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Monday April 28, 2008

Rev. Wright Again in Center of Dem. Contest

Associated Press - April 28, 2008

WASHINGTON - As Democratic front-runner Barack Obama sought to diminish race as a "determining factor" in the 2008 presidential contest, his former pastor said on Monday that the heated controversy over some of his remarks from pulpit were an attack on the black church in America.

Obama was heading into primaries in Indiana and North Carolina next week badly needing to rebound after a substantial defeat by rival Hillary Rodham Clinton in Pennsylvania.

But Rev. Jeremiah Wright's repeated and high-profile appearances in recent days were keeping alive the candidate's relationship with the outspoken black religious scholar who was the Illinois senator's spiritual adviser for 20 years.

"It is an attack on the black church, not an attack on Jeremiah Wright," the pastor said in a fiery speech Monday morning at the National Press Club in Washington.

He denounced U.S. intervention in Latin America and Iraq in an unrelenting attack on American foreign policy, in what was sure to fuel heavy criticism of Obama, who has denounced Wright's incendiary remarks in the past but refused to separate himself from Wright.

The religious leader has said the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States were "chickens coming home to roost" because of the country's actions in the world.

Wright rejected those who have labeled him unpatriotic.

"I served six years in the military," he said. "Does that make me patriotic? How many years did (Vice President Dick) Cheney serve?"

He said his Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago has a long history of liberating the oppressed by feeding the hungry, supporting recovery for the addicted and helping senior citizens in need. He said congregants have fought in the military, including in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"My goddaughter's unit just arrived in Iraq this week while those who call me unpatriotic have used their positions of privilege to avoid military service while sending over 4,000 American boys and girls to die over a lie," he said.

In other snippets of past sermons from the pulpit in Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ, Wright also said God should "damn" America for its oppression of blacks and accused the government of flooding the streets of black communities with illegal drugs.

Distribution of isolated portions of those remarks on the Internet and television were believed to have played a roll in Obama's loss last week in Pennsylvania, which showed the issues of race, gender and economic difficulties facing working-class voters were playing an important role in the Democratic nominating campaign now in it's 17th contentious week.

Wright also said he had warned Obama, if he were elected president, "I'm coming after you too because you represent a country that grinds people under."

Wright was making his third appearance since last Thursday.

"I am not one of the most divisive" black spiritual leaders, Wright told a 10,000-strong audience Sunday night at a meeting of Detroit, Michigan, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "I'm one of the most descriptive."

In a rollicking, often humorous and highly intellectual defense of black culture, Wright insisted he did not speak for Obama.

"I'm not a politician," he said. "I know that fact will surprise many of you because many in the corporate-owned media made it seem like I am running for the Oval Office."

The videos of Wright's remarks have knocked Obama's presidential campaign off stride and he acknowledged on "Fox News Sunday" that race was "still a factor in our society."

Yet, he asked rhetorically, "Is that going to be the determining factor in a general election? No, because I'm absolutely confident that the American people - what they're looking for is somebody who can solve their problems."

A Democratic victory in the November general election against presumptive Republican nominee John McCain would mean a first regardless of who wins - Obama, the first black president, or Clinton, the first woman to hold the office.

As the Democrats looked toward North Carolina and Indiana, those issues stood in stark relief. Obama had a sizable lead in pre-balloting polls in North Carolina, where there is a large African-American population, but he was running about even in with Clinton in Indiana.

His support there depended heavily on urban areas with larger black populations in contrast with Clinton's deeper backing in rural- and small-town Indiana and among hard-pressed working class whites - especially women - in rust-belt cities.

Those same divisions gave Clinton a nearly 10-percentage point victory last week in Pennsylvania, a vote that buried speculation she would exit the race, in which Obama holds an unassailable lead in elected delegates to the party's August national convention in Denver.

Clinton, meanwhile, campaigned in North Carolina, saying the U.S. has failed to give proper attention to Afghanistan, noting an assassination attempt on the country's president on Sunday as proof.

Speaking at a rally along Cape Fear in North Carolina, the former first lady said Afghanistan needs "as much, if not more attention" than Iraq.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the Sunday gunfire assault that missed President Hamid Karzai but killed three and wounded eight others at a ceremony in Kabul.

Clinton noted she had met Karzai, and said, "He is a brave man trying under very difficult circumstances to hold that country together, and we have not given him the resources he needs."

Clinton was in the state after spending two days campaigning in Indiana and appealing to working-class voters.

On the Republican side, nominee-in-waiting McCain criticized Obama as insensitive to the poor and out of touch with America's economic needs.

McCain's remarks in Coral Gables, Florida, arose from Obama's opposition to the Arizona senator's proposal to suspend the federal fuel tax this summer. Clinton has endorsed a similar proposal.

"I noticed again today that Senator Obama repeated his opposition to giving low-income Americans a tax break, a little bit of relief so they can travel a little further and a little longer, and maybe have a little bit of money left over to enjoy some other things in their lives," McCain said.

It was notable that McCain criticized Obama but did not strike out at Clinton, who trails her Democratic rival Obama in elected delegates and popular votes with seven U.S. states, and the territories of Puerto Rico and Guam still to vote.

An Associated Press tally of the delegate race has Obama leading Clinton 1,724.5 to 1,593.5.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Comments

Wright is keeping it interesting but even if he said nothing the Republicans would keep him involved. McCain is such a loser they'll have to throw all the dirt they can to beat either Democrat.

He denounced U.S. intervention in Latin America and Iraq in an unrelenting attack on American foreign policy, in what was sure to fuel heavy criticism of Obama, who has denounced Wright's incendiary remarks in the past but refused to separate himself from Wright.
I suppose to people who don't know any history that might fuel criticism but most people are coming to realize the Iraq invasion was wrong and stupid, and the US has overthrown governments we didn't like in Latin America over and over. Wright is right there and those remarks are only "incendiary" because it's not politically correct to bring those things up, what with the press being so complicit when they happened.

But I'm sure Obama had not intended to stop campaigning while he educates us on our history, so that may indeed hurt him.

"I served six years in the military," he said. "Does that make me patriotic? How many years did (Vice President Dick) Cheney serve?"

None, actually. He could have been in Vietnam but he "had other priorities in the Sixties than military service." In fact the Bush administration is well stocked with chicken hawks, starting at the top.

'Wright also said he had warned Obama, if he were elected president, "I'm coming after you too because you represent a country that grinds people under."'

Where was the press coverage of this guy the last seven years? He's no doubt had a lot of things to say, as have others, that the media ignored. And after he can't be used against Obama any more they'll ignore him again.

Obama is running for President, and Wright is a Minister, writer, and speech-giver. They are friends. To use everything that Wright says as a reason to reject Obama is immature and purposefully minipulative against Obama and the Democratic Party. The media loves it, this makes money and takes attention away from the reasons that Obama and Clinton are campaigning on. Of course the Republicans are gleeful! In short just some more pre-election circus tricks.

The fact that Cheney is a notorious, gun-toting, lawyer-shooting chicken-hawk is a distraction from the central issue.

Wright is, at least in part, a demagogue. Whatever good he has done is subsumed by his reinforcing, in his congregation, the belief in racist conspiracy theories, such as "the U.S. government pushes drugs to inner-city youth" and "the U.S. government created the AIDS virus to commit genocide against African-Americans." This is demagoguery, not prophesy.


Nothing this paranoid, delusional windbag (Wright) could say can make me vote for McCain. It's such a common practice for those who are racist themselves, but like to pretend not to be, to accuse everyone around them of racism.

Some posters here excel at that.

Still not sure which of the two Democrats to vote for.

I'm not saying the government's pushing drugs to inner-city youth but who is? It could very well be someone in government its not far fetched at all. Certainly the government has control over volume and other aspects of the trade. Be realistic we are talking about amounts so massive it is impossible to move without notice.

Wright is an interesting distraction from the race for Democratic nominee. Who knows if this will hurt Obama's chances at being elected to be the presidential candidate for the Democrates? The one thing I know for sure...won't be voting for McCain in November.


It's ludicrous to believe the government has a stake in supporting and "pushing" (pun intended) the inner-city (or any other) drug trade, or that it "certainly" controls it. What would it stand to gain? How can more people not be in the know if that were true? Someone is definitely getting rich from the drug trade, but it's not the USG. The conspiracy theory just doesn't cut it.


If we'd legalize drugs we could control them (like alcohol and cigs) and tax them and there wouldn't be the truly massive amounts of money available to buy off people in the legal system. Pretty close, given how many use them anyway, to a win-win.

"On the Republican side, nominee-in-waiting McCain criticized Obama as insensitive to the poor and out of touch with America's economic needs.
McCain's [made his] remarks in Coral Gables, Florida"

OK, this cracks me up entirely. Obama's career began and orientation has been to work with the less affluent people - neither of the other candidates can make this claim. AND to have McCain say this in Coral Gables, - on the the very most welathy communities in the country - is the very pinnacle of irony and amusement.

As to Obama - Wright has given him a great opportunity here, and I hope he takes it. NOW is the time for Obama to start talking about what he sees as his vision. Not broad lofty images, nor minute detail. Somewhere in between would be good. And as he states it as clearly as Wright makes his own case, theh I think Obama will succeed. He does have a vision and a sense of what he thinks the country can do. I hope he takes advantage of this particular moment and speaks clearly.

Wright has the advantage of not running for office. His congregation knows what to expect, and he delivers. But by his own admission, he is not a politician - or a diplomate either, apparently. But he WILL hold Obama accountable - and that is good. I wonder if any of the other cnadidates has someone to whom they must account - I doubt it is anyone they want known.

The anonymous posting above was mine. Another in a long string of "oops".

To some degree I think Rev Wright has to accept his retirement and sit down quietly. He may soon undo everything he has helped shape. Every artist and composer has to learn when to stop. Now is the time.

The Gov has a lot more control of illegal drug than one might suspect.

"What is there to gain?"

You've got to be kidding right?

I'm not totally agreeing with Wright, but he's not a total idiot either.

jestrfyl-

This is one of the few times I completely disagree with you.

I think that perhaps the Rev Wright's time is just beginning. I absolutely do not think he should sit down quietly. He is perhaps the catalyst for something much bigger and more important than whether or not Sen Obama is elected president.


nnmns-
Yes, there is a certain irony that one of the wealthiest Senators in the Senate is suggesting that a man whose career has been about community organization and representation is out of touch with American's economic needs. And, to do so from Coral Gables, FL....my oh my.

I also agree that this would be a great time for Sen Obama to seize the moment and flesh out his vision. While he would loose some supporters along the way...I think he would pick up many that are fences sitters now. When people are authentic....they often draw others to themselves.

Peace!

JQ the Coral Gables post was not mine; I wish it had been. I suspect j.

John Q
Those other statements were mine as well. I left out the citation and tried to make amends in the one after it. Sorry - I am many things, but no one can accuse me of anonymity (and I think nnmns gave me away).

nnmns & jestrfyl-

Sorry for my confusion and not recognizing the author of the post. My comments still stand.

Peace be with you both!

20 years of friendship and pastoral ministry is a long time to evaluate the character of a man. It is improbable that Obama did not hear or learn about these radical views of Rev. Wright.
I like Obama, I would vote for him today, but I would like him to explain his viewpoints on the African-American agenda. This kind of bad publicity would hurt pretty badly in many parts of the country.
He has to step up and strongly settle this problem quickly.

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