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24th January 2008

More On Clinton History of Race Baiting

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This is an addendum to “Oh How We Forget, The Clintons Race Baited in ‘92″

THE 1992 CAMPAIGN: On the Trail; CLINTON ACCUSED OF POSTURING
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: June 18, 1992

A rap singer yesterday accused Gov. Bill Clinton of posturing on racial matters “like a lot of white politicians.” Appearing on NBC’s “Today” program, the singer, Sister Souljah, responded to a question by saying Mr. Clinton was racist.

“Yes, absolutely,” she said. “I think Bill Clinton is like a lot of white politicians: They eat soul food, they party with black women and play the saxophone, but when it comes to foreign policy they make the same decisions that are destructive to African people in this country and throughout the world. [Prophetic: Rwanda anybody?]

“I am not fooled by people who posture, who pick up black babies and pat them on the head. That is not what is important to us as a race,” she said.

Say it again Sista, Negroes just don’t understand.

Sister Souljah

Abroad at Home; Black and White
By ANTHONY LEWIS
Published: June 18, 1992

The episode of Bill Clinton and Sister Souljah may seem a passing curiosity in a long campaign. But it is in fact something more: a metaphor for the difficulty of politics in a divided country.

Sister Souljah, a young rap singer who mixes social commentary with her songs, was interviewed last month by David Mills of The Washington Post. On the subject of the Los Angeles riots, Mr. Mills asked: “Even the people themselves who were perpetrating that violence, did they think it was wise? Was that wise, reasoned action?” She replied:

“Yeah, it was wise. I mean, if black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people? . . . White people, this Government and that Mayor were well aware of the fact that black people were dying every day in Los Angeles under gang violence. So if you’re a gang member and you would normally be killing somebody, why not kill a white person?”

Last weekend Sister Souljah was an invited panelist at a meeting of Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition. Governor Clinton spoke to the group the next day, and he criticized her. He quoted part of the Post interview and a statement she had made on a music video: “If there are any good white people, I haven’t met them.”

Angry Bill Clintion

“Her comments before and after Los Angeles,” Mr. Clinton said, “were filled with a kind of hatred that you [ the Rainbow Coalition ] do not honor.”

The criticism infuriated Mr. Jackson. He said afterward that Sister Souljah “represents the feelings and hopes of a whole generation of people,” and that she said she had been misquoted in The Post. In fact the interview was tape-recorded.

A number of leading Democrats, white and black, praised Governor Clinton for speaking as he did. Mike Espy, the black Congressman from Mississippi [Note, Mike Espy then got a job in the Clinton Administration for his shuffling; are we surprised why so many Leading Blacks Shuffle for the Clinton’s now], said: “Any attempt to encourage actions that would threaten the lives of anyone is something we ought to condemn.”

Others thought it was good for Governor Clinton, and important, to show that he was prepared to disagree with Jesse Jackson. Democratic officials who had to deal with Mr. Jackson in the 1984 and 1988 campaigns spoke of his unending demands for special treatment.

My own reaction was that Governor Clinton had done the right thing. I know that black Americans have every reason for bitterness. But it cannot help their cause, or help the country, for those who have influence to use the language of hate and murder.

Then I spoke with Roger Wilkins, a friend who is one of the most respected voices of the black community. He was deeply distressed by what Governor Clinton had done.

“I do not defend Sister Souljah’s comments,” he said. “It is wrong for anyone to justify violence. But Clinton didn’t know what had gone on at that Rainbow meeting. And he didn’t ask Jesse Jackson, didn’t give him any warning of what he was going to do.

“At the panel the night before, Jackson stood up to Sister Souljah, insisting that you can and must work within the system. And she finally agreed with him. He didn’t invite her there to do her dirty rap.

“In that context Clinton’s speech was arrogant, and it was cheap. He came there to show suburban whites that he can stand up to blacks. It was contrived.”

For Mr. Wilkins and other black intellectuals, Bill Clinton would surely be an enormous improvement on George Bush as President. He would not appoint right-wing ideologues to the Supreme Court. He would not oppose modest civil rights bills with scary talk of “quotas.” He would not drain funds from America’s cities and then send Dan Quayle out to mock their poverty.

But Mr. Wilkins’s words showed me again how much perceptions matter on the issue of race. History, our terrible racial history, makes blacks understandably sensitive to the feeling that they are being used by politicians.

Governor Clinton has been a strong, even emotional advocate of racial justice through all his political life. He has the greatest potential for healing the country’s racial divisions of any candidate since Robert Kennedy. But it is hard for anyone to make blacks and whites feel he is speaking to both from the heart, as Kennedy did. That is still a test for Bill Clinton.

And we bought this con game when it was open and in our faces from day one. This is what happens when we don’t bother to read, to study, to think, to put EVERYBODY to the test, and to not be given to mystification.

More from Dick Morris on the current race baiting strategy

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There are currently 2 responses to “More On Clinton History of Race Baiting”

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  1. 1 On January 25th, 2008, Barbara J. Spraggins said:

    While most Blacks understand fully what Sista Souljah was trying to point out, this is the type of talk that makes the hair on Whites heads stand up. They do not want to hear this type of rhetoric from Black folk. As she pointed out, whether we admit it or not, many of us wonder why Blacks prey on each other. We are the poorest people in the U.S. Whites are the richest. Common sense would dictate that if those that prey on the Black community to pillage, rob and murder to gain little, why not rob from the rich? It makes sense to me. In no way, as I believe Sista Souljah was trying to relate advocate that anyone should resort to violence. However, we have to admit there are those who do, for whatever pitiful financial gain they can achieve. I find it amusing that Clinton would condemn her remarks, being that he is a White man, not the first Black President, as some ignorant Negros have tried to portray him, since violence is a way of life with most White folks. This country was founded on violence. What Blacks have to recognize is that at the end of the day, Clinton can go back to his White world and still be White. At the end of the day, we, Blacks will still and always be Black. Clinton condemned Sista Souljah because she had the audacity to say that maybe the thugs should cut down on the Black community and start killing some Whites. We all know that statement was inflammatory and scared the hell out of those White folk. Sounds like a Black uprising to them. That cannot be allowed. It is amusing at best, because that is when you see the Whiteness and the carte blanche Negros come out in protest.

    I agree with Dick Morris. I have stated repeatedly that the Clintons are brilliant strategists. Mr. Moriis breaks their strategy down and puts it in perspective. I think every thinking Black person need to read this analysis. I will continue to say, until I die, that whomever each and every Black whom votes decides he/she wants in the White House, the most important things that we must remember is that we should be holding that candidate accountable and addrssing our issues. If the candidate cannot do this with some clarity, then we need to re-think our position. I personally like Obama, however, there are some issues that I want him to address publicly. I fully understand that this election should not be just about race, however; each and every candidate should be addressing the disinfranchisement of the Black community. I am quite disturbed that all of the candidates tend to avoid expounding on details regarding this issue. I saw Obama on Tavis Smiley’s show where he was asked some of the questions pertinent to the Black community, however, none of the candidates who dare to speak on these issues have stated how they intend to correct the disparities. I am still waiting.

  2. 2 On January 28th, 2008, D. Yobachi Boswell said:

    Also Barbara, when you actually look at the full quote, and not just the sentence fragment that slick willy Bill pulled out; it’s clear that she was speaking based on the premise of what is reasonable to the mind of someone who kills who is in that situation. She did not give it as her opinion of what should be done, which is the lie that the Huxter Bill Clinton perpitrated it as.

    She maybe could have worded the set up to that statement a little better, but she was a young woman, though quite articulate, not exactly versed on political speak. But anyway, that’s beside the point because anyone as intelligent as Bill Clinton could certainly, easily understand what she said.

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