Isn't it time to retire the race card?

Published April 17, 2014

by Kathleen Parker, Washington Post, reprinted in Charlotte Observer, April 16, 2014.

One approaches the race fray with trepidation, but here we go, tippy-toe.

The race cards have been flying so fast and furious lately, one can hardly tell the kings from the queens.

Leading the weird lately has been Democratic Alabama state Rep. Alvin Holmes, who called Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina “Uncle Toms.” Holmes, who has also said that it’s fine by him if men want to marry mules and, while we’re exorcising demons, that white people are only pro-life until their daughter gets pregnant by a black man.

When Mark Childress wrote “Crazy in Alabama,” he wasn’t just whistling Dixie!

Holmes is a one-man book of quotes, but a particular statement got him in trouble. Not the Uncle Tom reference, but his offer of $100,000 to anyone who could show him that “a bunch of whites” had adopted black babies in Alabama.

His offer, which subsequently had to be modified, produced hundreds of mixed-race family photos posted to a website, “Faces of Families,” from Alabama and several other states. A statehouse rally of mixed-race, adoptive families also ensued. Holmes apparently has not been moved to retract his original statements.

No one denies that there are racists roaming the byways of Alabama – as elsewhere. But this doesn’t translate to all whites being racists, as Holmes implied, nor does it justify slinging racial slurs at African-Americans who don’t tow the party line. What can be more racist than insisting that all blacks think only a certain way?

That Scott and Thomas are conservatives who happen to be black earns them only contempt from what might be called “establishment blacks” – people whose identities have become so entrenched in past grievance that they can’t or won’t see that they have become what they loathed. History is littered with episodes of anti-establishment protesters becoming the new bureaucrats, victims the new oppressors.

To insist that Thomas and Scott are serving their white masters is above all a racist remark. The truth is, far more courage is required to be a black conservative than to foment outrage against manufactured heresy.

What’s merely crazy in Alabama is cognitively dissonant in Washington, which, you may recall, is home to a president and an attorney general who both happen to be African-American. Speaking recently at the 2014 convention of the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network, a nonprofit civil rights organization, Eric Holder said that he and President Obama have faced “unwarranted, ugly and divisive adversity.”

“What attorney general has ever had to deal with that kind of treatment?” Holder said. “What president has ever had to deal with that kind of treatment?”

How much time do you have?

Do some Americans dislike Holder and/or Obama because they’re African-American? Undoubtedly. Does this explain why the president and the attorney general have been criticized? No. Could it have something to do with dissatisfaction in the direction they’re taking the country? Most certainly.

Holder cannot pretend that his conduct of the attorney general’s office is in question only on account of his skin tone.

Given that most blacks are Democrats, it is hardly surprising that they support the president. Likewise, it is hardly surprising that Republicans do not. But the latter cannot be construed as evidence that whites are racist or that their opposition to the current administration is race-based.

It is striking that during what many had hoped would be a post-racial America, racial division has been amplified. Then again, maybe we’re experiencing the final death rattle of our racist past. Perhaps all those suppressed thoughts and feelings of anger, hurt and frustration had to rise to the surface before they finally could be eradicated.

Let’s hope we’re almost done.

 

April 26, 2014 at 3:29 pm
Norm Kelly says:

All libs think blacks are Demoncrats. All blacks are supposed to be DemocRATS.

They are a monolithic group. Just ask a demon politician.

Just ask Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, the Buffet Slayer in Raleigh. They will all tell you that all blacks are demons.

Just ask the people protesting voter ID laws everywhere, but specifically in NC. They say that this is a ploy by Republicans to restrict demon voters. What else are they claiming other than it's impossible for too many blacks to prove who they are and that blacks vote democRAT?

As for demon politicians making racist comments, there are 2 obvious explanations.

Blacks are not capable of being racist. It doesn't matter what they say, since they are black they are not racist. By definition. But this shouldn't need explaining.

Second, democRATS are not capable of being racist. They love black people. Just ask them. They will tell you how much they like supporting blacks. Every government spending cut is detrimental to blacks, because blacks are the major recipients of government largesse. Demoncrats are incapable of looking at a black person as a capable adult, they always ALWAYS look at a black person as someone who needs THEIR support and assistance. This isn't racist; it's a true display of love!

If you were a black person, wouldn't you see demons as loving? If you were a black person, wouldn't you automatically see Republicans as racist. Mostly because they expect you to take personal responsibility. Something the demons fight against constantly. If I were a black person, I would despise the demon party for having such a low opinion of my people, thinking we are so incapable just because we are black. But since I'm white, I'm only guessing at how I would react to be considered less capable than my white counterpart. Being on the receiving end of government give-aways might change my attitude.