on the wine track, Barack Obama combines these two demographics, though to his credit his appeal is nonracial, and he did not begin to win large tracts of black voters until after taking lily-white Iowa almost by storm. Nonetheless, it is the addition of the blacks to the students and upper-scale whites that allowed him to run better than the Harts and the Bradleys, and his share of the white vote--and his failings within it--tracked largely with theirs. Does this mean that Jacksonian voters are holding Obama's race and his background against him? It's hard to say that, as his problems among them are no worse than those of other, white, academicians in the past. Priests such as Hart, Tsongas, and Bradley, Brownstein notes, "run better among voters with college degrees run well in the Northwest, the West Coast, and portions of the upper Midwest where wine track voters congregate. Warriors usually thrive in interior states such as Ohio, Missouri, or Tennessee, where college graduates constitute 40 percent or less of the Democratic electorate."

This is the pattern Barone found in Obama's battles with Clinton. "When I first noticed Obama's weak showings among Appalachians, I chalked them up, as many in the press will be inclined to do, to an antipathy to blacks," Barone allowed. But then he went back and compared the results from the Virginia primary race on February 12, with those in the gubernatorial election of 1989, in which Democrat Douglas Wilder defeated Republican Marshall Coleman to become the country's first black governor since Reconstruction. In the Appalachian precincts of western Virginia--which border both Kentucky and West Virginia--Wilder, a moderate Democrat with an air of authority, greatly outpolled Obama everywhere in the region. "Jacksonians in southwest Virginia showed no aversion to Wilder. Take Buchanan County, which runs along both West Virginia and Kentucky. In 1989, it voted 59 percent to 41 percent for Wilder." In February 2008, it voted for Clinton over Obama by 90 to 9. "Wilder lost what is now the Ninth Congressional District (long known as the Fighting Ninth) by a 53-percent-to-47-percent margin. But that is far less than the 59-percent-to-39-percent margin by which George W. Bush beat John Kerry in the district in November 2004 or the 65-percent-to-33-percent margin by which Clinton beat Obama there in February 2008. Jacksonians may reject certain kinds of candidates, but not because they're black," Barone concluded. "A black candidate who will join them in fighting against attacks on their family or their country is all right with them." And these results in general elections included Republicans and independents, who are more likely to vote against liberals, which makes the anti-Obama results from the Democratic primary voters--who were presumably not moved by the putative attack machine of conservative bigots--all the more striking. Obama's problem may be less that he is running while black than that he is running to be the first Academician elected as president, a category that is zero for eight in national contests thus far. He is peering into an abyss not of bias, but a large Jackson Hole of rejection by warrior voters. And this problem is more than skin deep.

Complicating all this are the disparate facts that the voters most imbued with warrior instincts--southerners, rural voters, and many white ethnics--are those most suspected (by Newsweek) of harboring deep racial bias, and that the first credible black candidate to be running for president of the world's greatest power is also one of the least Jacksonian candidates who ever drew breath. The interesting counterexample of course would be to see a black Jacksonian run against a white Academician, and if Colin Powell had chosen to challenge Bill Clinton in 1996, we might have seen this take place. (Whether the black warrior could have been nominated is another whole story, as the centrism that would have made him electable would have given rise to hysterics in the party's activist base.) The charming, war-tested moderate Powell would have presented a fair test of whether an ultra-acceptable black candidate could have been undermined by prejudice. The charming, untested, and left wing Obama will not.

Now let us imagine a different candidate, one who looks like Barack Obama, with the same mixed-race, international background, even the same middle name. But this time, he is Colonel Obama, a veteran of the war in Iraq, a kick-ass Marine with a "take no prisoners" attitude, who vows to follow Osama bin Laden to the outskirts of Hell. He comes from the culture of the military (the most color blind and merit-based in the country), and not the rarefied air of Hyde Park. He goes to a church with a mixed-race congregation and a rational preacher. He has never met Bill Ayers, and if he did he would flatten him. He thinks arugula is a town near Bogota and has Toby Keith on his favorites list. Would he strike no chords at all in Jacksonian country? Does anyone think he would lose 90 to 9 in Buchanan County? Or lose West Virginia by 41 points? For those Jacksonians who would be fine with a black man in the White House (not as tiny a group as Newsweek thinks), Colonel Obama is the one we are waiting for. When we will get him is anyone's guess.

Noemie Emery, a WEEKLY STANDARD contributing editor, is author most recently of Great Expectations: The Troubled Lives of Political Families.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2008; allenwest; arugula; blackconservatives; electionpresident; elections; obama
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1 posted on 06/14/2008 9:08:07 PM PDT by Ooh-Ah
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To: Ooh-Ah

Who will get the disenfranchised bitter religious vote?


2 posted on 06/14/2008 9:11:10 PM PDT by BipolarBob (Yes I backed over the vampire but I swear I didn't see it in my rearview mirror.)
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To: Ooh-Ah
"It is a sure bet that the GOP will try to paint Obama as 'the other'--as a haughty black intellectual who has Muslim roots."

No. As a Radical Leftist Nutcase who has Muslim roots--and they won't have to "paint" him as one--it's what he is.

3 posted on 06/14/2008 9:15:45 PM PDT by Savage Beast (VOTE REPUBLICAN! = VOTE ANTI-DEMOCRAT!)
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To: Ooh-Ah

Oh for heaven’s sake, nobody thinks of Hussein as a “haughty intellectual.”

You could not be more of an Obama hater than I am, and I can’t stand how PHONY he is. He’s an actor, an inexperienced fraud who has never sat down in an office he was elected to and actually done anything whatsoever, much less anything of note.

Not an intellectual, and not haughty. Arrogant, yes. Not so grand as “haughty.”And he’s a MARXIST. Which makes him STUPID.

Add it up. He’s an arrogant stupid Marxist phony.

And I assure you, I eat far more arugula than he does.


4 posted on 06/14/2008 9:17:40 PM PDT by Veto! (Opinions freely dispensed as advice)
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To: BipolarBob

Mind you I don’t know whether you’ve really considered the advantages of owning a really fine set of modern arugulas.


5 posted on 06/14/2008 9:17:41 PM PDT by AZLiberty (President Fred -- I still like the sound of it.)
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To: Ooh-Ah
Without question, this is the best analysis of the Obama dynamic within the Democratic race and, more importantly, the general election.

The libs in the MSM will cry racism all the way to the ballot box, but pigmentation has nothing to do with it.

6 posted on 06/14/2008 9:21:53 PM PDT by TexasNative2000 (Is this tagline governed by McCain-Feingold?)
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To: Ooh-Ah
"I'll have them n-----s voting Democratic for the next two hundred years."
Democrat President Lyndon Johnson
(Aboard Air Force One)
“Inside the White House” by Ronald Kessler.
Times of London, July 13, 2000.

7 posted on 06/14/2008 9:24:15 PM PDT by Savage Beast (VOTE REPUBLICAN! = VOTE ANTI-DEMOCRAT!)
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To: Veto!
nobody thinks of Hussein as a “haughty intellectual.”

You might want to talk to some people who voted for him. That "above it all" mentality, which looks down at the unwashed masses with pity, is exactly what the libs love about him. (That and the fact that they get to assuage their white guilt.)

8 posted on 06/14/2008 9:24:36 PM PDT by TexasNative2000 (Is this tagline governed by McCain-Feingold?)
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To: the anti-liberal
As you posted on Allen West's response to: Black Conservatives Conflicted on Obama Campaign:

At Michelle Malkin:

It’s not race, it’s arugula

By see-dubya  •  June 14, 2008 07:50 AM

The Weekly Standard’s Noemie Emery disputes the media’s facile, predictable racial interpretation of Obama’s poor showing in Appalachia. It’s not because of race, but rather reflects a deep national divide between action-oriented Jacksonians versus clerical, paper-pushing Brahmins:

Let us call this rival approach the Barone Manifesto, after its author, political analyst Michael Barone, who crunched the poll numbers for Obama’s primary battles with Hillary Clinton and discovered that while the former did exceedingly well with white voters in university towns and state capitals, he did poorly almost everywhere else. From this, Barone broke the electorate down into two large divisions–academics and state employees who live in these places, whom he calls Academicians, and Jacksonians, who live elsewhere, especially in the regions close to the Appalachian mountains.

Yep, that’s it. Academicians eat arugula, and worry about its price at Whole Foods. Jacksonians don’t.

There’s nothing wrong with being an academician or eating arugula (hey, I do), you’re just going to have a hard time selling yourself to Jacksonian America as the kind of bold leader they’re looking for. Even if you were the bestest “community activist” in all of Chicago.

Emery’s last paragraph is interesting:

Now let us imagine a different candidate, one who looks like Barack Obama, with the same mixed-race, international background, even the same middle name. But this time, he is Colonel Obama, a veteran of the war in Iraq, a kick-ass Marine with a “take no prisoners” attitude, who vows to follow Osama bin Laden to the outskirts of Hell. He comes from the culture of the military (the most color blind and merit-based in the country), and not the rarefied air of Hyde Park. He goes to a church with a mixed-race congregation and a rational preacher. He has never met Bill Ayers, and if he did he would flatten him. He thinks arugula is a town near Bogota and has Toby Keith on his favorites list. Would he strike no chords at all in Jacksonian country? Does anyone think he would lose 90 to 9 in Buchanan County? Or lose West Virginia by 41 points? For those Jacksonians who would be fine with a black man in the White House (not as tiny a group as Newsweek thinks), Colonel Obama is the one we are waiting for. When we will get him is anyone’s guess.

I don’t know about Colonel Obama, but there’s one politician on the scene this year running for Congress in Florida who completes Emery’s List (heh) pretty nicely: Lt. Col. Allen West. What an amazing biography– and he’s even against amnesty:

In my time spent in Afghanistan I saw first-hand how an unprotected border can destabilize an entire country. All you hear coming out of Washington is foolish rhetoric about writing new laws and creating new government programs that sound good on paper but do nothing to solve the problem. Our border patrol officers put their lives on the line every day protecting our borders and engaging in high-powered gun battles. The duties they perform go beyond those of an immigration official. They are defending our borders and it is time we equip them with the tools they need to secure our border. As your congressman, I will push to move the Border Patrol out of the INS and into the Department of Defense. This is not a social issue; this is a national security issue.

Furthermore, something tells me LTC West isn’t going to be very patient with the Supreme Court’s handwringing on interrogation.

LTC West’s feelings about arugula remain unknown, although I think we would be willing to overlook a few youthful indiscretions of that nature.

UPDATE: via Robert Stacy McCain, here’s a sample of LTC West speaking:

Not too shabby. (I think he’s wrong about American weapons going to bin Laden through our assistance to the mujahideen in the 80’s; OBL was in a separate group funded by the Saudis.) But seriously, good speech.

Note the part where West says his opponent has more money than he does.
Hint, hint.

Come on, what do you want, a video of Allen West chewing out CAIR as unindicted co-conspirators and “an insurgency in our country” and taking up for FISA?

Well, all righty then.

MORE: Back on Jacksonians v. Arugulaticians, here’s Cuffy with a pretty good photoshop.


11 posted on Saturday, June 14, 2008 9:15:55 PM by the anti-liberal (Write in: Fred Thompson)

9 posted on 06/14/2008 9:28:26 PM PDT by Ooh-Ah
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To: Ooh-Ah

What a wonderful article. I couldn’t agree more. A writer that has put what I’ve been thinking into words.

Yes!


10 posted on 06/14/2008 9:29:50 PM PDT by republicangel
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To: Ooh-Ah
EXACTLY!! Great analysis!
11 posted on 06/14/2008 9:39:40 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (McCain could never convince me to vote for him. Only the Marxist Obama can!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting


12 posted on 06/14/2008 9:48:29 PM PDT by patriot08
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To: Ooh-Ah

I am a warrior voter. Jacksonian. Love this article.


13 posted on 06/14/2008 10:02:58 PM PDT by yldstrk (My heros have always been cowboys--Reagan and Bush)
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To: Ooh-Ah
Barack Obama consistently lost white voters

TWABO - Typical Whites Against Barack Obama.

14 posted on 06/14/2008 10:09:46 PM PDT by Right Wing Assault ("..this administration is planning a 'Right Wing Assault' on values and ideals.." - John Kerry)
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To: patriot08

To whoever provided the quotation on the picture (and I fully realize it may not have been you): this should be “to become dominant.” Using the wrong word, the verb “dominate” seriously undercuts the intended effect.


15 posted on 06/14/2008 10:59:14 PM PDT by Irene Adler (')
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To: Irene Adler

This article makes many excellent points, but I would quarrel somewhat with the author who identifies both Colin Powell and John McCain as Jacksonians. Colin Powell was never a Jacksonian, despite being in the military, IMHO, and I am not sure that John McCain entirely qualifies, either, though certainly much more than Powell ever did. I base my concern on McCain’s stance on global warming and drilling ANWAR, both Academician positions.


16 posted on 06/14/2008 11:03:43 PM PDT by Irene Adler (')
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To: Ooh-Ah

A very well written article that just about nails down the real divide in the American electorate.


17 posted on 06/14/2008 11:05:47 PM PDT by yooling ( "Ah, beer. The cause of and the solution to all of life's problems." H. Simpson)
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To: Ooh-Ah
Colonel Obama is the one we are waiting for. When we will get him is anyone's guess.

There is a black Lt. Col. running for the House in Florida that sounds like he would fit the bill someday (forgot his name though).

18 posted on 06/15/2008 12:25:44 AM PDT by Mogollon (Vote straight GOP for congress....our only protection against Obama, or McCain.)
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To: Ooh-Ah

A nice paean to Barone’s analysis.


19 posted on 06/15/2008 12:59:02 AM PDT by BunnySlippers
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To: TexasNative2000; Ooh-Ah; republicangel
This article proclaims that it is respectable, indeed morally acceptable, to vote against the black candidate even if you are white. At least it provides a cover story for doing so.

This proclamation means that the author-and by extension Michael Barone-have entered the great battle which defines modern politics: the battle over race in America. The article tells us that the great cleft in America is not race but gown and sword here described as academics versus Jacksonians. I do not believe it.

But I do emphatically believe that the academic versus Jacksonian analysis fashions for us a very useful and desperately needed weapon in the war. It must become respectable for whites to vote their racial interests so long as the left threatens whites by exploiting the issue of race in America. So long as more than 90% of blacks are going to vote their race, race remains the pivot of electoral politics. So long as black racial politics are as vulnerable to the demagoguery of the likes of the right Reverend Wright as they indisputably are, resistance to such a racial demagoguery must remain a prerogative. So long as the Democrat Party can nominate a candidate who cannot pass the racial "but for" test -ie, could this man have been nominated but for the fact that he is African-American? -whites must include that the other party is playing racial politics. So long as one party can insinuate, as the excrable Newsweek article has done, that when whites vote against this black candidate they are behaving as racists, whites must fight back with every legitimate weapon available.

I have posted countless times my belief that tip O'Neill had it wrong, that all politics is not local, but racial. In my about page I have argued that the left is philosophically drained and is held together mainly by their belief that they are superior to conservatives because we are racists and they are not. I have posted that Barak Obama is the perfect figure for the expiation of white guilt, for the redemption of America from its original sin of slavery, and from Jim Crow. As such, Obama is an empty vessel into which they can pour their vanities and their resentments, perfectly immune from rational argument because to assail this figure, this Messiah, is ultimately illegitimate because to do so is racist.

So we have the endless lists of things about Obama that we cannot criticize so brilliantly parodied by Rush Limbaugh ranging from the candidate' s ears to his name. This immunity from criticism illustrates perfectly the "Messiah" effect which the Libs are attempting to exploit. It is fundamentally racist. It is also demagogic and inimical to the greatest tradition of American politics.

Thank you Michael Barone for serving up an intellectual bomb shelter against the missiles charging racism which will be inevitably hurled against those who criticize Obama. I admire Barone as one of the most reliable and fair-minded analysts on the American political scene. His analysis more often than others has the added advantage of often being vindicated. I do not dispute that his analysis here is rightly descriptive of the voting pattern we have seen. It is not Barone's analysis I object to but the premise of it all, that it is somehow illegitimate to vote one's race when the other side is exploiting racism against it. Are these white voters in West Virginia really so obtuse that they cannot figure out the game that is being played against them? Are they not entitled to react against it?

Yes, Tip O'Neill, politics someday might in actual fact not be racial as and when we can come out of the shadows and tell the truth about what is really going on.

There have been two ways to deal with the demagoguery of the left which reveals its most corrosive side when it plays the race card. The one way, the traditional Republican way, is to surrender in a media orgy of mea culpa(witness, for example, Trent Lott). The other way, the Nathan Bedford Forrest way which partly prompted my avatar, is to proclaim to their faces, "damn your eyes."


20 posted on 06/15/2008 2:43:13 AM PDT by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat attack!" Bull Halsey)
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