By Ann Coulter
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Liberal racism sightings have become like a lunatic's
version of "Where's Waldo?" Kevin Baker of Harper's magazine says
Romney's referring to his "five boys" in last week's debate was how
he "slyly found a way" to call Obama a "boy." Says Baker: "How
the right's hard-core racists must have howled at that!"
MSNBC's Chris Matthews says the word
"apartment" is racist because black people live in apartments. He
also says the word "Chicago" is racist because -- despite its
well-known reputation as the home of Al Capone and the Daley machine -- a lot
of black people live there, too. (And don't get him started on "Chicago
apartments"!)
As we go to press, Matthews is working on an exciting new
hypothesis that peanut butter is racist.
Meanwhile, my new favorite actress, Stacey Dash, sends an
inoffensive little tweet supporting Mitt Romney and is buried in tweets calling
her "an indoor slave" and a "jiggaboo," who was
"slutting (herself) to the white man." (And those were just the
tweets from the Obama 2012 Re-election Campaign!)
Could we get an expert opinion from Chris Matthews or
Kevin Baker about whether any of that is racist?
It's a strange thing with liberals. They spend so much
time fawning over black nonentities -- like Maya Angelou, Eugene Robinson,
Barack and Michelle Obama, and Rachel Maddow's very, very, very special black
guest Melissa Harris-Perry -- that, every once in awhile, they seem to erupt in
racist bile to restore their mental equilibrium.
After President George W. Bush appointed Condoleezza Rice
the first black female secretary of state, she was maligned in racist cartoons
portraying her as Aunt Jemima, Butterfly McQueen from "Gone With the
Wind," a fat-lipped Bush parrot and other racist cliches.
Kevin Baker didn't notice any of that because he was
working on his theory that referring to your sons is racist.
When Michael Steele ran for senator from Maryland, he was
depicted in blackface and with huge red lips by liberal blogger Steve Gilliard.
Sen. Charles Schumer's Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee dug up a copy
of Steele's credit report -- something done to no other Republican candidate.
Is that more or less racist than Romney mentioning his
sons? More or less racist than the word "apartment"?
Mia Love, a black Republican running for Congress in Utah
had her Wikipedia page hacked with racist bile, heavy on the N-word. Her
campaign headquarters has been bombarded with racist graffiti and slimy
mailings with pictures of Klansman next to photos of her family.
Some would say that's even more racist than Romney
talking about his sons.
On less evidence than the birthers have, liberals
slandered both Clarence Thomas and Herman Cain with the racist stereotype of
black men as sexual predators.
As the preceding short list suggests, liberals usually
limit their racist slime to conservative blacks. But not always.
In 2008, Bill Clinton said of Obama "a few years ago
this guy would have been carrying our bags." Democratic Sen. Harry Reid
praised Obama for not speaking in a "Negro dialect." Joe Biden
complimented Obama for being "clean" and "articulate."
Did I mention that Kevin Baker thinks that Romney
referring to his "five boys" is racist?
Two years ago, liberal newsman Dan Rather said the
criticism of Obama was that he "couldn't sell watermelons if you gave him
the state troopers to flag down the traffic." (I immediately called for
Rather's firing for that, and then remembered that he didn't have a job.)
Last week, Rather won the 2012 Edward R. Murrow Award for
Lifetime Achievement from Washington State University. That's not a joke -- or
at least not my joke.
Meanwhile, evidence of alleged Republican racism
invariably consists of tenuous connections and apocryphal signals normally
associated with schizophrenics and sufferers of "Thrilled Leg
Syndrome."
Since February 2008, the primary evidence of racism has
been failure to fully support Obama's election, policies or re-election. As
Slate magazine's Jacob Weisberg put it during the last presidential campaign,
only if Obama were elected president would children in America be able to
"grow up thinking of prejudice as a nonfactor in their lives."
I wish I had a nickel for every kid who's come up to me
in an airport and said, "What I wouldn't give to be able to think of
prejudice as a non-factor in my life ..."
Curiously, liberals weren't concerned about what children
in America would think if Clarence Thomas' Supreme Court nomination had been
defeated. No, only electing the most liberal person ever to seek the presidency
on a major party ticket would prove that the country could "put its own
self-interest ahead of its crazy irrationality over race."
The left's racial demagoguery worked: In 2008, Obama
received a larger proportion of the white vote than any Democrat running for
president in nearly 40 years. (Though he tied Clinton's 1996 white vote
record.)
And look how well that turned out! We haven't heard
another peep about racism since then.
To read more about what a smashing success the left's
utterly self-serving racial bullying has been, read my new book, "Mugged:
Racial Demagoguery From the Seventies to Obama."
No comments:
Post a Comment