On being Black, African American & Obama

Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

This post is run of the mill race bait.

-VG

Typical, a republican makes the racist statement and then everyone else is wrong for commenting on it, unless it is about Hillary, Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton. Of course to the republicans, racism is Black folks fault.
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

Ann Coulter is irrelevant. She has to say out of pocket things to sell books and stay on the talk shows. She's like Blunt, irritating only if you acknowledge it's existance.
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

Who gives a fuck what "Man Coulter" has to say. :smh:
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

She may be irrelevant, but she gets a lot of air play. Coulter is the mouth piece of the Republican Party that appeases the racist GOP members without the Republican Party actual acknowledging it officially. Keeping the base interested. But you can bet, she is on the payroll!
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

Ann Coulter is irrelevant. She has to say out of pocket things to sell books and stay on the talk shows. She's like Blunt, irritating only if you acknowledge it's existance.

She is so irrelevant that you HAD to post the fact that she is IRRELEVANT???

very smart.....:hmm:
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

She reminds me of all those class clowns from school.
Just another attention whore buffoon.
Like the class clown she has the power to disrupt the class(the media)and take away from those who really have something meaningful to say but don't have the shock factor element.
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

She reminds me of all those class clowns from school.
Just another attention whore buffoon.
Like the class clown she has the power to disrupt the class(the media)and take away from those who really have something meaningful to say but don't have the shock factor element.



You hit the ugly, blonde nail on the head. She comes off like she needs some dick. I've wanted to email Bill Maher begging him to bang that bitch so she would relax. I'm sure there's an educated, articulate person under that bullshit veneer but she'd rather make money than be respected. Her choice. She sold out for cheap.
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

You hit the ugly, blonde nail on the head. She comes off like she needs some dick. I've wanted to email Bill Maher begging him to bang that bitch so she would relax. I'm sure there's an educated, articulate person under that bullshit veneer but she'd rather make money than be respected. Her choice. She sold out for cheap.

Bill Maher likes the sistas and has too much class to fuck with this broad,besides he's into more classy broads like SuperHead:rolleyes:
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

Ann Coulter is irrelevant. She has to say out of pocket things to sell books and stay on the talk shows. She's like Blunt, irritating only if you acknowledge it's existance.

Maybe she's like Blunt in that she should be ignored, but she's definitely like Blunt in that she is not ignored.

I don't know if I'd say she's as relevant as Rush Limbaugh or Hannity, but people like this are instrumental in persuading people to vote against their interests, which is the dominant factor in American politics-- i.e. broke motherfuckers voting Republican because of gay marriage, tax cuts working against their interests, etc.
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

According to whosdatedwho.com this chick has fucked everybody from Jimmy JJ Walker to Bill Maher. She doesn't believe half of what she says. She's just playing the game. I think Blacks could learn a lot from her and the rest of the crew at Fox.
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

According to whosdatedwho.com this chick has fucked everybody from Jimmy JJ Walker to Bill Maher. She doesn't believe half of what she says. She's just playing the game. I think Blacks could learn a lot from her and the rest of the crew at Fox.

Damn,I thought you were just bullshittin,she really did fuck with Maher and JJ.
:lol:
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

Maybe she's like Blunt in that she should be ignored, but she's definitely like Blunt in that she is not ignored.

I don't know if I'd say she's as relevant as Rush Limbaugh or Hannity, but people like this are instrumental in persuading people to vote against their interests, which is the dominant factor in American politics-- i.e. broke motherfuckers voting Republican because of gay marriage, tax cuts working against their interests, etc.

I don't know,I think more people probably know who she is than Limbaugh and Ghouliani's bitch boy ho(Hannity) because she's always saying off the wall shit and people tune in knowing that.
 
Re: Ann Coulter Calls Barack Obama "Half Black"

Yeah this bitch is a st8 up ho who's getting her's on the fast track. You could say the same for every rich muthafucka in America. We need to see this for what it is. Anyone who's read Shakespeare, Machavelli, Sun Tzu or Diop knows it just a Game.
 
Re: Obama: On Black Enough

<font size="5"><center>Obama: Biracial candidate walks own fine line </font size><font size="4">
But presidential hopeful's postracial style has its pitfalls</font size></center>

By Janny Scott
nyt_logo_140x252.gif

Sat., Dec. 29, 2007

Jesse Jackson's Comment
Earlier this fall, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, an Obama supporter who ran for president twice, was quoted by a reporter as saying Mr. Obama “needs to stop acting like he’s white” (words that Mr. Jackson has variously said that he would never say and that were taken out of context).

He added, “If I were a candidate, I’d be all over Jena.”

More recently, Mr. Jackson accused the Democratic candidates except for John Edwards of having “virtually ignored” the plight of blacks. (His son, Representative Jesse Jackson Jr., a national co-chairman of the Obama campaign, fired back in an op-ed column in The Chicago Sun-Times under the headline, “You’re wrong on Obama, Dad.”)

“A black candidate doesn’t want to look like he’s only a black candidate,” the Rev. Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist, who ran for president in 2004, said in an interview about Mr. Obama. “If he overidentifies with Sharpton, he looks like he’s only a black candidate. A white candidate reaches out to a Sharpton and looks like they have the ability to reach out. It looks like they’re presidential. That’s the dichotomy.”

In a telephone interview, Mr. Obama denied that he had spoken less about race issues than other candidates. But he said he focused when possible on “the universal issues that all Americans care about.” His aim, he said, is “to build broader coalitions that can actually deliver health care for all people or jobs that pay a living wage or all the issues that face not only black Americans but Americans generally.”

He suggested that his critics were comparing him not with Mr. Edwards or Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton but with Mr. Jackson and Mr. Sharpton. “That comparison is one that isn’t appropriate,” he said. “Because neither Reverend Jackson nor Reverend Sharpton is running for president of the United States. They are serving an important role as activists and catalysts but they’re not trying to build a coalition to actually govern.”

Mr. Obama’s legislative record does not diverge sharply from that of other black legislators, some who have studied it say. For example, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which grades members of Congress on their support for its agenda, gave Mr. Obama a 100 percent score. The difference between him and some others lies more in life experience, approach to politics and style.

And while Mr. Obama’s advisers say he is entirely comfortable with his identity — as he has said, proud to be an African-American but not limited by that — he carries a peculiar burden as a presidential candidate: whether or not he calibrates his words, blacks as well as whites are likely to parse them for anything they might signal about racial issues.

“There is a special expectation and opportunity that we have to talk about the ways race works in America,” said Gov. Deval Patrick, a friend of Mr. Obama and the first black to lead Massachusetts.

But, Mr. Patrick said, “sometimes I think advocates want one note from us. I think our experience in our lives and in our politics has been that there’s much more than the one note — and sometimes a cacophony.”

There was a time when black politicians had little in common with white politicians. They had been educated in segregated schools and historically black colleges; many had entered politics through the civil rights movement, social activism or the black church. Their districts and constituents were overwhelmingly African-American. They were “race men” who had built their careers advocating for blacks.

Winning a mixed district
They tended to be more liberal and militant than the Democratic Party as a whole, said Michael C. Dawson, a University of Chicago political scientist. They opposed rising military budgets and military intervention abroad, favored economic redistribution and were willing to consider such things as demands for reparation for slavery.

Hanes Walton Jr., a University of Michigan political scientist, said, “Once you got African-American elected officials in the 1960s and 1970s, there was huge demand from the black community about getting things done. Some of these elected officials came on with fairly rough edges because they were making consistent and hard demands. In many ways, that couldn’t be escaped. These elected officials knew that they were elected from the black community.”

Mr. Obama, by contrast, grew up in Hawaii and Indonesia, far from any center of black life. He graduated from a private prep school in Honolulu, Columbia College and Harvard Law School. Though he has belonged to the Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago since 1987, he was not raised in the traditions of the black church, which Ange-Marie Hancock, a Yale political scientist, says “nurtured generations of black politicians” and “that almost exclusive emphasis on race — and race in a black/white framework.”

Mr. Obama was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1996 — not from an overwhelmingly black district like those that elected early black legislators but from a racially and economically mixed neighborhood, Hyde Park, home of the University of Chicago. In a state where Irish-American dynasties dominate Democratic Party politics, he sprang up as an outsider — a former community organizer without party or machine support.

Mr. Obama never fit any easily recognizable model of a black politician during his seven years in Springfield. He was a progressive Democrat who worked with Republicans; a black man whose weekly poker-game partners were white; an independent Democrat whose mentor, Mr. Jones, was one of the most powerful black politicians in the state and supported by the Chicago machine.

In his 2006 book, “The Audacity of Hope,” Mr. Obama recalls sitting with a white, liberal Democrat in the Senate and listening to a black, inner-city legislator, whom he identified only as John Doe, speechifying on how the elimination of a particular program was blatant racism. The white colleague turned to Mr. Obama and said, “You know what the problem is with John? Whenever I hear him, he makes me feel more white.”

Mr. Obama finds a lesson in that moment: White guilt has exhausted itself. Even fair-minded whites resist suggestions of racial victimization. Proposals that benefit minorities alone cannot be a basis for the broad coalitions needed to transform the country, he concluded. Only “universal appeals” for approaches that help all Americans, he wrote in his book, “schools that teach, jobs that pay, health care for everyone who needs it” can do that, “even if such strategies disproportionately help all Americans.”

Mr. Obama has never had difficulty appealing to whites. In his ill-fated 1999 campaign against Representative Bobby L. Rush, a four-term Democratic congressman and former Black Panther, Mr. Obama won the white vote but lost the black vote in a district that was overwhelmingly black. Abner J. Mikva, a former Illinois congressman and longtime supporter, said, “It took him a while to realize that it’s a vote that has to be courted.”

Hermene Hartman, the publisher of N’Digo, a weekly newspaper in Chicago, recalls advising Mr. Obama to talk less about his experience as the first African-American editor of the Harvard Law Review. “What I was saying early on was, ‘Harvard Review will play at the University of Chicago, it won’t play on 55th and King Drive,’” Ms. Hartman said.

Mr. Mikva says Mr. Obama learned to campaign in different ways without changing the substance of what he was saying. He learned to use rhythms, analogies, “quotes that resonate better.” Others say he simply worked hard at becoming better known, consolidating his support among black elected officials, black ministers, labor organizations and community groups, skating nimbly among factions.

Straddling interests
Mr. Obama’s relationship with Mr. Jackson extends back at least to the early 1990s. Mr. Jackson’s daughter, Santita, was a friend of Mr. Obama’s wife, Michelle, and was a bridesmaid at their wedding. The Congressional district of Representative Jackson included Mr. Obama’s State Senate district; they have worked together on issues, endorsed some of the same reform-minded candidates against the party slate and sought each other’s advice.

At the same time, Mr. Obama has remained close to his longtime mentor, Mr. Jones — an old antagonist of Representative Jackson, who defeated him for Congress in 1995. Alan Gitelson, a political scientist at Loyola University in Chicago, said, “The skill of Obama is that he’s been able to straddle the two major factions among blacks in Illinois.”

Mr. Obama has also cultivated a working relationship with Mayor Richard M. Daley. Mr. Daley, who backed an opponent of Mr. Obama in the 2004 Senate primary, this year endorsed Mr. Obama for president — around the time that Mr. Obama endorsed Mr. Daley for re-election, annoying some supporters and passing over two black candidates considered unlikely to win.

“I can tell you, having worked for both of them, they are both pragmatists who want to get things done,” said David Axelrod, Mr. Obama’s chief strategist and a longtime consultant to Mr. Daley.

By the time Mr. Obama began running for the United States Senate, he “didn’t have to run as a black candidate,” said Don Rose, a longtime political consultant in Chicago. Illinois had already elected one black senator, Carol Moseley Braun, and Mr. Obama had nailed down overwhelming black support. According to Mr. Axelrod, he ended up with 92 percent of the black vote in a competitive field.

Yet race was a subtext of a television advertisement widely believed to have helped Mr. Obama win, Mr. Rose believes. The advertisement featured Sheila Simon, the daughter of former Senator Paul Simon, a Democrat who was a revered figure in Illinois politics, lionized by white progressives and admired by some conservatives. Mr. Simon, who had worked with Mr. Obama on ethics reform, had intended to endorse him but had died unexpectedly after heart surgery in 2003.

So Mr. Axelrod had asked Ms. Simon to make an advertisement about the similarities between her father and Mr. Obama. He said the commercial might help explain Mr. Obama’s unexpected success in white, working class neighborhoods on Chicago’s Northwest Side, which had been hostile to black candidates in the past. Mr. Rose believes that the advertisement’s subtext, intentionally or not, was gender and race: “It is saying, ‘People, I’m a white woman, and I’m not afraid of him.’”

Dining with Sharpton
In Washington, Mr. Obama made it clear almost immediately that his career would not be defined by his race. One of the first acts of the new Congress was to certify the results of the Electoral College. Some members of the Congressional Black Caucus moved to contest the certification of the Ohio votes. Mr. Obama did not join them. In a hastily arranged maiden speech, he said he was convinced that President Bush had won but he also urged Congress to address the need for voting reform.

In his office, he hung paintings of Lincoln, Gandhi and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., all of whom he calls his heroes.

In recent weeks, Mr. Obama has turned some of his attention to courting black voters. Nine months into his campaign, he held his first fund-raiser in Harlem, at the Apollo Theater, where he said, among other things, he was in the race because he was “tired of reading about Jena.” Then he went on tour with Oprah Winfrey, whom he had gotten to know when she interviewed him after his speech at the Democratic National Convention in 2004.

Mr. Sharpton, who has yet to endorse anyone, says Mr. Obama began his campaign as “the alternative to guys like me.” But in recent months, Mr. Sharpton said, “he’s been calling us.”

Mr. Obama also arranged to dine with Mr. Sharpton, in the presence of a herd of reporters, before his appearance at the Apollo.

“A portion of black voters want Obama to give them some raw meat,” said Julian Bond, chairman of the board of the N.A.A.C.P. “Because they want so badly to have their concerns addressed and highlighted, and they expect it of him because he’s black.”

Copyright © 2007 The New York Times

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22052552/
 
Re: Obama: On Black Enough

<font size="5"><center>Obama can end the racial barter</font size></center>

Financial Times
By Christopher Caldwell
Published: December 29 2007

Next Thursday's caucuses in Iowa mark the start of the American election season. Barring a late surge by the populist John Edwards, the Democratic meetings will either give Hillary Clinton a strong chance of becoming the first woman president or Barack Obama a strong chance of becoming the first black one. A female president would be no big deal for the US, which has stood for most of its history in the world's feminist vanguard. A black president, however, would be epochal.

That Mr Obama's candidacy is even viable calls for a re-examination of America's central problem, which for generation after generation has bloodied its streets, haunted its conscience and warped its institutions. Does Senator Obama represent a "new kind of politics", as he has claimed? If so, how? And does it have anything to do with his race?

Shelby Steele poses these questions in the most provocative way in a new book called A Bound Man: Why We Are Excited About Obama and Why He Can't Win. There is no American essayist more important or original than Mr Steele. In The Content of Our Character (1990), he looked at the obstacles to black individualism thrown up not only by white prejudice but also by black demands for solidarity. That book managed to do something books about race almost never do: deepen people's understanding. Today, Mr Steele is worried that when Americans look at Mr Obama, they don't see a politician so much as a vehicle for their redemption.

Mr Steele has a lot of biographical insight about Mr Obama. The two have faced similar challenges. Both have white mothers, which, Mr Steele says bluntly, "is often seen as a stain of inauthenticity on the black identity by both blacks and whites". Both sought (in Mr Steele's view) to deepen their black identity through political organising among the inner-city poor in Illinois - Mr Steele in East St Louis in the 1960s, Mr Obama in Chicago in the 1980s.

But while Mr Steele grew up under segregation and had a black identity imposed on him, Mr Obama, the son of a Kenyan economist and the descendant of US slave-owners (not to mention a cousin of vice-president Dick Cheney), was brought up by his white family in Indonesia and Hawaii, far from the mainland US and its racial strife. He had the option of assuming a "multi-racial" or "post-racial" identity, but has sought a black one.

He is, in Mr Steele's words, "a man with a very complex identity trying, understandably, to make himself simpler and more recognisable to a society not used to pondering his like". Mr Steele roots for Mr Obama passionately, but believes he has walked into a trap.

Whites Seek to Dissociate From Racism Through Barter
To understand why, we need to understand Mr Steele's theory of US race relations, which centres on white guilt. "Given the shameful history of white supremacy," he writes, " . . . there is nothing less than a profound, even ferocious, need in white America to dissociate from racism." So in the wake of the civil rights era, a dynamic arose in which whites bartered political and economic power for absolution, or what Mr Steele calls <u>"racial innocence</u>".


Blacks engaged in this barter in two ways:

Some were "<u>challengers</u>" - political firebrands such as Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, who in Mr Steele's view assumed whites were racist until proved otherwise. This approach eventually wears out a society's patience.

By contrast, "<u>bargainers</u>" - such as Oprah Winfrey or Bill Cosby and now Mr Obama - base their lives on the assumption that white America will live up to its promises of equality.​

This is no dead end. For white people, writes Mr Steele, "gratitude is transmogrified into a real and powerful affection for the black who inspires it". Bargainers can become beloved national icons.

But there is a pathos in bargaining, too. It leads logically to real freedom - individual blacks taking charge of their own lives. "Just because we were oppressed," Mr Steele writes, "it does not follow that there is a force other than our own assumption of responsibility - our own agency - that will lift us up."

Obama Trapped Like Cosby
Yet that reality cannot be avowed politically without disrupting the biracial bargain. Mr Steele notes that, since Mr Cosby began lecturing and agitating for black self-help about a decade ago, he has lost his iconic status for both races. His approach shuts off the tap of power for hardline black leaders and the tap of forgiveness for whites.

Mr Obama is trapped as Mr Cosby was, Mr Steele believes: his best asset is a life of brilliance harnessed to diligence, but he cannot share it without threatening people. "Will the black American identity, still so reflexively focused on victimisation, be nullified if a black wins the presidency of this largely white nation?" Mr Steele asks. His answer appears to be: yes.

Mr Steele's model is a bleak one. It basically accuses one side of servility and the other of manipulation. Bleak though it may be, as a description of US race relations in the past few decades it is accurate in its essentials. What Mr Steele sees less well is that in a free society, such a dynamic must be highly unstable, precisely because it is so demeaning to all concerned. It can be propped up by means of taboos. But only for a time.

That is why, while Mr Obama may not win, Mr Steele is wrong to say he cannot win. America's decades-old racial bargain was designed for baby-boomers. Now that the gap between white and black opportunity has narrowed and the country has filled with immigrants of many other races, that bargain is losing not just its support but its internal logic.

If Mr Obama is now the candidate best positioned to offer a better bargain, it is for reasons that are more generational than racial.

The writer is a senior editor at The Weekly Standard

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/e358115c-b5...=http://realclearpolitics.com/&nclick_check=1
 
Who is Barack Obama?

Article I found, Discuss..

Who is Barack Obama?

Very interesting and something that should be considered in your choice. If you do not ever forward anything else, please forward this to all your
contacts...this is very scary to think of what lies ahead of us here in our own United States...better heed this and pray about it and share it. We checked this out on 'snopes.com'. It is factual. Check for yourself.

Who is Barack Obama?

Probable U. S. presidential candidate, Barack Hussein Obama was born in Honolulu , Hawaii , to Barack Hussein Obama, Sr., a black MUSLIM from Nyangoma-Kogel , Kenya and Ann Dunham, a white ATHIEST from Wichita , Kansas ..

Obama's parents met at the University of Hawaii . When Obama was two years old, his parents divorced. His father returned to Kenya . His mother then married Lolo Soetoro, a RADICAL Muslim from Indonesia ..

When Obama was 6 years old, the family relocated to Indonesia . Obama attended a MUSLIM school in Jakarta . He also spent two years in a Catholic school.
Obama takes great care to conceal the fact that he is a Muslim. He is quick to point out that, 'He was once a Muslim, but that he also attended Catholic school.'

Obama's political handlers are attempting to make it appear that that he is not a radical. Obama's introduction to Islam came via his father, and this influence was
temporary at best. In reality, the senior Obama returned to Kenya soon after the divorce, and never again had any direct influence over his son's education.

Lolo Soetoro, the second husband of Obama's mother, Ann Dunham, introduced his stepson to Islam. Obama was enrolled in a Wahabi school in Jakarta . Wahabism is the RADICAL teaching that is followed by the Muslim terrorists who are now waging Jihad against the western world.

Since it is politically expedient to be a CHRISTIAN when seeking major public office in the United States , Barack Hussein Obama has joined the United Church of Christ in an attempt to downplay his Muslim background. ALSO, keep in mind that when he was sworn into office he DID NOT use the Holy Bible, but instead the Koran. Barack Hussein Obama will NOT recite the Pledge of Allegience nor will he show any reverence for our flag. While others place their hands over their hearts, Obama turns his back to the flag and slouches. Let us all remain alert concerning Obama's expected presidential candidacy.

The Muslims have said they plan on destroying the US from the inside out, what better way to start than at the highest level - through the President of the United States , one of their own !!!!

Please forward to everyone you know. Would you want
this man leading our country?
 
Re: Who is Barack Obama?

Article I found, Discuss..

Hardly an objective article but hey.
If you were to run for president,it could be argued by your advisories that, as you were member of a internet site that shared porn,illegal music, software amongst it's members that, you were part of an underground movement that was misogynistic and intent on undermining the the moral fabric of American society........

Obama doesn't broadcast his Muslim history because it won't get him many votes, if anything it's more likely to cost him votes.
Would you broadcast your membership to a porn board if in his shoes???
 
Re: Who is Barack Obama?

Hardly an objective article but hey.
If you were to run for president,it could be argued by your advisories that, as you were member of a internet site that shared porn,illegal music, software amongst it's members that, you were part of an underground movement that was misogynistic and intent on undermining the the moral fabric of American society........

Obama doesn't broadcast his Muslim history because it won't get him many votes, if anything it's more likely to cost him votes.
Would you broadcast your membership to a porn board if in his shoes???

hell no but thanks for putting it like that so others could understand.
 
Re: Who is Barack Obama?

you FOUND it? The same bullshit email forward been going around for the past 9 months?

Why don't you post some Nigerian oil prince letters too?

same amount of validity.

Motherfuckers STILL posting email forwards?
 
Re: Who is Barack Obama?

I don't recite the pledge allegience to the flag or hold my hand over my heart either (religious beliefs - christian), so I can understand the meaningless of those symbolic gestures. Like the catholics who go to church every sunday and sin away Mon. - Sat.

60 minutes did a piece last night (just before the Clemens interview) on a Boston hitman who feels absolved of his more than 25 murders because his Catholic priest told him to "say 10 hail Mary's and never kill again." People believe what makes tham comfortable, and I believe Obama is what we need right now to slow down/halt the retaliation to the fuckery by the British/American empires through the years (as you call Jihad). It's simple payback to me for the arrogance of America from the past.

Maybe if America shows it can actually live up to it's founding credo of "All men are created equal..." we'll see a change for the better.

Obama as pPOTUS doesn't concern me one bit. It's the past 8 years, and the so-called majority who voted for it and won't now admit to their gullable, foolish, believe anything that sounds good decision making leading to their votes that got us in this deep doo-doo that I'm worried about. They're still here; desperate for the next "Great White Hope" to muddle in the Mid-East, thump his chest and lead the sheep to slaughter in the name of American Democracy!!

Ask yourself why we fight for Democracy around the world but don't have one person - one vote here in America? Those in power have structured things to allow a few influential people (electoral college) to determine which of 2 candidates to vote for. Americans are so scared we'll never see aprotest to change thid and you'll never hear about it in the media; they make so much money in the current system of buying political ads they'll NEVER allow newscasts to speak to that truth.

A POTUS with a Muslim history (you haven't convinced me of his current beliefs) may bring America respect from around the world that was squandered by this false christian in office now.

His 2nd day in office - paint the White House BLACK!!
 
Re: Who is Barack Obama?

This kind of thing is good because the republicans are going to saturate the media with this kind of shit during the campaign. It will give people the opportunity to deicide how ridiculous the GOP is. The Arkansas Project, Swift Boating, Willy Horton, would you expect anything else from republicans? The main issue is that the vast majority of the American electorate is feed up with it.
 
Re: Who is Barack Obama?

you FOUND it? The same bullshit email forward been going around for the past 9 months?

Why don't you post some Nigerian oil prince letters too?

same amount of validity.

Motherfuckers STILL posting email forwards?

Well asshole I got it from another message board, how the fuck am suppose to know it was a email forward just thought I would share with the ppl here who havent read it.
 
Obama and the Psychology of the Color Barrier.

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