Rev. Wright Please STFU

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
`

Neither Hillary or McCain could have invented a better game stopper for Obama
than Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

This guy either (A) has an agenda and is finally getting a chance to advance it;
or (B) he has been bitten by the media bug and doesn't know how to shut the
fuck up.

It doesn't matter whether what he says is true, inspiring or just what
white people need to hear; its causing Barack Obama major problems and if the
good Reverend gives a shit -- he would shut the fuck up -- hence, I am more
and more inclined to believe that he believe's HIS agenda is more important that
Barack's agenda.

I thought Tavis was being selfish in New Orleans. Rev. Wright might be the most
selfish -- and is quickly revealing himself to be Rev. Wrong.

As he said at the National Press Club interview this morning, he'll be a pastor
on November 5th (the day of the election) and he'll be a pastor on January
21, 2009 (the day after the next president takes office). I agree, which
means he has plenty of time to do his thing; right now, he's raining on the
Barack Obama parade and he needs to Shut the fuck up.

QueEx
 
`

And, the media could do this country a great favor:

  • Stop connecting Barack Obama to Jeremiah Wright; and

  • Challenge anyone else (especially John McCain, Hillary
    Clinton and any surrogates of same) who try to make or
    suggest a connection -- unless they have some facts.

QueEx
 
Agreed. The timing could not be worse... fresh off a Penn loss...falling polls for Obama, and a tight race in Indiana.... Wright just hands the next news cycle leading up to the next primaries to Hillary Clinton. He could have waited until after the next primaries...this reeks of ego. I don't disagree with Wright's message, but he could have been more tactical about this...getting his message out there without the risk of doing too much damage to Obama.
 
True, but just playing devils advocate....Maybe the logic is that if the media keeps exposing America to the truisms of the black church it will relax at being concerned about the rhetoric from the video. Hence the comparisons to some of MLK's sermons and the like will take some of the bite out of his words.

I don't think it will work, because America is dumbed down to believing sound bites and not the whole "boring" story.
 
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His does believe his agenda is greater than that of Obama. He is spreading the teachings of Jesus Christ for the betterment of mankind. Obama is trying to become President of the United States for the betterment of Americans. His being on telelvision is due to corporate media wanting to do damage to Obama. If he has never met Barrack obama, do you really think that that the media would have paid that much attention to his speech last night. Hell, that wasn't even the national NAACP. It was the Detroit Chapter. They've never had that much coverage at a fund-raiser. Obama has his job and Wright has his. don't do what the white media wants and keep attaching Wright to Obama. Obama has moved on and so should we.
 
His being on telelvision is due to corporate media wanting to do damage to Obama.

BINGO! Rev. Wright could refuse the invitations and he has it within his power to refrain from comments he knows will only stir the controversy. Those things are within the good Reverends power. He has thus far declined. How can you possibly blame it on the "corporate media" ??? If he wasn't a willing participant, it couldn't do any damage to Obama through Rev. Wright.

Obama has moved on and so should we.
I think its Rev. Wright who needs to give it a rest; it is he who won't let this entire fiasco move on.

QueEx
 
Obama Strikes Back, Denouncing Wright

<font size="5"><center>
Obama Strikes Back, Denouncing Wright</font size></center>



PH2008042901825.jpg

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama had some tough
words for his former pastor in Winston-Salem, N.C., a week before
the state's May 6 primary. (Associated Press)


Washington Post
By Peter Slevin
April 29, 2008


WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. -- Sen. Barack Obama today strongly criticized the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, his former pastor, saying that Wright's comments about the United States in recent days have been "destructive" and "outrageous."

Using his sharpest language yet to describe a series of Wright performances that he said left him angry and sad, Obama accused Wright of exploiting racial divisions at the same time the Illinois senator is aiming to bring the nation together.

"When I say I find these comments appalling, I mean it," Obama told reporters in firm and somber tones. "It contradicts everything that I'm about and who I am. And anybody who has worked with me, who knows my life, who has read my books, who has seen what this campaign is about I think will understand that it is completely opposed to what I stand for and where I want to take this country."

Obama, calling reporters together for the second time in 24 hours to address an issue that threatens to weaken his campaign, said he decided to speak out after watching videotape of Wright's theatrical performance on Monday at the National Press Club, where he attacked the U.S. government and Obama alike.

Wright "caricatured himself," Obama said.

"I have spent my entire adult life trying to bridge the gap between different kinds of people. That's in my DNA, trying to promote mutual understanding," Obama said. "To insist that we all share common hopes and common dreams as Americans and as human beings. That's who I am. That's what I believe. That's what this campaign has been about."

"Yesterday, we saw a very different vision of America," Obama went on. "I am outraged by the comments that were made and saddened over the spectacle that we saw yesterday."

Obama said he had not spoken in several weeks with Wright, who retired earlier this year as pastor of Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ and a mainstream congregation thousands strong. Wright performed Obama's marriage, baptized his two daughters and inspired the title of his latest book, "The Audacity of Hope."

"There has been great damage," Obama said. "I do not see the relationship being the same after this."

Wright's strongly worded sermons were little known in political circles before Obama ran for president. He first drew attention on the day in February 2007 when Obama announced his candidacy because the candidate disinvited him from delivering a benediction, saying later that he did not want Wright to suffer the inevitable media attention.

The minister became a serious problem only after Obama had become the Democratic front-runner. In the weeks before the April 22 Pennsylvania primary, news outlets broadcast excerpts from fiery Wright sermons that critics charged were anti-American and racist.

Obama said he had not heard the most dramatic sermons. He denounced some of Wright's most inflammatory remarks and followed up with an ambitious speech on race relations in Philadelphia, where he also sought to put Wright's views and comments in perspective. Obama said he was giving Wright, who had prayed with him and inspired him, the benefit of the doubt.

In the weeks that followed, Wright said little. But he surfaced very publicly late last week, explaining himself in a lengthy PBS interview and declaiming boldly in a NAACP speech in Detroit on Sunday and a press conference at the National Press Club on Monday morning.

Obama told reporters after a Winston-Salem rally that he was troubled by many aspects of Wright's recent performances, including his decision "to command the stage for three or four consecutive days in the midst of this major debate" about such issues as health care, education, energy, economic policy and the war on terrorism.

"After seeing Rev. Wright's performance, I felt there was a complete disregard for what the American people are going through and the need for them to rally together to solve these problems," Obama said. "It now is the time for us not to get distracted."

"What mattered to him," Obama said, "was him commanding center stage."

Obama, who met Wright almost 20 years ago and joined Trinity United in 1992, disputed assertions that Wright was his "spiritual mentor." He described Wright as his pastor and a man "who provided valuable contributions to our family." He said the Wright who spoke to the press club "is not the person I knew for 20 years."

"When he states and then amplifies such ridiculous propositions as the U.S. government somehow being involved in AIDS; when he suggests Minister Farrakhan somehow represents one of the greatest voices of the 20th and 21st centuries; when he equates the United States's wartime efforts with terrorism; there are no excuses. They offend me. They rightly offend all Americans."

He also said Wright's comments "were not only divisive and destructive, but I believe they also end up giving comfort to those who prey on hate, and I believe they do not portray accurately the perspective of the black church."

Obama said he was "particularly angered" by Wright's allegation that the candidate was engaging in political posturing when he denounced the minister's earlier remarks.

"If Rev. Wright considers that political posturing, then he doesn't know me very well," Obama said. "Based on his comments yesterday, well, I may not know him as well as I thought, either."

http://blog.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/04/29/obama_strikes_back_denouncing.html?hpid=topnews
 
Re: Obama Strikes Back, Denouncing Wright

<font size="4">
Obama's Reverend Wright Press Conference (VIDEO)
April 29, 2008 01:44 PM

</font size>

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Re: Obama Strikes Back, Denouncing Wright

UNFORTUNATELY, AS AN OBAMA SUPPORTER, THE "RIGHT WING" MEDIA, (FOX NEW & SOMETIMES CNN) ARE NOW SAYING THAT IT'S TOO LATE FOR HIM TO DENOUNCE WRIGHT. SAYING THAT, "HE KNEW THAT FOR 20 YEARS, SO WHY DENOUNCE HIM NOW, IT'S TOO LATE." MAN, I TELL YA', OBAMA CAN'T WIN FOR LOSING. THEY ARE MAKING IT HARD FOR A BLACK MAN, EXTREMELY HARD. NO MATTER WHAT OBAMA DOES, NO MATTER WHAT HE SAYS, IT'S OBVIOUS THOSE MUTHAFUCKAS WON'T LET IT GO. THAT'S ALL THEY HAVE.

I THINK THEY WANT HIM TO KILL REVEREND WRIGHT AND BURN THE CHURCH DOWN, THEN THEY'LL BE HAPPY. FROM NOW ON HE SHOULD DO LIKE MCCAIN DOES. WHEN THEY ASK HIM ABOUT WRIGHT HE SOULD SAY LIKE MCCAIN SAYS, "I'VE SAID ALL I HAVE TO SAY ABOUT IT, AND THAT'S IT, NEXT QUESTION." THEY DON'T FUCK WITH MCCAIN AFTER HE FIRMLY SAYS HE HAS COMMENTED ABOUT A TOPIC ALREADY.

THE SAD THING IS, THE MEDIA WILL CONTINUE TO FOLLOW REVEREND WRIGHT LIKE BRITTANY SPEARS.

IN SUMMARY, FUCK FOX NEWS, SEAN HANNITY, BILL O'REILLY, AND ALL THE WHITE RACIST REPUBLICAN ELITIST. FUCK'EM ALL.

MR. OBAMA, KEEP YA' HEAD UP AND KEEP ON KEEPING IT POSITIVE AND RUNNING THE STRONG HONEST CAMPAIGN YOU ARE DOING NOW. FUCK THE BULLSHIT!!!!:yes::angry::yes:
 
Rev. Wright is sickening....

Sickening to the point where I am starting to think that either Mc Cain and/or Clinton has promised him a spot on their...something.

I'm going to start a mass e-mail bomb to his church....


info@tucc.org
 
`

I agree, which means he has plenty of time to do his thing"

QueEx

... By then he will not matter. Obama is the only reason why he is receiving this amount of attention. He knows he has to ride the wave while its still high.
 
Re: Obama Strikes Back, Denouncing Wright

if it's too late, then that's good for his non-backbone punk ass


Obama is a biaaatch :mad:




:hmm:





:yes:
oh well..back to whiteness as usual
 
I don't know Bro, a lot of people like what Wright is saying, though many feel its not the right time. I hope he really does retreat during the rest of this campaign, however, I believe we have not heard the last of Wright. Hell, I've read many comments on this board from posters who believe that HIV is directly an invention of the government of the United States. I remember, and maybe you do as well, many Black people who cheered at the attacks on the World Trade Center on 911. While Obama doesn't subscsribe to many of Wright's pronouncements (and neither do I), there are enough people out there that do and we will hear Wright speak to them, in the future.

QueEx
 
What's truly disturbing is the fact that so many brothas on this board feel the need to justify their racism towards white people that they're willing to sacrifice the one viable black candidate of our time.

And what's even sadder in the black community is this whole notion of monolithicism... where people who share an ethnicity have to think and (ergo) vote the same way. And if a brotha decides to vote for Clinton or McCain... they're a sellout and want to be white... completely ignoring any policy differences that vary from individual to individual.

That is truly disgusting. Besides, Jeremiah Wright basically tried to compromise Barack's integrity by saying that all this unity stuff that he talks about is just politics and not sincere... and that he really agrees with him (Wright).

He's an enemy to Barack's candidacy.
 
cosign

Doesn't matter if what he is saying is true or not. Obama can't win even if he gets 100% of the black vote alone. He has to win whites and other races for him to have a chance. Don't you think Jessie and Al spoke the truth while they were running? Granted they were both 1 dimensional candidates but there was no way they could get any whites to vote for them saying what they said. (Truth be damn) Just play the game and in Obama's situation just get the donations and power then push your agenda after you are in office. Voters are so fickled. Just play the game.

I knew that alot of blacks would say that Obama wasn't black enough. And when he didn't really touch upon race during his campaign he was called a sale out. He was doing what it takes to be a viable candidate and was doing a great job of it until Wright's statements came out. Regardless, he should have known that those statements would be used against him. Its something he should have done before the primaries started. So far I haven't seen anything that shows anyone is against him because he's black. Presidential politics are brutal anyway. Whether it Hillary, Kerry, Bush, Bush, Bill, or Gore.
 
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