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INCITEMENT TO HATE: Barack Obama's Speech at 100th anniversary of th   Message List  
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Saturday, July 18, 2009

INCITEMENT TO HATE: Barack Obama's Speech at 100th anniversary of the NAACP


This is what a country looks like when individuals take responsibility for
themselves:

In the early decades of the 19th Cent., New England began to come of age.
intellectually and culturally. Carried on the wave of scientific progress and
newly acquired independence and wealth, the Puritan tradition begot a very high
standard of plain living and high thinking. Boston [the Athens of America] and
Harvard College set a swift intellectual pace, and the passion for learning
became demonic, spreading even to workers. While textile mills proliferated, and
a growing rail network bound the northern states together, libraries and art
galleries were established. Crowds of laborers listened to lectures on geology
and Shakespeare, zoology and Milton; with the beginning of the lyceum system in
1826, dozens of courses were available in even the smallest towns. Many sailors
spoke half a dozen languages, and farmers in the field played the flute, read
coleridge and carlyle. Elihu Burritt, the "learned Blacksmith" of Worcester,
Mass., read Greek as he
worked at his forge, and translated Longfellow into Sanskrit. Charles Dickens
was impressed by the factory girls of Lowell. who cooperatively bought pianos
with their meager earnings, subscribed to English reviews, and published their
own essays and verse in the Lowell Offering, which had a worldwide circulation

When the romantic revolution that had swept Europe broke on New England's shores
in the 1830s, its impact on the Puritan ethic generated a school of literature
and philosophy called Transcendentalism. Members were Emerson [who described
himself as a professor of the Science of Joy], Thoreau, Hawthorne, Cooper,
Melville and Whitman. Soon the philosopher William James, born 1842, presented
his philosophy of Pragmatism, a doctrine which suited the problems of
frontiersmen conquering a continent and American practical thinkers. So the
legacy of our founding fathers had grown and produced some marvelous creative
intellectuals and artists and scientists. Every man had a chance to develop his
potential, and all this without any meddling by the government, which was there
to make all this possible and allowed each man free reign within the law.
 Sarastro
As a society our values are in the toilet. Our priorities are cannibalistic. And
so we got the President we deserved, I suppose.
After reading Obama's speech, there is no getting around it. The man is a
racist. He is not a unifier, a healer , a leader -  he divides, incites,
destroys. He foments animus and anger. His antagonist is the big white bogeymen
looming out of reach while stealing the very lives and futures of black
children, Muslims, latinos and gays. Demagoguery.
Of course no Obama speech would be complete without the advancement of Islamic
supremacism. "Muslims are discriminated against for public prayer", yet not
mentioning public Christian prayer (which can get you fired these days). He is
hell bent on ginning up the jihad.
He stokes the haters who still think that reparation for slavery is in order.
Obama is now unashamedly stirring up a revolution of unwarranted hatred against
everything that is pure and lovely and right.
The speech proves, yet again, that he does not (nor does he want to) represent
all Americans. He is the most racist, divisive official we have ever elected to
any high office, let alone the most powerful office in the world. The speech was
scandalous. Listen to the African American president of the United States rail
against discrimination in the country that elected him. Obama deceives and
demagogues when he castigates the economy (which he is destroying) as being
racist. The economy targets blacks - got that? The US has the highest standard
of living for African Americans anywhere in the world, but to the left, facts
are irrelevant. He preaches to us that AIDS devastates the African American
community here in the US with disproportionate force. Whose fault is that? Sex
and drugs is the problem. The culture in the Black community promotes the
riskiest behavior. Teach your children well.
When Obama speaks of children who don't "have a fair chance in life", he
victimizes them before they have had a shot at grabbing the brass ring. Keep
telling someone he's/she's a loser and pretty soon they believe you. Everyone is
this great country has a fair chance in life.
His banks on the constituency of disgruntled haters. The speech is a leftopath's
wet dream. "We know that even as we imprison more people of all races than any
nation in the world, an African American child is roughly five times as likely
as a white child to see the inside of a prison". What would he have us do, let
criminals run wild in the streets? Black leadership is failing miserably if one
in five Black children could end up in prison. What values are being taught?
Education, ethics, kindness, industrious work ethic?
Obama rails, "more than half a century after Brown v. Board, the dream of a
world-class education is still being deferred all across the country. African
American students are lagging behind white classmates in reading and math -- an
achievement gap that is growing in states that once led the way in the civil
rights movement." That's because the left seized public education and destroyed
it. No one, of whatever color, wants to send their kids to a public school.
Affluent Americans opt out, industrious Americans home school. But the Democrats
deny the poor school vouchers and the opportunity for a real education. The left
wants to keep them down on the farm.
I think it interesting to note that the Democrats were the party of slavery and
the Republicans fought and died to free the slaves. Jim Crows laws were Democrat
laws. He repeatedly cites Martin Luther King and Abraham Lincoln - both
Republicans. The American people have been dumb downed so far, they can't think.

President Barack Obama makes remarks at the 100th anniversary of the founding of
the NAACP in New York, Thursday, July 16, 2009
 
Text at the Examiner
(troublesome points highlighted and noted with my comments on the last page.):
President Barack Obama makes remarks at the 100th anniversary of the founding of
the NAACP in New York, Thursday, July 16, 2009.
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA
TO THE NAACP CENTENNIAL CONVENTION
Hilton New York
New York, New York
7:00 P.M. EDT
President Obama: “Thank you. What an extraordinary night, capping off an
extraordinary week, capping off an extraordinary 100 years at the NAACP.
(Applause.)
So Chairman Bond, Brother Justice, I am so grateful to all of you for being
here. It's just good to be among friends. (Applause.)
It is an extraordinary honor to be here, in the city where the NAACP was formed,
to mark its centennial. What we celebrate tonight is not simply the journey the
NAACP has traveled, but the journey that we, as Americans, have traveled over
the past 100 years. (Applause.)
It's a journey that takes us back to a time before most of us were born, long
before the Voting Rights Act, and the Civil Rights Act, Brown v. Board of
Education; back to an America just a generation past slavery. It was a time when
Jim Crow was a way of life; when lynchings were all too common; when race riots
were shaking cities across a segregated land.
It was in this America where an Atlanta scholar named W.E.B. Du Bois --
(applause) -- a man of towering intellect and a fierce passion for justice,
sparked what became known as the Niagara movement; where reformers united, not
by color, but by cause; where an association was born that would, as its charter
says, promote equality and eradicate prejudice among citizens of the United
States.
From the beginning, these founders understood how change would come -- just as
King and all the civil rights giants did later. They understood that unjust laws
needed to be overturned; that legislation needed to be passed; and that
Presidents needed to be pressured into action. They knew that the stain of
slavery and the sin of segregation had to be lifted in the courtroom, and in the
legislature, and in the hearts and the minds of Americans.
They also knew that here, in America, change would have to come from the people.
It would come from people protesting lynchings, rallying against violence, all
those women who decided to walk instead of taking the bus, even though they were
tired after a long day of doing somebody else's laundry, looking after somebody
else's children. (Applause.) It would come from men and women of every age and
faith, and every race and region -- taking Greyhounds on Freedom Rides; sitting
down at Greensboro lunch counters; registering voters in rural Mississippi,
knowing they would be harassed, knowing they would be beaten, knowing that some
of them might never return.
Because of what they did, we are a more perfect union. Because Jim Crow laws
were overturned, black CEOs today run Fortune 500 companies. (Applause.) Because
civil rights laws were passed, black mayors, black governors, and members of
Congress served in places where they might once have been able [sic] not just to
vote but even take a sip of water. And because ordinary people did such
extraordinary things, because they made the civil rights movement their own,
even though there may not be a plaque or their names might not be in the history
books -- because of their efforts I made a little trip to Springfield, Illinois,
a couple years ago -- (applause) -- where Lincoln once lived, and race riots
once raged -- and began the journey that has led me to be here tonight as the
44th President of the United States of America. (Applause.)
Because of them I stand here tonight, on the shoulders of giants. And I'm here
to say thank you to those pioneers and thank you to the NAACP. (Applause.)
And yet, even as we celebrate the remarkable achievements of the past 100 years;
even as we inherit extraordinary progress that cannot be denied; even as we
marvel at the courage and determination of so many plain folk -- we know that
too many barriers still remain.
We know that even as our economic crisis batters Americans of all races, African
Americans are out of work 1more than just about anybody else -- a gap that's
widening here in New York City, as a detailed report this week by Comptroller
Bill Thompson laid out. (Applause.)
We know that even as spiraling health care costs crush families of all races,
African Americans are more likely to suffer from a host of diseases but less
likely to own health insurance than 1just about anybody else.
We know that even as we imprison more people of all races than any nation in the
world, an African American child is roughly five times as likely as a white
child to see the inside of a prison.
We know that even as the scourge of HIV/AIDS devastates nations abroad,
particularly in Africa, it is devastating the African American community here at
home with disproportionate force. We know these things. (Applause.)
These are some of the barriers of our time. They're very different from the
barriers faced by earlier generations. They're very different from the ones
faced when fire hoses and dogs were being turned on young marchers; when Charles
Hamilton Houston and a group of young Howard lawyers were dismantling
segregation case by case across the land.
But what's required today -- what's required to overcome today's barriers is the
same as what was needed then. The same commitment. The same sense of urgency.
The same sense of sacrifice. The same sense of community. The same willingness
to do our part for ourselves and one another that has always defined America at
its best and the African American experience at its best. (Applause.)
And so the question is, where do we direct our efforts? What steps do we take to
overcome these barriers? How do we move forward in the next 100 years?
The first thing we need to do is make real the words of the NAACP charter and
eradicate prejudice, bigotry, and discrimination among citizens of the United
States. (Applause.) I understand there may be a temptation among some to think
that discrimination is no longer a problem in 2009. And I believe that overall,
there probably has never been less discrimination in America than there is
today. I think we can say that.
But make no mistake: The pain of discrimination is still felt in America.
(Applause.) By 2African American women paid less for doing the same work as
colleagues of a different color and a different gender. (Laughter.) By Latinos
made to feel unwelcome in their own country. (Applause.) 3 By Muslim Americans
viewed with suspicion simply because they kneel down to pray to their God.
(Applause.) By our gay brothers and sisters, still taunted, still attacked,
still denied their rights. (Applause.)
On the 45th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act, discrimination cannot stand --
not on account of color or gender; how you worship or who you love. Prejudice
has no place in the United States of America. That's what the NAACP stands for.
That's what the NAACP will continue to fight for as long as it takes.
(Applause.)
I think all of us understand that our task of reducing these structural
inequalities has been made more difficult by the state and structure of our
broader economy; an economy that for the last decade has been fueled by a cycle
of boom and bust; an economy where the rich got really, really rich, but
ordinary folks didn't see their incomes or their wages go up; an economy built
on credit cards, shady mortgage loans; an economy built not on a rock, but on
sand.
That's why my administration is working so hard not only to create and save jobs
in the short-term, not only to extend unemployment insurance and help for people
who have lost their health care in this crisis, not just to stem the immediate
economic wreckage, but to lay a new foundation for growth and prosperity that
will put opportunity within the reach of not just African Americans, but all
Americans. All Americans. (Applause.) Of every race. Of every 4creed. From every
region of the country. (Applause.) We want everybody to participate in the
American Dream. That's what the NAACP is all about. (Applause.)
Now, one pillar of this new foundation is health insurance for everybody.
(Applause.) Health insurance reform that cuts costs and makes quality health
coverage affordable for all, and it closes health care disparities in the
process. Another pillar is energy reform that makes clean energy profitable,
freeing America from the grip of foreign oil; putting young people to work
upgrading low-income homes, weatherizing, and creating jobs that can't be
outsourced. Another pillar is financial reform with consumer protections to
crackdown on mortgage fraud and stop predatory lenders from targeting black and
Latino communities all across the country. (Applause.)
All these things will make America stronger and more competitive. They will
drive innovation, they will create jobs, they will provide families with more
security. And yet, even if we do all that, the African American community will
still fall behind in the United States and the United States will fall behind in
the world unless we do a far better job than we have been doing of educating our
sons and daughters. (Applause.)
I hope you don't mind -- I want to go into a little detail here about education.
(Applause.) In the 21st century -- when so many jobs will require a bachelor's
degree or more, when countries that out-educate us today will out-compete us
tomorrow -- a world-class education is a prerequisite for success.
There's no two ways about it. There's no way to avoid it. You know what I'm
talking about. There's a reason the story of the civil rights movement was
written in our schools. There's a reason Thurgood Marshall took up the cause of
Linda Brown. There's a reason why the Little Rock Nine defied a governor and a
mob. It's because there is no stronger weapon against inequality and no better
path to opportunity than an education that can unlock a child's God-given
potential. (Applause.)
And yet, more than half a century after Brown v. Board, the dream of a
world-class education is still being deferred all across the country. African
American students are lagging behind white classmates in reading and math -- an
achievement gap that is growing in states that once led the way in the civil
rights movement. Over half of all African American students are dropping out of
school in some places. There are overcrowded classrooms, and crumbling schools,
and corridors of shame in America filled with poor children -- not just black
children, brown and white children as well.
The state of our schools is not an African American problem; it is an American
problem. (Applause.) Because if black and brown children cannot compete, then
America cannot compete. (Applause.)
And let me say this, if Al Sharpton, Mike Bloomberg, and Newt Gingrich can agree
that we need to solve the education problem, then that's something all of
America can agree we can solve. (Applause.)
Those guys came into my office. (Laughter.) Just sitting in the Oval Office -- I
kept on doing a double-take. (Laughter and applause.) So that's a sign of
progress and it is a sign of the urgency of the education problem. (Applause.)
All of us can agree that we need to offer every child in this country -- every
child --”
AUDIENCE: Amen!
Got an ‘Amen corner’ back there -- (applause) -- every child -- every child
in this country the best education the world has to offer from cradle through a
career.
That's our responsibility as leaders. That's the responsibility of the United
States of America. And we, all of us in government, have to work to do our part
by not only offering more resources, but also demanding more reform. Because
when it comes to education, we got to get past this whole paradigm, this
outdated notion that somehow it's just money; or somehow it's just reform, but
no money -- and embrace what Dr. King called the "both-and" philosophy. We need
more money and we need more reform. (Applause.)
When it comes to higher education we're making college and advanced training
more affordable, and strengthening community colleges that are the gateway to so
many with an initiative -- (applause) -- that will prepare students not only to
earn a degree, but to find a job when they graduate; an initiative that will
help us meet the goal I have set of leading the world in college degrees by
2020. We used to rank number one in college graduates. Now we are in the middle
of the pack. And since we are seeing more and more African American and Latino
youth in our population, if we are leaving them behind we cannot achieve our
goal, and America will fall further behind -- and that is not a future that I
accept and that is not a future that the NAACP is willing to accept. (Applause.)
We're creating a Race to the Top fund that will reward states and public school
districts that adopt 21st century standards and assessments. We're creating
incentives for states to promote excellent teachers and replace bad ones --
(applause) -- because the job of a teacher is too important for us to accept
anything less than the best. (Applause.)
We also have to explore innovative approaches such as those being pursued here
in New York City; innovations like Bard High School Early College and Medgar
Evers College Preparatory School that are challenging students to complete high
school and earn a free associate's degree or college credit in just four years.
(Applause.)
And we should raise the bar when it comes to early learning programs. It's not
enough just to have a babysitter. We need our young people stimulated and
engaged and involved. (Applause.) We need our -- our folks involved in child
development to understand the latest science. Today, some early learning
programs are excellent. Some are mediocre. And some are wasting what studies
show are by far a child's most formative years.
That's why I've issued a challenge to America's governors: If you match the
success of states like Pennsylvania and develop an effective model for early
learning; if you focus reform on standards and results in early learning
programs; if you demonstrate how you will prepare the lowest income children to
meet the highest standards of success -- then you can compete for an Early
Learning Challenge Grant that will help prepare all our children to enter
kindergarten all ready to learn. (Applause.)
So these are some of the laws we're passing. These are some of the policies we
are enacting. We are busy in Washington. Folks in Congress are getting a little
tuckered out. (Laughter.) But I'm telling them -- I'm telling them we can't
rest, we've got a lot of work to do. The American people are counting on us.
(Applause.) These are some of the ways we're doing our part in government to
overcome the inequities, the injustices, the barriers that still exist in our
country.
But all these innovative programs and expanded opportunities will not, in and of
themselves, make a difference if each of us, as parents and as community
leaders, fail to do our part by encouraging excellence in our children.
(Applause.) Government programs alone won't get our children to the Promised
Land. We need a new mind set, a new set of attitudes -- because one of the most
durable and destructive legacies of discrimination is the way we've internalized
a sense of limitation; how so many in our community have come to expect so
little from the world and from themselves.
We've got to say to our children, yes, if you're African American, the odds of
growing up amid crime and gangs are higher. Yes, if you live in a poor
neighborhood, you will face challenges that somebody in a wealthy suburb does
not have to face. But that's not a reason to get bad grades -- (applause) --
that's not a reason to cut class -- (applause) -- that's not a reason to give up
on your education and drop out of school. (Applause.) No one has written your
destiny for you. Your destiny is in your hands -- you cannot forget that. That's
what we have to teach all of our children. No excuses. (Applause.) No excuses.
You get that education, all those hardships will just make you stronger, better
able to compete. Yes we can. (Applause.)
To parents -- to parents, we can't tell our kids to do well in school and then
fail to support them when they get home. (Applause.) You can't just contract out
parenting. For our kids to excel, we have to accept our responsibility to help
them learn. That means putting away the
Xbox
-- (applause) -- putting our kids to bed at a reasonable hour. (Applause.) It
means attending those parent-teacher conferences and reading to our children and
helping them with their homework. (Applause.)
(transcript incomplete from this point. Watch the video on the link above for
the full wordage.)
And it means we need to be there for our neighbor's son or daughter, and return
to the day when we parents let each other know if we saw a child acting up.
That's the meaning of community. That's how we can reclaim the strength, the
determination, the hopefulness that helped us come as far as we already have.
It also means pushing our kids to set their sights higher. They might think
they've got a pretty good jump shot or a pretty good flow, but our kids can't
all aspire to be the next LeBron or Lil Wayne. I want them aspiring to be
scientists and engineers, doctors and teachers, not just ballers and rappers. I
want them aspiring to be a Supreme Court Justice. I want them aspiring to be
President of the United States.
So, yes, government must be a force for opportunity. Yes, government must be a
force for equality. But ultimately, if we are to be true to our past, then we
also have to seize our own destiny, each and every day.
That is what the NAACP is all about. The NAACP was not founded in search of a
handout. The NAACP was not founded in search of favors. The NAACP was founded on
a firm notion of justice; to cash the promissory note of America that says all
our children, all God's children, deserve a fair chance in the race of life.
It is a simple dream, and yet one that has been denied - one still being denied
- to so many Americans. It's a painful thing, seeing that dream denied. I
remember visiting a Chicago school in a rough neighborhood as a community
organizer, and thinking how remarkable it was that all of these children seemed
so full of hope, despite being born into poverty, despite being delivered into
addiction, despite all the obstacles they were already facing.
And I remember the principal of the school telling me that soon all of that
would begin to change; that soon, the laughter in their eyes would begin to
fade; that soon, something would shut off inside, as it sunk in that their hopes
would not come to pass - not because they weren't smart enough, not because they
weren't talented enough, but because, by accident of birth, they didn't have a
fair chance in life.
So, I know what can happen to a child who doesn't have that chance. But I also
know what can happen to a child who does. I was raised by a single mother. I
don't come from a lot of wealth. I got into my share of trouble as a kid. My
life could easily have taken a turn for the worse. But that mother of mine gave
me love; she pushed me, and cared about my education; she took no lip and taught
me right from wrong. Because of her, I had a chance to make the most of my
abilities. I had the chance to make the most of my opportunities. I had the
chance to make the most of life.
The same story holds for Michelle. The same story holds for so many of you. And
I want all the other Barack Obamas out there, and all the other Michelle Obamas
out there, to have that same chance - the chance that my mother gave me; that my
education gave me; that the United States of America gave me. That is how our
union will be perfected and our economy rebuilt. That is how America will move
forward in the next one hundred years.
And we will move forward. This I know - for I know how far we have come. Last
week, in Ghana, Michelle and I took Malia and Sasha to Cape Coast Castle, where
captives were once imprisoned before being auctioned; where, across an ocean, so
much of the African-American experience began. There, reflecting on the dungeon
beneath the castle church, I was reminded of all the pain and all the hardships,
all the injustices and all the indignities on the voyage from slavery to
freedom.
But I was also reminded of something else. I was reminded that no matter how
bitter the rod or how stony the road, we have persevered. We have not faltered,
nor have we grown weary. As Americans, we have demanded, strived for, and shaped
a better destiny.
That is what we are called to do once more. It will not be easy. It will take
time. Doubts may rise and hopes recede.
But if John Lewis could brave Billy clubs to cross a bridge, then I know young
people today can do their part to lift up our communities.
If Emmet Till's uncle Mose Wright could summon the courage to testify against
the men who killed his nephew, I know we can be better fathers and brothers,
mothers and sisters in our own families.
If three civil rights workers in Mississippi - black and white, Christian and
Jew, city-born and country-bred - could lay down their lives in freedom's cause,
I know we can come together to face down the challenges of our own time. We can
fix our schools, heal our sick, and rescue our youth from violence and despair.
One hundred years from now, on the 200th anniversary of the NAACP, let it be
said that this generation did its part; that we too ran the race; that full of
the faith that our dark past has taught us, full of the hope that the present
has brought us, we faced, in our own lives and all across this nation, the
rising sun of a new day begun. Thank you, God bless you, and may God bless the
United States of America.

 
 
Adam made notes: 
1 Classic hyperbolic spin phrase: What are the actual figures?
2 What women? Where? Which company? Paid less because she was a woman, or
because she was African American? Are there any non-African American women
working in the same company? What are they paid? For what grade of work? This is
some tiny specific local scenario that his researchers have dug up from
somewhere and spun it. It’s meaningless unsubstantiated half-truth, or even
fiction. I want to know his source for this.
3 Normally, there would have been no prudent warrant to mention Muslims at all
in this speech. Or not Muslims alone. The context of his argument at this point
is religious persecution in general, but to specifically use Islam as the
subject was simply yet another opportunity to slip in deliberate promotion of
Islam. It’s almost as if he had the whole speech written just to promote
Islam. And remember, this is how he works anyway. Obama has got where he is
today by the use of a barrage of subliminal messages slipped out of context into
the broader media thrust. Just like the global warming myth, the goofball idea
starts small, almost unnoticed, and gradually gains consensus until it is the
whole message. And this is done deliberately – It’s the Trojan Horse speech
method – Whole speeches are written on seemingly benign subjects, just so they
can subliminally work in two little words as the cancerous seeds of the real
agenda. And nobody notices at
first, except sharp observers and watchmen such as yourself, who twig early
what is really going on. If Obama was a true gentleman, he would have included
Jews, Christians, Sufists and Jedi in that sentence, none of whom proselytize at
the point of a sword. But no. Our ‘president’ is only concerned with
promoting Islam, whose ‘missionaries’ are sworn to murder or tax the
non-converts.
He’s either doing it deliberately, or he’s doing it just to annoy us. There
are no mistakes in a presidential speech to any organization celebrating a
centenary.
4 Ah, the ‘creed’ word. The most abused and deceitfully used word in the
modern English language, and it’s used in every second breath on the lips of
the average libtard. “Every creed” should mean exactly that – Every
religion, right down to the formal summary of its principles, in fact. But in
modern parlance it simply means “every religion except Judaism and
Christianity.” So in saying “Every creed, Obama is simply lying. He has no
intention of putting opportunity to participate in the American dream within
reach of every Jew and Christian. On the contrary, he is currently legislating
to exclude those of a traditional Judaeo-Christian point of view from the
process, to make us aliens in our land. Christians and Jews are the ones Obama
is encouraging to have viewed with suspicion simply because they kneel down to
pray to their God. And in any case, Muslims are the only people who have ever
had the arrogant and un-teamlike indolence to
demand work-breaks for prayer, whilst Jews ands Christians are on record as
having been the most selflessly productive employees in American history. They
reserved their prayer times for before or after work-hours and their Sabbaths,
and on their foundational work rests the wealth and liberty of the nation. But
in contrast, five prayer times throughout the working day in Islamic nations has
maintained merely feudal subsistence and bandit economies with a bronze-age
standard of living for most, and whose adherents’ purest expression of service
to the nation and religious fervor is mass murder, specifically of Americans.
And these are the people who Obama, given the choice of a random religious group
to ‘just pluck out of the air’ wants us to withhold the pain of
discrimination from. Engendering sympathy and love for them from the gullible
masses by putting them on the bus seat with Rosa Parks.
Obama’s oratory tactics REALLY stink.
 
 

Posted by Pamela Geller on Saturday, July 18, 2009 at 08:25 PM | Permalink




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    http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2009/07/incitement-to-hate-.html     Saturday, July 18, 2009 INCITEMENT TO HATE: Barack Obama's Speech...
~mary~
hope_4_america
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Jul 20, 2009
12:49 am
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