The Attack on Michelle Obama

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Mincing Up Michelle </font size>
<font size="4">
There are some who think it will be harder for America
to accept a black first lady — the national hostess
who serenely presides over the White House
Christmas festivities and the Easter egg roll
— than a black president</font size></center>



New York Times
By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: June 11, 2008


Hillary and Bill are busy updating their enemies lists. And Obama is racking his brain trying to figure out where to stash his erstwhile rival.

If a President Obama put her on the Supreme Court, of course, we would have the infinite fun of hearing Bill rant about how Scalia, Alito, Thomas and Roberts were dissing Hillary.

It’s good news for Obama that Hillary’s out of the race. But it’s also bad news. Now Republicans can turn their full attention to demonizing Michelle Obama. Mrs. Obama is the new, unwilling contestant in Round Two of the sulfurous national game of “Kill the witch.”

There are some who think it will be harder for America to accept a black first lady — the national hostess who serenely presides over the White House Christmas festivities and the Easter egg roll — than a black president.

There are creepy Web sites, like TheObamaFile.com, dedicated to painting Michelle as a female version of Jeremiah Wright, an angry black woman, the disgruntled, lecturing “Mrs. Grievance” depicted on the cover of National Review.

On that site and others around the Internet, the seamy rumors still slither that there’s a tape of Michelle denouncing “whitey,” a rumor that Barack Obama disdained last week as “scurrilous.”

E.D. Hill, the Fox anchor who said that the celebrated fist pump between Michelle and her husband the night he snagged the nomination could be called a “terrorist fist jab,” apologized Tuesday.

In their narrative of how Hillary lost in The Times on Sunday, Jim Rutenberg and Peter Baker said that Mark Penn argued that Hillary should subtly stress Obama’s “lack of American roots.”

That’s a good preview of how Republicans will attack Michelle, suggesting that she does not share American values, mining a subtext of race.

She’s a devoted daughter, wife and mother who has lived the American dream, from the humble South Side of Chicago to Harvard Law School. Hey, isn’t it totally unAmerican to complain that being a black woman in the ’80s at a class-conscious, white-bread college, Princeton, was somewhat uncomfortable?

Just as Bill and Hillary did the “Pssst! He’s black!” thing on Barry, now the Republicans will use the same tactic on the strong and opinionated Michelle.

Unlike her husband, who wrote in his memoir that he had learned at a young age to smile and charm and disarm whites of the notion that he might be a bristly black militant, Michelle has not always hidden her jangly opinions so well. She has spent more time dwelling on the ways in which society can pull down the less privileged and refers a lot to a callous but unnamed “They.”

“Michelle,” as one political observer puts it, “is a target-rich environment.”

Team Obama is hoping for the best. When she’s on her game, after all, Michelle is a knockout. And as one Obama booster enthuses: “Michelle’s story is a lot more mainstream American than Cindy McCain inheriting a brewery.”

But the campaign is preparing for the worst, planning to shore up Michelle with her own slick and quick war room staffed by top operatives from previous campaigns.

David Axelrod thinks “there’s a real recoil potential” if the Republicans go after Michelle. “I don’t think she’s projecting herself into the fray in a way that would justify that,” he said, adding that her charming and polite daughters, Malia and Sasha, are walking testimony to Michelle’s “loving parenting.”

Mike Murphy, the G.O.P. strategist who worked for John McCain in 2000, but not yet this year, said Michelle is heading into her “big moment in the sun.”

“She’ll have the opportunity to do pretty well and the opportunity to really screw up.” he said. “What I glimpse of her from far away makes me think there could be trouble, but anytime you have that size microphone, she will have some control over how she handles the pressure.”

She’s going to take her big microphone on “The View” as a co-host next week, when she will no doubt try to put her remark about her belated pride in her country in context. And she clearly scored a pre-emptive hit both with her chic style — Vogue’s André Leon Talley declared in The Times the dawn of “a black Camelot” — and with her playful fist pump that now has older white guys, like North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley, awkwardly trying to do it with Obama.

The dap or pound, as it’s also called, was a natural and beguiling moment that showed the country that, even though she started out as her husband’s boss and has a résumé that matches his, she likes him and is rooting for him, and is not engaged in a dreaded Clintonesque competition with him. (On the night of the Pennsylvania primary, Bill was eagerly checking to see who had swayed more voters — him or Hillary.)

“She isn’t sitting with a fixed, adoring gaze,” Axelrod said. “But she obviously loves him deeply and believes in him, and more than that, she believes in this. And that motivates him.”


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/11/opinion/11dowd.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
 

Garifuna

Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

The real truth is starting to come out. The Clintons have shown the way, and what the "they" really fear is that Michelle Obama could be running for President in 8 to 16 years.

If there is one thing that scares America more than a strong Black man, it's an angry Black woman.

Michelle is a strong Black woman coupled to a strong Black man. Don't make her angry!
 

Magicdplaya

Potential Star
Registered
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

The real truth is starting to come out. The Clintons have shown the way, and what the "they" really fear is that Michelle Obama could be running for President in 8 to 16 years.

If there is one thing that scares America more than a strong Black man, it's an angry Black woman.

Michelle is a strong Black woman coupled to a strong Black man. Don't make her angry!

First, ignoring the clintons attacks is probably the best route to diffuse any potential problems.

Second, I hate to say it but the easy in which we as a race can be manipulated by the goverment has erased any type of fear that the power structure had of us, male or female. I don't think the Clintons care if Michelle Obama runs or not. They are just angry about the primary race they fucked up.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

First, ignoring the clintons attacks is probably the best route to diffuse any potential problems.

Second, I hate to say it but the easy in which we as a race can be manipulated by the goverment has erased any type of fear that the power structure had of us, male or female. I don't think the Clintons care if Michelle Obama runs or not. They are just angry about the primary race they fucked up.
I would tend to agree with you here. Sometimes we over think or over assume what white people intentions might be.

QueEx
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

<IFRAME SRC="http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
Re: Michelle Obama Steps Against Hill and Bill

<IFRAME SRC="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/11/dick-durbin-those-who-att_n_106590.html" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/11/dick-durbin-those-who-att_n_106590.html">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 

GET YOU HOT

Superfly Moderator
BGOL Investor
Don't hold your breath, this will get worse, before it levels out. In your home, in your neighborhood, in your world, you are solely responsible for your actions, if you let one person, get away with a degrading comment against the Obamas, then you have equivoically aided the ENEMY...
 

lionheart2

Potential Star
Registered
Is this Obama's high school sweetheart?

Is this Obama's high school sweetheart?

These ninjas over at Dimewars think so.

If so, she is not a good look...then again Asian women age a lot faster than black women.
 

GreedySmurf

Star
Registered
Re: Is this Obama's high school sweetheart?

Is this Obama's high school sweetheart?

These ninjas over at Dimewars think so.

If so, she is not a good look...then again Asian women age a lot faster than black women.

C'mon rookie, you think who Obama dated in high school is of any interest in this campaign?!?!

You do realize he's over 40 right?!?!

Youngin's I swear... :smh:
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>The Loud Silence Of Feminists</font size><font size="4">
Where are Michelle's Feminist Defenders? </font size></center>

Washington Post
By Mary C. Curtis
Saturday, June 21, 2008

Michelle Obama has become an issue in the presidential campaign even though she isn't running for anything. An educated, successful lawyer, devoted wife and caring mother has been labeled "angry" and unpatriotic and snidely referred to as Barack Obama's "baby mama."

Democrats, Republicans, independents, everyone should be offended.

And this black woman is wondering: Where are Obama's feminist defenders?

It's not as though they're out of practice. In 1992, Hillary Clinton was deemed too assertive and not first lady material. Similar, and worse, claims were made this year. But just as you didn't have to be for Clinton to decry the sexism in the coverage of her campaign, you don't have to be an Obama supporter to defend Michelle Obama against similar treatment.

So I want to know: What does Gloria Steinem think? She was out front with her support of Clinton, promoting the importance of a female president. She has even endorsed Barack Obama. What's her reaction now that the knives are out for another strong woman?

How about Geraldine Ferraro, the former vice presidential nominee whose racially tinged denunciations of Barack Obama sparked a media firestorm?

Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women, has said: "We're going to keep watching because we think Michelle Obama will be the recipient of the same kind of attacks that Hillary was."

A feminist ray of hope.

The campaign against Michelle Obama -- who went on "The View" this week to prove her everywoman bona fides -- has not caused a rift between black and white women so much as it has exposed it.

I've long been frustrated, as a black woman and a feminist, with our national conversation. I didn't hear the cause speaking up for women of color or for women who have always worked in blue-collar or service jobs. Choice was not their issue.

The woman who employed my educated mother to clean her house never quite saw her as a sister in the struggle for equality.

Still, I cheered Steinem when she spoke at my college. Her message could have been more inclusive, but it was a start.

I'd like a little of that solidarity back now, not suspicion because someone of my race defeated someone of our sex.

Michelle Obama is being demonized for things she allegedly said on tapes that are rumored to exist. She is a victim of sexism and racial stereotypes.

Just as the Rutgers women's basketball team was miscast by Don Imus, Obama is being labeled something she clearly is not. Her achievements are being dismissed.

But in America, there's seldom a cost for disrespecting black women.

I'm waiting for feminists who speak of second-class citizenship and being pushed to the back of the bus to remember the civil rights movement that gave birth to those words. After all, it was a black woman, Rosa Parks, who took her seat up front and pulled others there, too.

I'm not holding my breath, though.

As a journalist, I have stayed neutral about political candidates. But as an American, I would have been excited about the historic first had Hillary Clinton emerged victorious from the Democratic primary battle. Yet when an African American made a different kind of history, it seems that feminists can't share in the triumph.

They don't have to vote for the husband to defend the wife.

Okay, I get it: Your candidate lost. You're angry.

But frankly, I'm getting a little peeved myself.

Mary C. Curtis is a columnist at the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer.



http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/20/AR2008062002209.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="4">About Mary C. Curtis</font size>

curtis-m.jpg



Mary C. Curtis is executive features editor and features
columnist at The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer. From 1985
through 1994, Curtis worked at The New York Times in
a variety of editing positions, including editor of Home,
Education, Life and The Living Arts, a section in the
national edition that she helped develop. Curtis was
features editor for arts and entertainment at The Sun
in Baltimore and also worked as a reporter and editor
for The Associated Press in New York and Hartford,
Conn., and for the Arizona Daily Star in Tucson. Curtis
has won national, regional and state awards for her
columns, including the 2005 Carmage Walls Prize for
Commentary from the Southern Newspaper Publishers
Association, first place in commentary in the National
Association of Black Journalists' Salute to Excellence
contest and the 2004 Thomas Wolfe Award for the best
piece of newspaper writing in North Carolina for a story
on Confederate heritage groups. In 2004 she was inducted
into the Hall of Fame of the Region IV NABJ. Curtis is a
member of the American Association of Sunday and Feature
Editors, the Society of Professional Journalists and NABJ.
She was a 2006 Nieman fellow.

http://www.nieman.harvard.edu/narrative/digest/resources/bios/curtis-m.html
 

Built4Life

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
<font size="5"><center>The Loud Silence Of Feminists</font size><font size="4">
Where are Michelle's Feminist Defenders? </font size></center>

Washington Post
By Mary C. Curtis
Saturday, June 21, 2008




http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/20/AR2008062002209.html


In the end, most of these so-called feminists are white which is why I am always perplexed when women of color are duped by these women to join their ranks. Anyone who purports themselves to be crusaders against oppression should be anti-racist, ant-homophobia, anti-poverty and anti-sexism because it is immoral to not be that way while claiming you are.
 

kurrupt

Star
Registered
In the end, most of these so-called feminists are white which is why I am always perplexed when women of color are duped by these women to join their ranks. Anyone who purports themselves to be crusaders against oppression should be anti-racist, ant-homophobia, anti-poverty and anti-sexism because it is immoral to not be that way while claiming you are.

c/s You would think her being a woman these feminists groups would come out. But her being a sista cancels that subscription :smh:
 
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