Haley to appoint Scott to fill S.C. Senate seat

samh32

Rising Star
OG Investor
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That will make Scott the first African American from the South to serve in the U.S. Senate since Reconstruction -- and the only African-American senator to serve in the upcoming 113th Congress.

Haley is set to announce the appointment at a noon ET press conference. A special election for the seat will take place November 2014.

The rest of the South Carolina House delegation – a particularly close-knit group, was asked to attend today’s announcement at the South Carolina statehouse, according to several South Carolina House Republican sources.
 
Republicans keeps shooting themselves in the foot. They put forward a 100% house nigga to show how unbiased they are after the shellacking they received from blacks and browns in the last election. Do they really think people of color cannot see through this?? Obviously not. To the GOP I'd say, "Keep thinking we'll accept anyone "black".

The first time mush mouth Scott gives his first Senatorial speech they will soooooo regret their unqualified choice. :smh:
 
Originally Posted by thoughtone
We will see how far they rise. These congressman were thrown under the bus.

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Do you want to see them rise?

Do they want to see President Obama rise?

Republicans keeps shooting themselves in the foot. They put forward a 100% house nigga to show how unbiased they are after the shellacking they received from blacks and browns in the last election. Do they really think people of color cannot see through this?? Obviously not. To the GOP I'd say, "Keep thinking we'll accept anyone "black".

The first time mush mouth Scott gives his first Senatorial speech they will soooooo regret their unqualified choice. :smh:

source: Think Progress

Meet Sen. Tim Scott: The Tea Party Lawmaker Who Wanted To Impeach President Obama And Kick Kids Off Food Stamps

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Tim Scott is America’s newest senator today after getting tapped by South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) to fill the vacancy left by former Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC). DeMint announced this month that he was leaving the Senate to head up the Heritage Foundation, an arch-conservative think tank in Washington DC.

Though DeMint left big, controversial shoes to fill for Republicans, few conservatives will be disappointed with Scott’s record. Elected to Congress just two years ago in the Tea Party wave, Scott has already garnered headlines for his plan to impeach President Obama, his legislation to cut off union members’ children from food stamps, and his defense of Big Oil.



Here’s a quick look at Scott’s record:
  • Floated impeaching Obama over the debt ceiling. As the debt ceiling debate raged in the summer of 2011 because of the intransigence of Tea Party freshmen like Scott, the nation inched perilously close to defaulting on its obligations. One option discussed by some officials to avoid that scenario was for the president to assert that the debt ceiling itself was an unconstitutional infringement on the 14th Amendment. However, Tim Scott told a South Carolina Tea Party group that if Obama were to go this route, it would be an “impeachable act.”
  • Proposed a bill to cut off food stamps for entire families if one member went on strike. One of the most anti-union members of Congress, Scott proposed a bill two months after entering Congress in 2011 to kick families off food stamps if one adult were participating in a strike. Scott’s legislation made no exception for children or other dependents.
  • Wanted to spend an unlimited amount of money to display Ten Commandments outside county building. When Scott was on the Charleston County Council, one of his primary issues was displaying the Ten Commandments outside the Council building. According to the Augusta Chronicle, Scott said the display “would remind council members and speakers the moral absolutes they should follow.” When he was sued for violating the Constitution and a Circuit Judge’s orders, Scott was nonplussed: “Whatever it costs in the pursuit of this goal (of displaying the Commandments) is worth it.”
  • Defended fairness of giving billions in subsidies to Big Oil. Scott and his Republican allies in Congress voted repeatedly last year to protect more than $50 billion in taxpayer subsidies for Big Oil corporations. When ThinkProgress asked Scott whether it was fair to do that, especially at a time when oil companies are earning tens of billions in profit every quarter, the Tea Party freshman defended the industry: “fair is a relative word,” said Scott.
  • Helped slash South Carolina’s HIV/AIDS budget. As a state representative, Scott backed a proposal to cut the state’s entire HIV/AIDS budget, despite the fact that South Carolina ranks in the top-third of reported AIDS cases. The cuts were ultimately included in the state’s budget, impacting more than 2,000 HIV-positive South Carolinians who needed help paying for their medication.
 
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Tim Scott! 3 Takeaways From the Announcement
of South Carolina's Newest Senator


The GOP does a delicate dance on race,
the state's delegation closes ranks around Lindsey Graham,
and Jim DeMint tries to consolidate a legacy.



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The Palmetto State has a new senator. At noon on Monday, South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley announced that she will appoint Tim Scott, a representative from Charleston, to the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Jim DeMint, who will become president of the Heritage Foundation. The appointment isn't a huge surprise: Various outlets, including this one, named Scott as a leading contender almost immediately upon DeMint's announcement, and the senator made it known that he favored Scott as his replacement. DeMint is expected to formally resign January 3. Scott will then serve until 2014, when he'll have to run in a special election to serve the remainder of DeMint's term; and then, assuming he wins, again in 2016 for a full, six-year term.

Though the decision was expected, the press conference in Columbia, S.C., tells us a lot about the GOP, South Carolina, and the future of the Senate. Here are the three biggest takeaways.

  1. An Uncomfortable Dance on Race: Tim Scott is making history several times over: He will be the first southern black senator from the GOP since Reconstruction; the first black Republican senator since Edward Brooke of Massachusetts lost in 1978; and the only currently serving black senator. (Your shocking fact for the day: Brooke remains the only black senator to ever be reelected.) Scott's departure from the House of Representatives means that body will have no black Republican members. But Scott has long resisted being defined by his race, even as he's notched milestones, and his party remains implacably opposed to affirmative action. He works hard to speak in terms that would have come just as easily to senators like Strom Thurmond and Fritz Hollings. "I'm just a country boy trying to take care of the country," he told me in 2011.

    So today, Haley, Scott, and members of the South Carolina congressional delegation did a delicate dance. While Haley celebrated the fact that Scott's appointment made Monday a "historic day in South Carolina," she took great pains to add, "It is very important to me as a minority female, that Congressman Scott earned this seat. He earned this seat for the results he has shown." The GOP understandably wants to celebrate its diversity -- a black senator being appointed by an Indian-American female governor, no less -- but wants to avoid the appearance that Scott's appointment carries any whiff of affirmative action.


  2. Lots of Love for Lindsey Graham: One of the quirks of the DeMint resignation is it means there will be two separate U.S. Senate elections in South Carolina in 2014, something that's only happened 49 times before in the nation's history. Conventional wisdom says this is good for Lindsey Graham (no relation to the author), who has been criticized for willingness to work across the aisle, because it means he may not face the strongest challenger. At the Columbia press conference, there was lots of love for the state's senior senator. He stood at Haley's right, with Scott on the left. Scott, after praising the man he will replace, had many kind words for Graham, saying he looked forward to serving alongside him and learning about foreign affairs from him. Next up was DeMint, who is well to Graham's right and has clashed with him repeatedly over the years. "Senator Graham has been a good partner to me," DeMint enthused. "We've worked real well together and he's a great senator. He's done a great job on so many different issues. I've been proud to serve with him and I'll be proud to work with him from my perch at the Heritage Foundation."

    Then it was Graham's turn to speak, and he did so for longer than Haley, DeMint, or Scott. He praised DeMint. He celebrated Scott. He told Haley admiringly, "You put up with more crap than anybody I know in politics." Then he turned to fawn over the rest of the South Carolina delegation -- including Reps. Joe Wilson, Mick Mulvaney ("you're going to be the next Paul Ryan"), and Trey Gowdy. He also spoke warmly of Rep. Jeff Duncan, the only member of the GOP delegation not present. (Duncan's spokesman said his boss was already in D.C., without time to make it home, when he learned of the press conference.) Maybe the lovey-dovey atmosphere won't last, but getting this kind of vocal backing from DeMint and Haley suggests a closing of ranks around Graham. As for the congressmen, Mulvaney and Duncan have both expressed interest in higher office, so it makes sense that he'd try to charm them now.


  3. Jim DeMint Wrestles With His Legacy. DeMint leaves the Senate with his legacy up in the air. On the one hand, his legislative achievements are thin at best. On the other, he has helped to cultivate a new crop of conservatives in Washington, and he can boast a major role in getting senators like Marco Rubio, Mike Lee, and now Scott into office. DeMint, with a chuckle, acknowledge that the praise he got at home was a bit different from much of the establishment's reaction: "Governor, when you say there will never be anyone like me in the Senate again, most of Washington says, thank goodness!" But a moment later, he pointed to the strange situation created by his abrupt departure with an unfinished term and, it seems, an unfinished mission. "The reason I'm leaving the Senate is I believe the idea of taking the [conservative] case to the American people is something I can do much more effectively from the Heritage Foundation knowing that my seat is going to be filled by someone who's going to continue to take the stands we need to in the Senate," DeMint said.

But even at the press conference, there was evidence on the differences between Scott and DeMint. Pressed on why his rating from the American Conservative Union was lower than DeMint's, the incoming senator assured the audience that "philosophically, we're on the same page," but noted that reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank was one area on which they parted ways. Haley, in reciting Scott's accomplishments during his two years in the House, extolled his work to get federal funds to deepen Charleston Harbor, another issue on which he and DeMint diverged, the latter viewing it as pork-barrel spending. DeMint's legacy will depend not only on his work at the Heritage Foundation, but also on what kind of senator Scott turns out to be -- and whether he's able to hold on to the seat in 2014 and 2016.



SOURCE: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics...ent-of-south-carolinas-newest-senator/266363/



 
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Next Black Senator: Tim Scott, Republican

“I Am Not A Race-Centric Person”

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December 13, 2012

by Wilson Riles


http://www.blackcommentator.com/498/498_nyj_tim_scott_share.html

There have only been six blacks in the U.S. Senate in the history of the country. This is not surprising because the Senate was always intended to be an exclusive “club.” There were three Democrats from Illinois (Carol Mosely Braun [1993 and the only woman], Barack Obama [2005], and Roland Burris [2009]), one Republican from Massachusetts (Edward Brooke III [1967]), and two Republicans from Mississippi (Hiram Rhodes Revels [1870] and Blanche Kelso Bruce [1875]). With the resignation of Tea Party favorite Jim DeMint, South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley will choose a replacement and bets are that she will choose her State legislative and Tea Party colleague, Republican Congressman Tim Scott. I think DeMint is smiling broadly.

Tara Wall, an African-American who was a senior media adviser to 2012 Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, said “It would be a significant nod to conservatism and inclusion…Scott is a very personable, well-respected, highly committed congressman who has been tireless in his advocacy of faith, economic freedom and entrepreneurship. He’d make a fantastic senator.” The Tea Party faction in the Republican Party got the election message about the power of demographics and so-called “identity politics.” Tim Scott is intended to be the “tip of their spear” in a new Republican strategy to appear inclusive. They know from his history (small government advocacy, anti-labor, pro business, and fundamentalist values oriented) that he is in total sync with their conservative message. They may worry a bit that the 45-year-old black man is not married but the first bill he authored as a Congressman would have defunded and de-authorized the President’s health care reform package.

Scott’s Congressional District reaches from the Sea Islands south of Charleston, through the city where the Civil War began and north along the coast to the Myrtle Beach area. In 2010, with massive fundraising and the endorsements of tea party groups, Sarah Palin, Jim DeMint, Eric Cantor, Mike Huckabee, and the anti-tax National Club for Growth, the black conservative businessman bested six candidates and defeated in a runoff Strom Thurmond’s son, fellow Charleston County Councilman Paul Thurmond. Scott became the first African-American Republican elected to Congress from South Carolina in 114 years. As a Senator, he will become a conservative Republican superstar.

Another black Congressman from South Carolina, Jim Clyburn, 70, was Chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus in 1999. Clyburn invited Scott to join, saying, “What I would say to Tim is come join the caucus; Let us have the benefit of your input. Maybe we can learn something from you and maybe you can learn something from us.” <span style="background-color:yellow">Scott chose not to join the Congressional Black Caucus , despite Clyburn's invitation. “I am not a race-centric person,” he said. He thinks of himself as a Republican who happens to be black.</span>

Isn’t it interesting how so many black folks who get to where they are because of race, push race away once they arrive! U.S. culture channels us into believing that our successes are due to our individual characteristics but that our failures are due to discrimination imposed on us from outside ourselves. Know that it is not just blacks who exhibit this ego protection; rich, powerful people exhibit exactly the same false thinking. Of course our successes and our failures are due to both our individual character and how we are treated - at the same time. The real paradigm is both-and and not either-or.

Clyburn and Scott are products of different times. Scott has distant memories of direct segregation and discrimination; for Clyburn those memories are seared on his brain and he is reminded of that history everyday when he is confronted with existent racial differences. Scott “sees the key in individual wealth, through lower taxes and strong business policy.” <span style="background-color:yellow">Scott thinks that if he can “make it” in the U.S., anybody can make it who tries. Therefore, if you do not make it, it is because you did not try. He has drunk the capitalist conservative “cool aid.”</span> Clyburn believes prosperity first takes strategic government investment - after all, it was government that disinvested in “some” folks and facilitated their damage. Scott believes that “as government spending goes up, American freedom goes down.” But this, also, is NOT either-or.

As African Americans continue to climb torturously out of the pit of racism in the U.S., one thing has been repeatedly brought home to us that we dare not forget: Firsts, who break some color-line, or Seconds or - as in this case - Sevenths are almost always disappointing. Some of us get very excited when a person we can identify with achieves a position where few of us have been before. We jump to many assumptions about the harmony of experience between that achiever and us and we often have a false understanding about what an individual can do to make things better for the rest of us. This is W.
E. B, DeBois’ flawed theory of the “talented tenth.” (DeBois later corrected himself.) We forget that no one achieves without the participation of many others and that no one would even get close to positions of real power until it is perfectly clear that that person will not threaten the basic status quo. The “system” at the top has learned well how to protect itself! The fundamental change that is needed will not come from the top; it never has and it never will. (However, that is not a reason not to challenge the top; it is a reason to do it with understandings of that strategy’s limitations.)

<span style="background-color:yellow">Know that DeMint and the Tea Party Republicans will also be disappointed. They have a false understanding of “identity politics” in the black community. It will take more than skin color to cause blacks in this country to accept Tea Party anti-government, blame-the-victim, racist rhetoric. Tim Scott standing with DeMint, Sarah Palin, Eric Cantor, and the Club for Growth will more than cancel the blackness that he himself pushes away. Scott cannot make their racism more palatable or open black ears to their false solutions; blacks heard clearly the racist Tea Party the first time. It is Tim Scott, with his ego still flying from his meteoric rise, who will be rudely awakened when his genteel self is dropped because he cannot hide the despicable truth of his political affiliations. And the demographics of this country will march on without the toxicity of conservative Republicans.</span>

The military in their counterinsurgency work talk about the Center of Gravity in a community. It is “the source of power that provides moral or physical strength, freedom of action, or will to act.” The Center of Political Gravity or the political barycenter of oppressed communities is imbedded significantly deeper than it is in privileged communities. The western social psychological community is much more regimented and tends to completely acquiesce to leadership from the top. It is undoubtedly related to authoritarian daddy-structures and habits. <span style="background-color:yellow">In the black community, where too many daddies have been absent, the locus of political action is wrapped in the sensibilities of mothers who tend to focus on the whole family group and make consultative decisions with the group in mind.</span>

<span style="background-color:yellow"> Tim lost this black community sensibility when he allowed a white man, John Moniz of Chick- Fil-A, to mentor him and become a substitute daddy. Folks like Scott and other Firsts - or Seconds, Thirds, or Sevenths - are not long followed when they exhibit, as he has, white, conservative Republican, individualistic, non-consultative-I-know-what’s-best-for-you, capitalistic sensibilities.</span>


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The Puzzle of Black Republicans


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by Adolph L. Reed Jr.

December 18, 2012


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/19/opinion/the-puzzle-of-black-republicans.html

When Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina announced on Monday that she would name Representative Tim Scott to the Senate, it seemed like another milestone for African-Americans. Mr. Scott will complete the term of Senator Jim DeMint, who is leaving to run Heritage Foundation. He will be the first black senator from the South since Reconstruction; the first black Republican senator since 1979, when Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts retired; and, indeed, only the seventh African-American ever to serve in the chamber.

But this “first black” rhetoric tends to interpret African-American political successes — including that of President Obama — as part of a morality play that dramatizes “how far we have come.” It obscures the fact that modern black Republicans have been more tokens than signs of progress.

The cheerleading over racial symbolism plays to the Republicans’ desperate need to woo (or at least appear to woo) minority voters, who favored Mr. Obama over Mitt Romney by huge margins. Mrs. Haley — a daughter of Sikh immigrants from Punjab, India — is the first female and first nonwhite governor of South Carolina, the home to white supremacists like John C. Calhoun, Preston S. Brooks, Ben Tillman and Strom Thurmond.

Mr. Scott’s background is also striking: raised by a poor single mother, he defeated, with Tea Party backing, two white men in a 2010 Republican primary: a son of Thurmond and a son of former Gov. Carroll A. Campbell Jr. But his politics, like those of the archconservative Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas, are utterly at odds with the preferences of most black Americans. Mr. Scott has been staunchly anti-tax, anti-union and anti-abortion.

Even if the Republicans managed to distance themselves from the thinly veiled racism of the Tea Party adherents who have moved the party rightward, they wouldn’t do much better among black voters than they do now. I suspect that appointments like Mr. Scott’s are directed less at blacks — whom they know they aren’t going to win in any significant numbers — than at whites who are inclined to vote Republican but don’t want to have to think of themselves, or be thought of by others, as racist.

Just as white Southern Democrats once used cynical manipulations — poll taxes, grandfather clauses, literacy tests — to get around the 15th Amendment, so modern-day Republicans have deployed blacks to undermine black interests, as when President Ronald Reagan named Samuel R. Pierce Jr. to weaken the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Clarence M. Pendleton to enfeeble the Commission on Civil Rights and Clarence Thomas to enervate the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Over the course of history, racial alignments have shifted radically. The Democrats were the party of white supremacy until the New Deal. The Republicans were a party of relative, if feeble, support for civil rights until the 1950s. The tables have completely turned. No Republican presidential nominee has won the black vote since 1936. All four black Republicans who have served in the House since the Reagan era — Gary A. Franks in Connecticut, J. C. Watts Jr. in Oklahoma, Allen B. West in Florida and Mr. Scott — were elected from majority-white districts.

There is little that connects these men to mainstream black politics or to the country’s first two black senators, Hiram R. Revels and Blanche K. Bruce, who were elected (by the Mississippi State Senate) during Reconstruction, that extraordinary and brief moment of African-American political empowerment after the Civil War destroyed chattel slavery.

Not until the Great Migration of blacks to Northern cities between the two world wars were they again capable of electing candidates of their choosing. In the South, blacks began to register to vote in substantial numbers only after the Supreme Court overturned the “white primary,” which had allowed Southern Democrats to exclude blacks by defining the party as a private club, in 1944. The Voting Rights Act in 1965 turned the trickle of black politicians into a flood.

But the increase in representation has been a mixed blessing. Redistricting and gerrymandering have produced “safe” seats for black politicians across the South but have also concentrated black votes in black districts, giving white Republicans a lock. (As The New York Times reported, House Democratic candidates won about 50.5 percent of the national vote last month but only 46 percent of the seats; in North Carolina, they won 51 percent of the vote but only 27 percent of the seats.)

For Mr. Scott, the true test will come in 2014, when he will presumably run for a full six-year term. As Mr. Obama has shown, the question is not whether whites are willing to vote for a black candidate, but whether black candidates can put together winning coalitions (no matter their racial makeup) and around what policies. I suspect black South Carolinians will not be drawn to Mr. Scott.

The trope of the black conservative has retained a man-bites-dog newsworthiness that is long past its shelf life. Clichés about fallen barriers are increasingly meaningless; symbols don’t make for coherent policies. Republicans will not gain significant black support unless they take policy positions that advance black interests. No number of Tim Scotts — or other cynical tokens — will change that.


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source: Think Progress

EXCLUSIVE: The GOP’s New ‘Anti-Stimulus’ Senator Sought Stimulus Funds

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Senator-Designate Tim Scott (R-SC)​

On Wednesday, ThinkProgress exclusively reported that Senator-Designate Tim Scott (R-SC) used a controversial method of securing federal contracts and grants for his district known as “lettermarking,” despite his supposed opposition to earmarks. A ThinkProgress review of newly obtained documents reveals that Scott also used the process to request stimulus funds for a pet South Carolina project — despite his public opposition to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and federal stimulus in general.


During his first campaign, he said that the 2009 stimulus had “failed Americans.”
Shortly after becoming a Congressman in 2011, he endorsed “elimination of any unobligated ‘stimulus’ funding.” And in a September 2012 statement, Scott said, “It is clear that the current path is unsustainable – stimulus spending doesn’t work and will not work.”

But, while he publicly attacked the stimulus, he wrote a May 2012 letter to Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood requesting almost $22 million in stimulus funding for renovation of railroad tracks in North and South Carolina:
It is my understanding that you will soon be making decisions on the Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER IV) grant program. I am writing in support of a joint application submitted by Horry County, South Carolina, Carolina Southern Railroad (CSR) and Columbus County, North Carolina. The funding provided through this grant will be used to rehabilitate 89 miles of railroad tracks used by CSR that are in dire need of repair and/or replacement. Currently, these tracks are shut down because they do not meet the new Federal Railroad Authority bridge requirement.
Read the letter:



The TIGER IV grants were funded by the 2012 continuing resolution, but are effectively an extension a program created by the 2009 stimulus.

On his campaign website, Scott wrote, “The biggest challenge facing our nation today is the culture of spending that has taken over Washington, D.C. I have fought hard to change the conversation from ‘how much can we spend’ to ‘how much can we save’, and we have succeeded in beginning to change that mindset. However, there is still a lot of work left to be done.” “The time for pet projects and special favors,” he added, “is over.”
 
another view . . .



Defending Tim Scott's Blackness



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Being a Republican doesn't preclude a black person from dedication to the African-American
community, but to some, this idea is debatable. The Huffington Post's Maya Rupert writes
that after it was announced that Rep. Tim Scott would take over Jim DeMint's term in the
Senate, many began to question whether the South Carolina Republican was actually for the
people. But Rupert argues that breaking rank with traditional black politics doesn't mean
Republicans of color are any less black.





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By: Maya Rupert
Policy Director,
National Center
for Lesbian Rights
dECEMBER 21, 2012


The announcement that South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley will appoint Tim Scott, a black Republican, to complete the remainder of Jim DeMint's term as a Senator, has generated a disturbing reaction.

Despite the fact that Scott will become the only sitting black Senator (since we elected the other one president), there has been a significant amount of commentary on whether Scott's conservative views undermine his blackness and render him a "sell out" or an "Oreo." To be clear, these accusations should not be confused with the perfectly legitimate question of whether appointing a black man that most black people disagree with will help the Republican Party shed its racially uninclusive image. Instead, these attacks question Scott's authenticity as a black man.

This isn't new. High profile black Republicans have often been confronted with such attacks. From Condoleezza Rice to Clarence Thomas, black conservatives often find themselves being race-checked for splitting with the majority of the black community on their political leanings.

It may be a common narrative, but it's incredibly unfair. Moreover, it's dangerous. And not just for black conservatives, but for the liberals who are typically making the claims as well.

Essentially, this argument boils down to an insistence that after having faced racism and systemic racial bias in this country, black people are only allowed to have a certain type of reaction to the oppression we have faced. It implies that it is possible to be black the "wrong way." Attacking black Republicans then, becomes one more way to rob an already marginalized group of entitlement to interpret their own experience.

It is especially distressing that sometimes those leading these attacks are people outside the black community. This is not solely a condemnation of white outrage at the existence of someone like Scott, though I confess I'm uncomfortable with the racial dynamics of white liberals feeling such ownership over the loyalty and allegiance of black voters that the appointment of a black conservative sparks accusations of not being "black enough" from people who are not black at all.

But my frustration is broader than that. In fact, it is broader than frustration over the reaction to black Republicans. It is frustration that those from marginalized communities face unfair attacks any time they veer to the right of the political spectrum.

As I've written elsewhere, those attacks themselves are sometimes the problem, as the term "Uncle Tom" and references to "house versus field slaves" roll off the tongue far too quickly and thoughtlessly whenever this issue comes up, and such racially charged language exacerbates what is already an inappropriate criticism.

But beyond that, the suggestion that people of color, LGBT people, or low-income people cannot vote for Republicans without being condescendingly told they are voting against their own interest is denying them agency because they are a member of an underrepresented group.

When being a part of a marginalized community disentitles people from complexity of thought, it perpetuates the same system of oppression and privilege that made those communities marginalized to begin with. We cannot simultaneously decry the existence of privilege and then exercise it to tell those who have been oppressed how they are allowed to advocate on their own behalf. If we want a meaningful social justice movement aiming at change for those who have been disenfranchised, we have to let go of the idea that we can assume a monolithic voting bloc. Fighting for increased political power for those who have been underrepresented means increased political diversity, and we have to make room for the fact that sometimes progress will bring more black Republicans.




SOURCE: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/maya-rupert/in-defense-of-black-repub_b_2342688.html



 
That's about the only way you are going to get a Black Senator form South Carolina any time soon.
As oppose to every other state in the Union?

Haley is the fifth black senator since Reconstruction. Three came from Illinois fairly recently (since the mid-90's), and of the three, one was appointed. You can think of the two elected as complete oddities in modern politics. White Liberals and conservatives have shown "white is right" is extremely important to them.

It's very illustrative why the black community is in the shape it's in now since they've enthusiastically adopted the same white over black mentality.

Black people should find some way to be in power no matter what. Unless you think they have the political or economic luxury to be picky.
 
As oppose to every other state in the Union?

Haley is the fifth black senator since Reconstruction. Three came from Illinois fairly recently (since the mid-90's), and of the three, one was appointed. You can think of the two elected as complete oddities in modern politics. White Liberals and conservatives have shown "white is right" is extremely important to them.

It's very illustrative why the black community is in the shape it's in now since they've enthusiastically adopted the same white over black mentality.

Black people should find some way to be in power no matter what. Unless you think they have the political or economic luxury to be picky.

I stand by my original statement. The odds are remote that a Black person will get elected as Senator in today's conservative Republican south. There is a good chance New Jersey and and Massachusetts will have Black Senators in the near future. Correspondingly, using your argument, the lot of Black folk in New Jersey and Massachusetts is far above those in South Carolina.
 
I stand by my original statement. The odds are remote that a Black person will get elected as Senator in today's conservative Republican south. There is a good chance New Jersey and and Massachusetts will have Black Senators in the near future. Correspondingly, using your argument, the lot of Black folk in New Jersey and Massachusetts is far above those in South Carolina.
I agree the odds are remote, but you should realized it's not isolated to the south. White people do not see you as their equal.

You can cite the possible advancements all you want, but I'll believe it when I see it.

Good for them if they make it, but I'm not going to shit on a black person who made it outside of the Democrats.

Who can deny that white people put white people first? The only problem is black people putting white people first and shitting on other blacks for superficial reasons like a label.
 
And how many conservative Blacks do?
I don't know but if I wanted to bet between the two, I bet a black conservative would think about black people more than a white one. Same thing goes for white and black liberals.

Are you in some kind of denial about state of black political and economic power?
 
I don't know but if I wanted to bet between the two, I bet a black conservative would think about black people more than a white one. Same thing goes for white and black liberals.

Are you in some kind of denial about state of black political and economic power?


So why the disrespect of President Obama.

Dedicated, Christian, loving heterosexually male to is only wife, with two beautiful, intelligent respectful, articulate girls.

Accomplished, college educated, hard working man with an equally hard working accomplished wife.

Everything the conservatives claim you should aspire to, to be acceptable in their eyes. At least a Black person.
 
So why the disrespect of President Obama.

Dedicated, Christian, loving heterosexually male to is only wife, with two beautiful, intelligent respectful, articulate girls.

Accomplished, college educated, hard working man with an equally hard working accomplished wife.

Everything the conservatives claim you should aspire to, to be acceptable in their eyes. At least a Black person.
It's better for Obama to be there than not, but maybe you can explain how Obama represents black political and economic power and do so after you go on a thread-bumping mission for all the articles of people complaining how he does nothing for the black community.

His value to black people is marginal but still positive, which is why I said it's better to have him than not, but blacks aren't advancing substantially with him there.

Obama himself promotes that he's trying to implement good policies for America, and black people will naturally benefit. I thought he and you rejected trickle-down economics. He's even expanded it to trickle-down politics.

It's the same bad logic you people use to get away from black issues on this board. Talking about Obama automatically makes it a black issue. Never mind what the majority of the black community is actually going through.

So once again, are you in some kind of denial about state of black political and economic power?

Do you really think you have the luxury to shit on the only black senator just because he's not from your preferred white team?
 
After you're done bumping the black criticism of Obama threads, you can start on the cost of Obamacare to the average person threads.

Thanks in advance,
Greed
 
If you can tell me how to post empirical evidence of an event that hasn't happened yet, then I'll do it.

As an example you can post empirical evidence of your assertion that blacks will benefit under Obamacare.

Also, post evidence that Obama is the epitome of black political and economic power.

Also, post evidence on why blacks can afford to be picky regarding Haley becoming the only black senator out of a hundred.
 
If you can tell me how to post empirical evidence of an event that hasn't happened yet, then I'll do it.

Key Provisions Of "Obama Care" Tale Effect Today September 23

As an example you can post empirical evidence of your assertion that blacks will benefit under Obamacare.

Obamacare Saves Consumers $2.1 Billion Since 2011

Report: Rebates from Obamacare health care law will top $1 billion

This other bullshit is rhetorical

Also, post evidence that Obama is the epitome of black political and economic power.

Also, post evidence on why blacks can afford to be picky regarding Haley becoming the only black senator out of a hundred.
 
Are you just going to pretend there aren't post in those thread that contradicts your "empirical evidence," which you chose to ignore and instead just question the posters' blackness like you do Haley's.

This other bullshit is rhetorical
You mean rhetorical as in the actual subject of this thread?
 
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