March 18, 2008
Say Goodbye to the Glowbama Mystique
By
Michelle Malkin
Barack Obama—the self-anointed
soul-fixing, nation-healing
political Messiah—has lost his glow. That is the
takeaway from the beleaguered Democratic
presidential candidate's "major" speech in
Philadelphia yesterday. [Text|Video]
For all of his supposedly
unique and transcendent understanding of race in
America, Obama's talk amounted to the
same old, same old. The Glowbama mystique has gone
the way of the Emperor's clothes. Instead of
accountability, we got excuses. Instead of disavowal of
demagoguery, we got whacked with the moral equivalence
card. Instead of rejecting the Blame America mantra of
left-wing
black nationalism, we got more Blame Whitey. Same
old, same old.
For two decades, Obama tethered
himself to a fire-breathing pastor peddling bitter
Marxist "black liberation theology" in the name
of God. Behind the "audacity of hope" was a
grievance-mongering preacher animated by the voracity of
hate. And understand this: The Reverend Jeremiah Wright
and Barack Obama were not merely passing
"associates." They were mentor and mentee, guru and
student, with fates and fortunes intertwined.
For two decades, while using the
church to
build his Chicago power base and credibility in the
black community, Obama turned a deaf ear to Wright's
AIDS conspiracy theories, class warfare rants,
anti-Israel, anti-white raves, and "God damn
America" diatribes. These weren't
occasional outbursts. They were the
bread and butter of the Trinity United Church of Christ.
Now, Obama blames "talk
show hosts and
conservative commentators" for exposing Wright's
race-based rancor. Audacious, indeed.
On Friday, Obama attempted to
minimize the extent to which he had been exposed to
Wright's poisonous politicking on the pulpit. "None
of these statements were ones that I had heard myself
personally in the pews," he told Major Garrett of
Fox News. "The other statements were ones that I just
heard about while we were—when they started being run on
FOX and some of the other stations. And so they weren't
things that I was familiar with."
Yesterday, Obama changed his tune:
"I have already
condemned, in unequivocal terms, the statements of
Rev. Wright that have caused such controversy. For some,
nagging questions remain. Did I know him to be an
occasionally fierce critic of American domestic and
foreign policy? Of course. Did I ever hear him make
remarks that could be considered controversial while I
sat in church? Yes."
The clever Sen. Obama has attempted
to erect a firewall of protection from probing questions
about which remarks he heard and tolerated and failed to
object to while sitting in the pews. Dwelling on what he
knew and where and when, he argued yesterday, would be
"to simplify and stereotype and amplify the negative
to the point that it distorts reality."
But it is Obama's pastor ("former"
pastor, he is so quick to point out now, though
he is a two-decade-long mentor) who holds a warped
view of reality. And it is Obama who distorts the truth
by likening this Ward Churchill of the United Church of
Christ to an avuncular, yet lovable, family member who
cannot easily be renounced:
"I can no more disown him than I
can disown the black community. I can no more disown him
than I can my white grandmother—a woman who helped raise
me, a woman who sacrificed again and again for me, a
woman who loves me as much as she loves anything in this
world, but a woman who once confessed her
fear of black men who passed by her on the street,
and who on more than one occasion has uttered racial or
ethnic
stereotypes that made me cringe."
Glad to know something made Obama
cringe.
Even as he denied that he was
justifying and excusing Wright's demagoguery, Obama was
doing just that by invoking
slavery, Jim Crow,
segregated schools,
violence in the inner city and, yes,
denial of access to
FHA mortgages, to explain how we get to Wright
spewing "God damn America" on Sunday morning.
"These people are a part of me.
And they are a part of America, this country that I
love," Obama declared rather stiffly as he stood
self-consciously in front of more American flags that he
has ever been placed in front of this campaign season.
Well, you can't pick your grandma,
but you can pick your pastor. And Obama picked the wrong
one if he aspires to be the president of all America—an
America that includes citizens of all colors who cringe
at self-serving racial rationalizations masquerading as
moral salvation.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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."