Friday, November 07, 2008



Obama's blackness

There seemed to be a great taboo on mentioning Obama's blackness during the election campaign but at the moment you seem to hear almost nothing else -- what a great triumph is is for a black to become President etc.

It's just my impression. I have not bothered to document it it any way and maybe I have just been reading the wrong stuff but it is of course consistent with today's speech rules that you can only mention blackness to praise it.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

And how sad that one of Obama's daughters was dressed in a black dress. No joy comes from this for a child.

Anonymous said...

Welcome to the psychosis of the left. When he's a candidate, his race is "off limits." When he's President-Elect, it's all about his race.

When the country continues to languish in economic turmoil and malaise well into his first term (say 2 years), his race will again be "off limits," and any criticism of his inaction, indecision, and hubris will be called "racist."

Anonymous said...

Understanding that "everything" they say and do, including their appearance on that stage, has been "highly" choreographed by their handlers, it may have been a message for the American people like, it's all ours now and we'll make the rules!

If the truth be told, i think we'll find that Mrs. Obama is even more of an anti-White, anti-America radical than her husband and his "associates". I'm sure they'll have their hands full keeping her under wraps.

Anonymous said...

Never use the Big B.O. middle name, that is why I always say B.O. and since he is the president, he is the Big one.

Hence he is the Big B.O.

Now where is the deodorant that gets rid of B.O.?

Mobius

Anonymous said...

The sad truth is that people voted for him simply because he is black. They would rather compromise core values and morals for sake of electing a man of color. Sorry, but it is the issues that are important, not someone's race.

Anonymous said...

Obama's black. Damn, why didn't someone say so before. And to think I wasted my vote on McCain.

Anonymous said...

Maybe the silver lining is whenever Je$$ie Jackson or Sharpton whine about how racist the U.S.is we can point to the White House and tell them to shut up.

Anonymous said...

The man is a mulatto, not black. The fact that he was raised and educated by his white mother and white grandparents with no contact with his Kenyan father receives no coverage. Voters and the media who see him and speak of him as 'black' and ignore his whiteness and white cultural background are the racists.