Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Tonight I'm Gonna Party Like It's 1965

In a conversation with Supreme Court Justice William Douglas, fellow Justice Thurgood Marshall had reportedly stated, "You guys have been practicing discrimination for years. Now it is our turn." Apparently, this mantra remains for the Race Card Reverends, or more specifically, Al Sharpton.

It doesn't take a thousand Google searches to find an insinuation that white Americans are somehow inherently xenophobic, racist, bigoted - you know the list. With Al Sharpton's latest jihad against white people, it's abundantly clear that the Don Imus incident didn't result in a sole assault on Imus himself, but free speech in general.

In 1911, Booker T. Washington warned us about the concept of victimization for profit.

"I am afraid that there is a certain class of race-problem solvers who don't want the patient to get well, because as long as the disease holds out they have not only an easy means of making a living, but also an easy medium through which to make themselves prominent before the public."

Don Imus took responsibility for the comments he made. He apologized to those he wronged - the Rutgers basketball team. Imus went ahead and offered his regrets to Al Sharpton, although he wasn't even remotely personally insulted.

As Ann Coulter put it...

"This wasn't an insult to all mankind, and certainly not an insult to Al Sharpton. Now, if Imus had called the basketball players 'fat, race-baiting black men with clownish hairstyles,' well, then perhaps Sharpton would be owed an apology."

The cloth has been removed, unvailing an agenda to shred our constitutional and self-evident freedoms and burn them to a crisp. Imus's comment was not made out of hatred, but common stupidity that often associates with filling hours worth of satire on the radio every day. Most people accept that "shock jocks" are, by definition, offensive at times.

Courageously, Jason Whitlock of the Kansas City Star went on CNN with Tucker Carlson and defended his article about Al Sharpton's victimization profiteering from the Don Imus incident. He probably jumped the gun by using the word "terrorists", but other than that, his argument is accurate.

If Al Sharpton cared about racism and xenophobia, why didn't he comment on what the Sudanese thought about us foreigners? From Al-Quds Al-Arabi of London on September 24, 2003:

"During September 2003, mass hysteria spread through Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, which was ultimately quelled by police intervention and statements made by the health minister. The panic was caused by rumors of foreigners roaming the city and shaking men's hands, making their penises disappear. The rumors were spread rapidly by text messages on cellular phones, and diverted the public's attention from a breakthrough in negotiations in Kenya between Sudanese Vice President Ali Othman and SPLA leader John Garang."

In a time of terror and uncertainty, is it really necessary to bury a story in order to portray our Islamist oppressors as tolerant, peaceful, or even democratic? Oh wait, they're not white Americans. That's why it's not dirty to Al Sharpton. Or not dirty enough to make a quick buck and make face time with the sweethearts in the mainstream media.

Speaking of sweethearts, why wasn't Al Sharpton outraged by our tax-funded C-SPAN televising Dr. Kamau Kambon to speak about Hurricane Katrina? I thought Hurricane Katrina was important to Reverend Al. Oh, wait a minute. There's no controversy here. Just an ex-professor calling for the extermination of white people.



Here is the transcript:

"Now how do I know that the white people know that we are going to come up with a solution to the problem? I know it because they have retina scans, They have what they call racial profiling, DNA banks. And they're monitoring our people to try to prevent the one person from coming up with the one idea. And the one idea is how we are going to exterminate white people. Because that, in my estimation, is the only conclusion I have come to. We have to exterminate white people off of the face of the planet to solve this problem."

I've gotta admit, that one's a little hard for Sharpton to cash in on.

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