MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Hello, GOP primary voters. I know you're feeling upset about the new and graphic charges against Herman Cain. And I know that many of you blame white liberals, like myself, for allegedly drumming up these allegations to keep Cain from winning your nomination. But let me say on behalf of my fellow honky pinkos that this one really, really wasn't us. Because, you see, we would love for Herman Cain to win your nomination. Oh please, please, please vote for him anyway. There's no one we'd rather see run against Barack Obama in the fall. We're willing to beg here.
I won't lie to you. If Herman Cain became the nominee and then terrible and scandalous new information came out about him just before Columbus Day weekend, that probably would be us. We have no problem letting people know about ugly things your candidates have done. But what we would really never do is mess with your primaries so that your weak candidates give your strong candidates less trouble. And, brother, is Herman Cain a lousy candidate: much, much weaker than Mitt Romney, whom we probably dislike more than you do. If there's any way that you can keep Romney from getting the nomination, we'd be grateful. And we'd certainly never do anything that gets in the way of that. Go Herman!
I know that many of you have this theory that if you nominate an "American Black Conservative" then black voters will flock to the GOP and abandon Obama. Last night, as I drove through our country trying to find Monday Night Football on AM, I heard many people discussing this theory as established fact. But sinister white liberals like me are not so worried about what will happen if Obama ever faces a black conservative at the polls because, try to follow along now, that has already happened. It was 2004. It was Alan Keyes. It was not suspenseful.
Yes, I know that you're deeply committed to not remembering anything that happened in that time period, and even more committed to not drawing obvious, common-sense conclusions from the events of those days. But liberals like me have this weird bias toward evidence. If you want to know what would happen if you tried something (such as banning handguns, or investing in railroads, or running an eccentric black conservative against Barack Obama), we suggest looking at what actually did happen when that was tried before. I know this approach sounds odd to you. Treating it as a pure thought experiment that happens to give the result you want is probably more accurate. But even so, if you want to make Mr. Keyes Herman's running mate, we'd be cool with that.
Barack Obama has lost an election to another African-American candidate. That candidate is Mr. Bobby Rush.* Now, we know you don't have a huge supply of former Black Panther Party members in your candidate pool. But if you want to take a big slice of the African-American vote away from Obama, we'd suggest you find someone like Rush: someone more, and not less, outspoken about white racism than Obama is, someone more warmly disposed to old-school social welfare than Obama is, someone who is further to the traditional left than Obama is. If you have anyone like that, we'd be happy for you to nominate that person, too.
*The first version of this post misrembered Bobby Rush's name. -Dr. C.
Comments
Shhh! The more they think it's us, the more they'll rally around Cain!
by Verified Atheist on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 1:24pm
What the f does Bobby Seale know about Ah-mah-din-din-din-e-jad, jad jad?
by Oxy Mora on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 1:53pm
and who you callin "brother"?
by Oxy Mora on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 1:55pm
White dudes.
by Doctor Cleveland on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 3:11pm
Correction: The Panther whom Obama brilliantly viewed as the appropriate opponent for his first foray into electoral politics, (in this case the primary challenge of a sitting US Congressnan), was Minister of Defense Bobby Rush.
by jollyroger on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 2:44pm
Thanks. Fixed.
by Doctor Cleveland on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 2:59pm
Where in the Sam Hill have you been? I missed your contributions.
by Oxy Mora on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 3:19pm
I've been trying, (with the usual indifferent success) to muster the singleness of purpose demanded by a flood of work demands. The blog can eat the life.
by jollyroger on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 3:26pm
This is wrong. Obama was already an Ilinois state Senator when he ran against Bobby Rush. You seem very invested in this claim, since you keep making it despite being corrected many, many times.
Does the truth even matter to you, or is the "truthiness" of you claim more important to you?
by Ethanator on Wed, 11/09/2011 - 12:22am
Well, you've got the repeated part of the error right, but this is the first time I've been corrected for which thanks. (parenthetically, it does not raise Prez in my opinion to learn that this primary challenge (which I think odious for its target) came from an already serving party functionary as opposed to the rank outsider I had taken him to be (as evidenced by my emphasis upon his "first" electoral foray which occasioned your perhaps excessively vehement correction...) Since I seem to have made up that part, I will plead an attempt to give him the benefit of the doubt.
by jollyroger on Wed, 11/09/2011 - 10:01pm
I said in once and I'll say it again ... Obama is the best candidate for GOPers.
Just look at how much progress the GOPers have chiseled away from the stone the New Deal was carved out of. How many GOP Presidents can make that claim? Not even Ronnie Raygun was this successful.
Unfortunately, the GOP has given their children the run of the roost and can't wrestle control away from them. They might nominate a candidate and by some miraculous twist of fate pull off a stunning upset and put some clueless joker in the White House.
But I'm betting the GOP will try to garner enough support to frustrate their wayward children to the point they go off and start a 3rd party movement that will dilute the GOP ranks and assure Obama his second term. That way the GOPers can still chisel away at whatever's left of the New Deal and prep the landscape for an easy GOP victory in 2016.
by Beetlejuice on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 3:28pm
Dontcha think the public has shown itself to be a little bit fickle by voting in Republicans? They ushered Grayson and Feingold out of office. The public was a tad irate that teachers, nurses, police officers and firefighters got a livable wage and had health benefits.
Romney wasn't laughed off stage after saying "corporations are people too". Cain remains popular after telling people who got laid off that "It's their own fault" if they are unemployed.
Some folks are feeling buyers remorse after voting GOP in Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida, but a significant number are not.
by rmrd0000 on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 4:46pm
PART TIME LOVERS
That's why the democrats lost the mid term election and if Obama had been on the ballot, he would have lost too.
Buyers remorse: We democrats didn't put all of our sweat and tears in getting Obama through the primary process, only to find out too late, we were snookered into voting for republican lite.
The OWS would not have been necessary in 2011, we thought that battle of ideas was the basis for Obamas election win, in the first place.
Give him a second term to do what? More damage?
Obamas so much better than republicans, because at least he gives us a big kiss?
When the mistress kicks out the philanderer, the part time lover comes back to the ones that brought him to the dance. "Give me another chance baby?, "I promise, you'll like what you see the second time around; theres no need to look at another suitor"
We knew what was at stake then, evidently the man we thought was the standard bearer, turned out to be a sympathizer, a lover of the opposition. A part time lover
We weren't looking for a broker of peace, we were looking for an aggressive general to remove the yoke of Reaganomics, trickle down theories. To repair the damage.
I don't know about you, but I have buyers remorse. I have a lemon and theres no others to choose from. I am forced to continue with the lemon.
Obama, the part time, lover
by Resistance on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 8:55pm
So the rational reaction was voting out Feingold and Grayson?
by rmrd0000 on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 10:58pm
Feingold and Greyson were both victims of the tea-bagger express rolling them over. Obama, on the other hand, used the gift of gab and guile to make people believe in an idea. Unfortunately, ideas have about as much substance as a balloon ... a lot of hot air. And that what we all got ... a balloon. The idea was nothing more than the logo on the balloon we all bought into.
by Beetlejuice on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 11:12pm
So the Left let the Tea Party rule the day?
by rmrd0000 on Wed, 11/09/2011 - 1:18am
The left wasn't the only group, disillusioned by the Democratic leadership in DC.
In Feingold’s Loss, Independents Turn on One of Their Own
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/05/us/politics/05feingold.html
the loss came, in part, because independents flocked to his opponent,
“Independents deserted Democrats, period,” said Ken Goldstein, a political scientist ……. “This was not about Feingold’s record or the money or the advertising. It was about the anger of independents at the status quo.”
Still, others saw the flow of unregulated money as an added dimension to the narrative, in which Mr. Feingold was “hoist on his own petard,”
One poll found that Mr. Obama’s approval rating here had declined at a faster rate than in any other state.
Despite his independence, Mr. Feingold allied himself strongly with certain Obama policies, including the health care bill, for which Mr. Johnson repeatedly bashed him.
“This is the kind of climate where you would vote your mother out of office,” he said. “If you had a ‘D’ after your name, it was a liability.”
Democrats are not the only group that was disillusioned with Obama
_______________________________________________
Also this continuous BS about the Democrat is not as bad.
That’s the lefts perception; quit shoving that point DOWN to others, who’ll make up their own minds.
You can’t continue to try and sell something the people don’t want or believe. The arrogance
Perform and take the maximum advantage when your in power; or else the fickle electorate WILL REPLACE YOU.
No amount of moaning about stupid people, voting for Republicans will change that fact.
It is insanity to keep thinking that message works. It only works to keep the democrats in the pen. "You better stay in the pen; those big bad wolves will get you" as the shearer says “bring me another one”
Moral: When the democrats do get into power, they better perform or else, no republican - lites allowed. The left may be infatuated with the democrats, the independents not so much.
The independents kicked the democrats out, Feinstein was a victim.
by Resistance on Wed, 11/09/2011 - 5:00pm
The tea-baggers was a surprise to everyone ... including Feingold. Greyson was aware the district he represented was a swamp so he knew in advance he was on shaky ground regardless.
However, the gains tea-baggers made are in those low populated states that don't have much going for them at the moment ... Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and so forth ... they passed their prime and are close to becoming retirement communities. So that made them ripe for picking by the tea-baggers because everyone else thought the pickings there were too slim. Other states like Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas are on the knife's edge ... just a little push one way is all it will take.
The GOPer's have purposefully set things up to make the government stop working during the Bu$h years. It has been to their advantage the Democrats took over as the shit hit the fan so they're the ones that are being blamed. As soon as the GOPer's regain control over the government and have no further need for tea-baggers, they'll be nothing more than a footnote in the history books.
by Beetlejuice on Wed, 11/09/2011 - 7:07am
..............It has been to their (the GOP's) advantage the Democrats took over as the shit hit the fan so they're the ones that are being blamed.
Why in the world should the Republicans come to power again? The GOP led Presidency, Senate and House ran up the deficit after Clinton left a surplus. Heck Ronald Reagan left a deficit. Barry Goldwater believed in old boy style State's Rights. GOP Governors behave like dictators. Why would the public go back to the GOP?
Obama saved the US auto industry and prevented a full blown depression. He also got the first steps in changing health care in the US. If you recall, the first version of Social Security was not perfect.
by rmrd0000 on Wed, 11/09/2011 - 2:53pm
Instead of buyer's remorse, I'd say it's sticker shock after the purchase when you realize the cost of maintenance is far greater than what you can afford.
by Beetlejuice on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 11:04pm
Okay, you got me.
I hereby award DC the Dayly Title of the Day Award for this here Dagblog Site, given to all of DC from all of me.
But I shall erase the honor when and if Cain's staff starts jumping ship. hahahaha
by Richard Day on Tue, 11/08/2011 - 4:48pm