Memo From a Poison Penn
By Colbert I. King
Washington Post
Saturday, August 16, 2008
Say you find yourself seated on the train behind two white supremacists who are beside themselves over the possibility that Barack Obama could become America's first black president.
They are so fired up, they fail to notice you.
The men are discussing the urgent need to derail Obama's candidacy.
The obvious strategist of the two says that Obama's defeat can be brought about by hitting him hard, where it hurts the most.
We've got to launch an attack, he declares, on Obama's "lack of American roots." Paint him as a guy with an exotic background who's present in mainstream society but isn't really a part of it.
He asserts, with a snicker, that Obama has "a very strong weakness." We'll drive home the argument, he says, that Obama's "roots to basic American values and culture are at best limited."
(Continued here.)
Washington Post
Saturday, August 16, 2008
Say you find yourself seated on the train behind two white supremacists who are beside themselves over the possibility that Barack Obama could become America's first black president.
They are so fired up, they fail to notice you.
The men are discussing the urgent need to derail Obama's candidacy.
The obvious strategist of the two says that Obama's defeat can be brought about by hitting him hard, where it hurts the most.
We've got to launch an attack, he declares, on Obama's "lack of American roots." Paint him as a guy with an exotic background who's present in mainstream society but isn't really a part of it.
He asserts, with a snicker, that Obama has "a very strong weakness." We'll drive home the argument, he says, that Obama's "roots to basic American values and culture are at best limited."
(Continued here.)
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