- Anonymous
Martin Luther King was a Republican, as was Frederick Douglass.
You never hear that do you?
Well spoken Mr. West. Keep the faith and the fight.
Right rudder! Full steam ahead!
- http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=775953507 Berend Lienemann
I have also read in some places that MLK had strong ties to the Communist Party of America. I haven’t delved too much into it and it may just be rumor.
- Anonymous
Nope, you are correct. The Heritage put out a good piece. http://blog.heritage.org/2012/01/15/martin-luther-king%E2%80%99s-conservative-principles/. King was also a womanizer, and heavy drinker. He also embraced the welfare state later in his life, according to the Heritage article. School history books overlook his character flaws. But, he was monumental in the civil rights movement.
- Anonymous
Very interesting link, stevenbiot – particularly come from the well-respected Heritage Foundation.
- Anonymous
I love Heritage. I don’t enjoy the fact that they sponsored the individual mandate, but their analysis is usually spot on. Check out their Index of Economic Freedom.
- Anonymous
Yea, so repeat it.
Wait, no. How about you spend the time finding credible sources to substantiate the rumor you keep hearing.
That might put to rest the rumor I keep hearing about you and barnyard animals.
- Anonymous
Here’s one to back Berend up a bit. http://www.martinlutherking.org/helms.html
- Anonymous
Cows are extremely sexy in the right light!
- Anonymous
I had heard that too, but I was trying to find a credible source that would confirm it and was unable to. I mostly found that he was unaffiliated with either party and never wanted to endorse either one. Do you know if there is actually proof that he was a republican? I would love to be able to refer a few liberals I know to some actual facts.

- Anonymous
I’ve read it in many places. His grandfather and father were Republicans too, no doubt from knowing and living through the true history of democrats and their blatant racism. Frederick Douglass was quite vocal about his Republican convictions and membership. MLK probably read his writings/speeches a lot too.
Try this for starters: http://images.nbra.info/docs/library/NationalBlackRepublicanAssociation2009/NBRA%20Civil%20Rights%20Newsletter%202Feb11.pdf
- Anonymous
Thanks for the link Rshill7. I’m quite sure if someone were to edit the Wikipedia entry for MLKJr to include the information in your link, it would be quickly scrubbed out. It infuriates me that the left rewrites history to suit their needs — and gets away with it so that the lies can become what most people accept as truth.
- Anonymous
I can’t understand how professors, who’s main goals are to teach unbiased, historical information, are the cheerleaders of the left. It seems obvious that history, for the most part, is on the side of conservatives.
- Constance
Mr. West, Obama is not listening to you or anyone like you. He despises you. Don’t waste your breath talking to the president.
- Anonymous
Maybe other Americans will resonate and unite with his message?
But you’re right, Maobama will cling to his divisive predispositions like rats on driftwood.
- Anonymous
You know what really strikes me? When I look at Allen West, I don’t even think of him as a black man. I notice, but that’s not what strikes me. When I look at him, his character and his conviction resonate with me. I see a manly beauty and strength of leadership that appeals to me, not his skin color. When I hear him, I’m reminded of what makes my beloved nation so great!
The fact that he is a black man in America who is choosing to rise above racial divisions is icing on the cake. I hope everyone can follow this leader’s leading.
-I’m raising my children to notice a person first of all and their race last of all. I am happy to say that it is working.-
- Anonymous
He’s a good guy for sure.
- Anonymous
100% agree step!
- Anonymous
I say bravo to you! I feel exactly the same way about him. America just needs a few heroes to speak the truth… Allen West is certainly one of those. Wish he was running this year.
- Anonymous
Beautiful and True.
Too bad that Bam and Moochelle will not listen. - Anonymous
Congressman West: Why would you have to ask a man to behave decently? Thank you for your tireless efforts. Thank you for your service. Thank you for being an American.
But when you realize you need to remind a man, regardless of color, that he ought to remember to be decent, you’ve already identified the problem.
I would never dare to say the same thing to you, sir. It would be a dis-service and and insult. To the handi-capped and class-less Barack, maybe if he’d had a father, or a mother who raised him, or maybe if he’d actually worked a real job around a typical group of Americans, or been in the service, maybe you wouldn’t have to remind this man to be a man.
I appreciate your effort to admonish the poor benighted and immature soul of his responsibilities as a human being, and it is my fervent hope that your admonishments will escalate.
- Anonymous
Well said, Words. I “liked” it before I logged in, so that handsome bear isn’t showing up
(fixed it) - http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1396855720 Brian Jones
Hey WordsFailMe: You sure have a way with words!!! Great post Sir!
- Anonymous
And words fail me as well…
Good point there Words.
- Anonymous
Let’s stop looking at things as black vs. white and start looking at them as tax PAYOR vs. Entitlement spender. I don’t care what color you are. I care about whether or not you are a help or a drag on our country. Nothing else matters.
- http://twitter.com/Winston80 Winston
Obama will play the race card. His entire being is about racism and discrimination against ordinary Americans.
- StNikao
Obama is down with racism – he’s a black/Islamic supremacist like his father and a marxist like his mother’s family.
Islam is a violent racist, misogynistic, aggressive, abusive, totalitarian politicized hate group.
The reason Martin Luther King was killed was because he was a Christian, not a black muslim supremacist.
- Anonymous
StNikao, tough words but truth in all, which is why Obama’s policy to Islamicize huge swaths of the ME and N. Africa is extremely telling, to say the least.
- Anonymous
This is another distraction, BHO can’t RUN ON HIS RECORD! They will change the subject as necessary. I don’t care what skin color you have if you do a terrible job and your record proves it, you should not be reelected to any office. Period end of story!
- Anonymous
Folks need to read the true history of the democrat party as it relates to racism in the U.S.
MLK, the antithesis of the Black Panthers, Holder, Obama, and the Congressional Black Caucus.
James Earl Ray who pled guilty to the murder of King was a George Wallace proponent, bigtime. He loved Wallace’s racial segregation stance and hoped he’d become President. Wallace, a 4-term Alabama Governor and, you guessed it, a Democrat.
- Anonymous
Spot on, Rshill7. The KKK literally became the terrorist wing of the Democrat Party after it was created by a Democrat following Reconstruction. Former Senator-turned-Supreme Court jurist Hugo Black, law enforcement official Bull Connor, and US Senator Robert Byrd – all Democrats…all Klan members. It was the Democrat Party which instituted school segregation, established poll taxes, and literacy tests to keep blacks and other non-whites from voting in the southern states – which were all governed by Democrats George Wallace, Lester Maddox and Orval Faubus. Ain’t it something how the media and their allies in the Democrat Party have been able to successfully revise history by tarring the GOP with this issue? Their malevolence knows no boundaries.
- Anonymous
Congressman West is becoming a strong voice (not that I haven’t thought that for some time). How long do you think it will take before Obama has his lackeys calling Mr. West an ‘Uncle Tom’ or a ‘Tea Party waterboy’. They will need to take his race away from him to lessen his voice. Any bets, folks? Rahm? Sharpton? Mooochelle? Barry? I can’t hear you!
- Anonymous
Allen West is a good and honest man and his values and beliefs are spot on.
I couldn’t agree with him more. For a sitting U.S. President to play the race card once is despicable. To build a platform for re-election on it is cowardly and so wrong. I’m so disgusted with this partisan, divisive, and incompetent boob who constantly lies and disparages… this is his “hope and change”? Seriously, if clowns like Al Sharpton, the Jacksons (Jesse and son), Sheila Jackson Lee, Maxine Watters, Maobama… etc. would quit stoking these fires of hatred and class warfare, then America might be able to fully heal and this may become a non-issue.
I know discrimination and racism will always have a few who will carry that flag and use it for their own gain… but seriously, let’s try to come together, not hate or envy each other. Where is the love?
Allen West gets it. Martin Luther King got it… to love one another and come together. I pray that our outspoken idiot leaders wake up sometime and try to use their platforms for good someday… not evil.
- Anonymous
Round of applause from me.
Just as soon as the fires of racism are dying down, there is someone standing by to stoke them up again. Shocking that is should come from people like Sharpton and Jackson, who should be encouraging everyone to heal one another’s wounds. That’s the message of a true spiritual leader.
- Anonymous
I’ll have to disagree with West on this one point. The American people did NOT choose Obama on the content of his character. And they most assuredly DID choose him on the colour of his skin. How many times was the meme put out there that a vote against Obama was a racist vote. Had Americans really know the “content” or lack thereof of Obama’s character… how many would have voted for him in the first place? Far fewer than did, I wager… so much fewer that Barack Hussein Obama would NOT be President of the United States.
- Anonymous
Sorry, las. I was posting my comments as you posted yours. Didn’t mean to duplicate your thoughts and ideas. Although, I would have to say I agree wholeheartedly. lol
- Anonymous
Congressman West’s speech was eloquently spoken and I love his views and ideas. However, I have to disagree with one point of his speech.
White voters across America had judged our President by the content of his character, not the color of his skin, and elected a man of color…the lion’s share of these voters made their decision based on his character, his vision of hope and change, and his ability to relate with everyday Americans. –A. West
I believe Confressman West is being gracious here. We did not vote for Obama because of his character, in my opinion. We actually voted for him because of the color of his skin and a false sense of hope, which, in my opinion, is just as bad as voting against him because of his skin color.
Hopefully, in 2012, we can honestly look at the content of his character and his policies and finally leave race out of it altogether. Thank you, Congressman. Keep up the fight.
- Anonymous
You’re probably right, though I’m glad Mr. West decided to go with gracious. “You catch more flies with honey than with vinegar,” as the saying goes.
- Anonymous
I, too, am glad he went with ‘gracious’. As long as the reality of 2008 is out there. He will get more done in Congress than I ever could, due to the fact I probably would get arrested on assault charges on a daily basis. Sad, but true.
- Anonymous
Yikes… great minds do think alike.. But I suspect there are many many more great minds out there as well. Common sense IS really common it appears.
- Anonymous
Those Americans who voted for O’ thought they were voting for content of character but it was a ridiculously shallow concept of the content. In other words, it was all that the media would let out.
Those still small voices that tried to trumpet the depth of his depravity, and true content of his character were ridiculed, marginalized and laughed at. Most Americans are already colorblind, and the election proved it. He wasn’t raked across the coals, and he wasn’t vetted to any reasonable depth at all.
In this way, West is 100% correct IMO.
- Anonymous
I am proud to say I was counted among the 11% who strongly opposed Obama (Rasmussen poll, ’08 pre-election) and I hope to be among the 89% (!) who strongly oppose him in ’12 (future Rasmussen poll). Those small voices are getting louder. Can you hear it, Barry?
- Anonymous
Raked across the coals eh! Hmm.. It’ll never happen. But your points… all excellent.
- Anonymous
Raked across the coals eh! Hmm.. It’ll never happen. But your points… all excellent.
- Anonymous
Exactly! West may want to believe that Barack got elected due to objective character assessment, but this is a flat out lie! A mistake was made; we just don’t need to make it again.
- Anonymous
Well, lie is a strong word. I believe Congressman West was voicing what most Americans ‘believed’ were the reasons they voted for Barry. Hopefully they have awoken from their dream state.
- Anonymous
West may believe what he said; but he is too smart and aware to think that Barack’s election was because of integrity, character, etc.
- Anonymous
It has been my foolish hope that the voice of unity driving a post-racial America would be the voice of the one who has benefited the most: the President of the United States.
If there is one man in America who can say that he has attained Dr. King’s dream, it is him. If there is one man in America who has the platform and the influence to change the public discourse, it is him.
Sadly, he is the one who does just the opposite, just as Mr. West has said. (But I still hold out hope that he will wake up one morning and be a new man, just like Saul on the Damascus road.)
- Anonymous
I believe Rep. Allen West, a courageous, honorable, eloquent warrior for our nation and its conservative roots, is also likely issuing an alarm to the GOP electorate at large. As a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, he is undoubtedly within earshot to some of the anti-GOP comments, discussions and innuendo bantered about between the mostly Democrat, leftist members of that organization. Imagine what he may have heard in private if members, like Andre Carson and Maxine Waters, have stated the following publicly: declaring “war on the racist the Tea Party”, likening the GOP and the Tea Party to murderous racists, telling the Tea Party to “go to hell”, etc. No doubt, the Obama administration not only fully supports such attacks, but was instrumental in fomenting them. As the election gets closer, Obama will call on all of his well-known supporters to follow this path to “divide and conquer”, as well. It has already begun with Hollywood celebrities like Morgan Freeman, who declared on a nationally-televised interview that the “white, Tea Party will do anything to get this black man out of here”.
IMHO, Rep. West knows exactly where this is all heading and is issuing a subliminal clarion call to the electorate, because he is fully aware that Obama is about to engage in a race-based, scorched-earth assault in order to target the two most valuable constituencies required for his re-election: 1) mobilizing the disaffected, unemployed blacks who would otherwise sit out the election (which has plummeted from a high of 90% to 58%); and 2) shaming the larger number of white voters who cast “guilt votes” into not denying him a second term.
- Anonymous
The Congressional Black Caucus meetings remind me of Thanksgiving dinner, where we have two tables – the adult table and the kids table. However, I see some 40+ sitting at the kids table and one sitting at the adult table. Have faith, Congressman West. More are coming.
- Anonymous
Excellent, nukeman. And is if right on queue…meet Mia B. Love – up and coming, conservative, Tea Party superstar from Utah running for Congress:
http://legalinsurrection.com/2012/01/mia-b-love-a-conservative-political-star-rises-in-utah/
- Anonymous
Yes, help is, indeed, on the way.

- Anonymous
Allen West is a vindication of MLK. And it’s cool that he seems to realize it.
- Anonymous
I understand, and agree with everything West said, beside the part where he says that we elected Barack because of the content of his character. Truthfully, I think alot of people voted for racist motives, proven by the black vote, and white guilt. White people in this country have bought into the fallacy that we owe African Americans something, due to the fact that our ancestors, not us, may have partaken in the horrible slave trade. I feel no guilt, and did not own slaves. Therefore, I owe African Americans diddly squat!
- Anonymous
stevenbiot: ….and the real tragedy is what black people rightfully owe themselves yet deny because of their belief in decades-long leftist indoctrination. If the majority of black people would focus on pursuing their individual talents and skills based on grey matter – not skin color – their fortunes in life would exponentially rise. Instead, many blacks continue to fall for the ruse that skin color alone determines their pathway in life, denying themselves the opportunity to fully realize their true, innate potential because they refuse to go more than “skin deep”. In this way, they are not only the victims of Marxist-Democrat identity politics, but victimize themselves as well. A damn shame for both them and this country.
- Anonymous
Slavery was cruel and wrong no matter who instituted it. However, our history has been rewritten by those that want to manipulate white people into feeling guilty about slavery. Blacks were not blameless in the evil slave traditions as some of the worst offenders in the slave trade were African tribal kings. Some were even so diabolical that they sold their own family members.
Black Ivory – Africa’s Export
http://www.sciway.net/afam/slavery/flesh.htmlThe most common reasons for selling tribal members to the Europeans were for offenses against society, such as murder or theft, offenses against the king, or even personal or tribal misfortunes such as indebtedness or tribal famine.
But whatever the reason, he says, “the sale of human lives was profitable for African tribal kings and the European traders as well as the colonial planters.”
- Anonymous
12grace, your very good post reminds us that the ultimate goal of slavery – or oppression of any kind – is to empower one group of humans over another, and that color, creed, gender, etc., are just the “means used to achieve the ends”.
- Anonymous
Well put, Puchino.
- Anonymous
Yes, I think that many people voted “Race over Reason”.
“Howard started off the show playing a few clips of Sal asking black people if they were voting for Obama, and attributed all of McCain’s political policies to Obama to see if they would still vote for him. All the interviewees readily agreed with Obama when Sal lied to them about his pro-life, anti-stem-cell research and pro-war policies. Howard said the clips were revealing, and Sal came in to say he thought the election had become less about ideas and, instead, some kind of race war.”
Of the three people questioned, two said they are voting for Obama because he is Pro-Life, two said they are voting for Obama because he wants to stay in Iraq and finish the war and one because Obama is against stem cell research. All said that they had no problem with Sarah Palin being vice president.
http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/h/stern-harlem.htm
Links to Stories About Barack Obama
http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/o/obamalinks.htm - Anonymous
I loved that Howard Stern segment. Obama’s election was a racial one, no more, no less.
- Anonymous
obama seems to feel that black people were discriminated against years ago and now he is going to make every white person pay for the discrimination.
obama conveniently forgets that many white people marched with and sided with King and others fighting for Civil Rights and Equality for black people.
Now, it seems that some black Americans don’t want “equal rights” they think they deserve “superior rights”.
It is time for us to drop the hyphenated( like African-American) and come together as one-word Americans of all races and rebuild our country in unity.
That was the dream of Martin Luther King.
Sean Hannity asserts Barack Obama is a racist
Glenn Beck Calls Obama A Racist
saul alinsky, community organizing and rules for radicals
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/alinsky.htmBeck: Obama wants to use ‘race riots’ to ‘take this country down’
http://www.rawstory.com/rawreplay/2011/08/beck-obama-wants-to-use-race-riots-to-take-this-country-down/OBAMA’S BLACK PANTHERS CALL FOR THE KILLING OF WHITE AMERICANS
Ethnicity ( refers to his beliefs about reparations)
http://theobamafile.com/
http://theobamafile.com/index_next_politics.html - Anonymous
obama seems to feel that black people were discriminated against years ago and now he is going to make every white person pay for the discrimination.
obama conveniently forgets that many white people marched with and sided with King and others fighting for Civil Rights and Equality for black people.
Now, it seems that some black Americans don’t want “equal rights” they think they deserve “superior rights”.
It is time for us to drop the hyphenated( like African-American) and come together as one-word Americans of all races and rebuild our country in unity.
That was the dream of Martin Luther King.
Sean Hannity asserts Barack Obama is a racist
Glenn Beck Calls Obama A Racist
saul alinsky, community organizing and rules for radicals
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/alinsky.htmBeck: Obama wants to use ‘race riots’ to ‘take this country down’
http://www.rawstory.com/rawreplay/2011/08/beck-obama-wants-to-use-race-riots-to-take-this-country-down/OBAMA’S BLACK PANTHERS CALL FOR THE KILLING OF WHITE AMERICANS
Ethnicity ( refers to his beliefs about reparations)
http://theobamafile.com/
http://theobamafile.com/index_next_politics.html - Anonymous
I hate using the term “African-American,” too. It seems like black people are the true racists nowadays: Black congressional caucus, BET. I can’t understand how a group of people hate being marginalized, but on the other hand go to great lengths to segregate themselves from the rest of society.
- Anonymous
I agree that most people voted for Obama because of his race since no one knew who he was, and to this day we still don’t know anything about his background. He pays to keep that a secret. Everything that would have given us a clue as to his character would have been his associations (Wright, Farrakhan, Ayers, Jarrett, and all the other communists and Marxist with whom he has surrounded himself).
- Anonymous
I like it , I hope Obama reads it and understands it.
I have my fingers crossed Rep.West will run in 2016 , I would be proud to vote for him . - Anonymous
In honor of Martin Luther King Jr. day, here are some of my favorite MLK,jr quotes…
1. “The hottest place in Hell is reserved for those who remain neutral in times of great moral conflict.”
2. “Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.”
3. “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”
4. “Freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.”
5. “He who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it.”
6. “Means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek.”
and last but not least…
7. “I look to a day when people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”
- Anonymous
obama seems to feel that black people were discriminated against years ago and now he is going to make every white person pay for the discrimination.
obama conveniently forgets that many white people marched with and sided with King and others fighting for Civil Rights and Equality for black people.
Now, with obama’s influence, it seems that some black Americans don’t want “equal rights” they think they deserve “superior rights”.
It is time for us to drop the hyphenated (like African-American) label and come together as Americans of all races, follow our Constitution, and rebuild our country in unity.
That was the dream of Martin Luther King.
Sean Hannity asserts Barack Obama is a racist
Glenn Beck Calls Obama A Racist
saul alinsky, community organizing and rules for radicals
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/alinsky.htmBeck: Obama wants to use ‘race riots’ to ‘take this country down’
http://www.rawstory.com/rawreplay/2011/08/beck-obama-wants-to-use-race-riots-to-take-this-country-down/OBAMA’S BLACK PANTHERS CALL FOR THE KILLING OF WHITE AMERICANS
Ethnicity ( refers to his beliefs about reparations)
http://theobamafile.com/
http://theobamafile.com/index_next_politics.html - Anonymous
12grace, your point about Obama wanting white people to pay for discrimination is extremely valid. Long before Obama ever became elected for any office, I had already had a good deal of involvement with the jazz community, which happens to include a lot of black musicians who were aligned with the Democrat Party. One of the words routinely bantered about was the following: “reparations”. Simply put, these citizens believed, throughout the 1980s and 90s, that they should be guaranteed a large, lump sum of cash from the govt, because the sins of slavery were imposed on a population of people who were alive 120 years before…the “40 acres and a mule” rule. This thinking is so prevalent within the black community that Spike Lee, who is about to host a $35,000 a plate fundraiser for Obama, named his production company “40 acres and a mule”. This belief has not diminished time, but only intensified with the election of a black president. Obama is fully steeped in this as well, which is why his redistribution of wealth is in fact, a way of enacting reparations – no doubt about it.
- Anonymous
THANK YOU MR WEST, WELL SAID.
- http://pulse.yahoo.com/_GDJGRV2MMCB6P2ZYTUZW6BHFVA Richard
I’m dreaming of a DeMint-West presidential ticket! Tea Party unite against this tyrannical administration.
Allen West asked this morning, on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, that the President not play the race card in 2012. After all, his election was the fulfillment of Dr. King’s dream, West said, and “how devastated would Dr. King be to know the Americans who are still fomenting racism at the highest levels are the very people for whom he fought for and died?”
I was born in the inner city of Atlanta in 1961, when segregation was still rife, at a time when I would have been barred from visiting the very beaches that make up part of the congressional district I so proudly represent.
Just two years after my birth, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. momentously described his dream that one day his children would “live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but the content of their character.”
How proud he would have been on that November Tuesday in 2008 when Barack Obama was elected the 44th President of the United States. Clearly, Dr. King’s dream had come true. White voters across America had judged our President by the content of his character, not the color of his skin, and elected a man of color, whose very lineage with a black African father and white American mother, was a literal manifestation of the figurative melting pot of these United States.
The inauguration of our first black President, the highest office in the land, and perhaps the world’s most powerful office, clearly demonstrated to the world that race need not be a hindrance to success and achievement in America. The fact that Barack Obama won the largest share of white support of any Democrat in a two-man race since 1976 indicated the lion’s share of these voters made their decision based on his character, his vision of hope and change, and his ability to relate with everyday Americans.
Still, let us not ignore that white Democrats aren’t the only voters who are capable of making a decision based on character rather than color.
In the 2010 election cycle, 42 black Republicans were vying for seats in the House of Representatives, and 14 of them made it to the general election. Two of those candidates, myself as well as Tim Scott from South Carolina, carried that success all the way to the House of Representatives. I represent a Congressional District where more than 90 percent of my constituents are not black. A powerful movement of respect for black conservatism is brewing in this country, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. would be proud of it.
With all of this progress, why is it that we continue to hear charges of racism emanating from the left, and most disturbingly, from the White House itself? It seems anytime there is criticism of the President or any of his black members of his administration, such as Attorney General Eric Holder, that criticism is decried as racist.
Mr. Holder recently said of his critics, “This is a way to get at the president because of the way I can be identified with him, both due to the nature of our relationship and, you know, the fact that we’re both African-American.” In other words, he insinuated Republicans — along with Conservatives and Tea Party members — are incapable of judging anyone solely by their character, something I take very personally.
Mr. Holder and others need to know, the criticism of the President is not of his person, but of his policies, which have clearly failed our nation–and most tragically of all in this supposedly post-racial period –have failed the black community.
As of December 2011, black unemployment remained in double digits, nearly double the national average for men at 16.4 percent, and 14.1 percent for women.
According to a Washington Post poll in September 2011, the proportion of black Americans with a “strongly positive” view of President Obama has slipped from 83 percent to 58 percent. It would obviously be absurd to say the black community’s changing view of President Obama is racially biased, so how can one make the same claim about white members opposing his policies?
As we proceed into this general election cycle, it would be a disgrace if Mr. Holder’s comment is the first salvo in the upcoming campaign to deflect honest assessment of the President’s performance in office. This campaign must be about ideas, policy and the direction of this country, and the President must not hide behind a curtain of so-called racial bias.
All Americans, black or white – and every shade in between – must be allowed to voice their opinions, level their criticisms and engage in candid discussion without fear of being labeled “racist” simply because of the color of their skin. This is precisely what Dr. Martin Luther King spoke of so eloquently, and what we celebrate today.
My message to President Obama is this: “Mr. President, your very presence in office demonstrates Dr. King’s dream has indeed come true. But how devastated would Dr. King be to know the Americans who are still fomenting racism at the highest levels are the very people for whom he fought for and died?”
- http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=775953507
- http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1396855720
- http://twitter.com/Winston80
- http://pulse.yahoo.com/_GDJGRV2MMCB6P2ZYTUZW6BHFVA

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