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Thread: Carter: playing the race card
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09-16-09, 07:16 AM #1Carter: playing the race card
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090916/...eckling_carter
ATLANTA – U.S. Rep. Joe Wilson's oldest son defended his father against a claim by former President Jimmy Carter that the congressman's outburst during a speech by President Barack Obama was "based on racism."
Responding to an audience question at a town hall at his presidential center in Atlanta, Carter said Tuesday that Wilson's outburst was also rooted in fears of a black president.
"I think it's based on racism," Carter said. "There is an inherent feeling among many in this country that an African-American should not be president."
But Wilson's son disputed that.
"There is not a racist bone in my dad's body," said Alan Wilson, an Iraq veteran who is running for state attorney general in South Carolina. "He doesn't even laugh at distasteful jokes. I won't comment on former President Carter, because I don't know President Carter. But I know my dad, and it's just not in him."
"It's unfortunate people make that jump. People can disagree — and appropriately disagree — on issues of substance, but when they make the jump to race it's absolutely ludicrous. My brothers and I were raised by our parents to respect everyone regardless of background or race."
Carter, a Democrat, said Joe Wilson's outburst was a part of a disturbing trend directed at the president that has included demonstrators equating Obama to Nazi leaders.
"Those kind of things are not just casual outcomes of a sincere debate on whether we should have a national program on health care," he said. "It's deeper than that."
Wilson's spokesman was not immediately available for comment.
Wilson, a South Carolina Republican, was formally rebuked Tuesday in a House vote for shouting "You lie!" during Obama's speech to Congress last Wednesday.
The shout came after the president commented that illegal aliens would be ineligible for federal subsidies to buy health insurance. Republicans expressed their disbelief with sounds of disapproval, punctuated by Wilson's outburst.
Tuesday's rebuke was a rare resolution of disapproval pushed through by Democrats who insisted that Wilson had violated basic rules of decorum and civility. Republicans characterized the measure as a witch hunt and Wilson, who had already apologized to Obama, insisted he owed the House no apology.
South Carolina's former Democratic Party chairman also said he doesn't believe Wilson was motivated by racism, but said the outburst encouraged racist views.
"I think Joe's conduct was asinine, but I think it would be asinine no matter what the color of the president," said Dick Harpootlian, who has known Wilson for decades. "I don't think Joe's outburst was caused by President Obama being African-American. I think it was caused by no filter being between his brain and his mouth."
Harpootlian said he received scores of racial e-mails from outside South Carolina after he talked about the vote on Fox News.
"You have a bunch of folks out there looking for some comfort in their racial issues. They have a problem with an African-American president," he said. "But was he motivated by that? I don't think so. I respectfully disagree with President Carter, though it gives validity to racism."
Carter called Wilson's comment "dastardly" and an aftershock of racist views that have permeated American politics for decades.
"The president is not only the head of government, he is the head of state," he said. "And no matter who he is or how much we disagree with his policies, the president should be treated with respect."
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09-16-09, 07:44 AM #4
Re: Carter: playing the race card
Yeah, the old stand by argument. We do not have HALF of the racial/ethnic problems that many areas of the world have. It is a diversion as it more often than not is. Personally, I feel racism lags behind apathy, and abject laziness as core problems in American society IMHO.
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09-16-09, 07:54 AM #5
Re: Carter: playing the race card
Originally Posted by WorstPE
I watched HBO's Real Sports last night and they had a special story on Cullen Jones, the black olympic gold medal swimmer and it showed all kinds of footage of the 60's racial tension and I was feeling a little White Guilt today.
I'm over it now, lol.
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09-16-09, 08:47 AM #8
Re: Carter: playing the race card
it's just funny...i mean come on, RACISM!!?? because a white man speaks out against the twisted nonsense a black man spitting foolish garbage out his mouth!? Jesus Christ!.,that's right I said JESUS FUCKING CHRIST...so by those standards that makes me an anti-christ superstar...if it were a WOMAN speaking out, it would be heralded as a stepping stone for woman speaking out, if it was 180 reversal and a black man speaking out against an insane white man idea, it would be looked upon as most likely a regular disapproval of ideology and approach to the situation and maybe given props for speaking out against the big bad white man in front of national television. Now don't take me wrong, I object to the circumstance and arena this disapproval was expressed, there's a time and place and it was a little inappropriate. No way does it make it racist. That's simply a whiny ass card that will continue getting tossed in when for the next 3 years (hopefully it's just 1 TERM), every time whitey disagrees with the messiah.
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