Cartoon by Linda Eddy
Jan. 15, 2008
Iowa Presidential Watch
based on the following news stories:
Wes Pruden: Taking a switch to the candidates
…the Clintons, with a little help from Barack Obama, have loosed the race issue on us just when we thought all that had been put to rest.
…Bubba has played the race card before, once at the expense of old friends at home when he said he remembered the shame he felt for the black churches torched when he was a barefoot boy in Arkansas. It turned out that he remembered something no one else, black or white, did. An investigation revealed that no church black or white had ever been torched in Arkansas.
Roger Simon: The race card has been dealt
The race card is on the table, and it doesn’t matter who dealt it first. All that matters now is who plays it best.
“This is a defining moment,” Obama says in his stump speeches. “We are one nation, we are one people, and our time for change has come.”
And then he says: “There are folks all over the planet watching what we are doing.”
Translation: By voting for Barack Obama, you can prove to yourself, the nation and the world that you are not racist and that America has become a better place, a place decent enough to elect a black person to the presidency.
To the Clinton campaign, this is grossly unfair. When it is accused of playing the race card, it says Obama plays the race card every day.
In the contest for black votes, Clinton is trying to make the case that she has been working longer and harder for minorities than Obama has.
In the contest for white votes, Clinton says she is better qualified, more experienced and ready to lead from day one.
And though she doesn’t say it, her campaign knows that just as there are some people who will vote for Obama because he is black, there are some people who never will vote for him for the same reason.
Hillary Clinton is not electable because she is too polarizing, some of her opponents say.
She is far more electable than a black man, some of her supporters say.
The race card is on the table in this election. And it is not coming off.
The racial row that’s dividing the Dems
… never have two candidates so seemingly committed to the same cause taken out after each other — with supporters of Sen. Hillary Clinton saying her opponent Sen. Barack Obama is "no Martin Luther King," as Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) did yesterday, and Obama supporters accusing Clinton of race-baiting.
Some see it as supremely ironic that this fight has broken out in a historic presidential campaign in which both a woman and an African American are positioned to potentially break one of the hardest glass ceilings in American society.
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2 responses so far ↓
1 phantomlord // Jan 15, 2008 at 3:24 pm
My favorite part about this whole thing… is that the Dems are showing what they really think about Independents and to a greater extent, the GOP. “Oh, you can’t vote for him because he’s black and the Republicans hate black people.”
Psst, we don’t hate black people at all, but feel free to play up that stereotype to show who the real racists are. Maybe you’ll wake up the huge bloc of black people who agree with conservative ideas (family values, religion, etc) and get them to consider Republicans, who won’t be slinging mud over anyone’s race. I’m eager to attack Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama’s policies and ideas. We have a clear delineation between our ideas and theirs. The only difference between Hillary and Obama are their personalities, so they have to stoop to low levels like making race an issue or tearing up when they see their political dynasty crashing before their eyes.
America has twice as many people who lean hard right than who lean hard left. By all means, alienate the middle ground so we can scoop them up too. Promote those drivers licenses for illegal aliens that even 70% of deep blue NYers rejected. Keep messing around in Congress and showing how inept you are. You’re handing us the election. The only thing that can screw it up is if a candidate conservatives won’t vote for gets nominated (I’m looking at you especially John McCain). Then again, if you give us Hillary, we could run just about anyone against her and win since her negatives are already through the roof.
2 Hillary Clinton » Cartoon: Stop Digging // Jan 15, 2008 at 4:02 pm
[...] RochesterConservative.com wrote an interesting post today on Cartoon: Stop DiggingHere’s a quick excerpt … with supporters of Sen. Hillary Clinton saying her opponent Sen. Barack Obama is “no Martin Luther King,” as Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga….Hillary Clinton is not electable because she is too polarizing, some of her opponents say…. [...]
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