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TOPIC: We All Blew It (9-6-09 Huffington Post) Van Jones was all about race (give me a break)


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We All Blew It (9-6-09 Huffington Post) Van Jones was all about race (give me a break)
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We All Blew It
by Carl Pope

Lots of stuff about how this was all about race.  No mention of the fact that Van Jones was accusing President Bush and others of being behind the 9/11 attacks.  Of course, maybe for Huffington Posters, that's considered to be a simple fact, so it couldn't possibly have anything to do with anything.


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Can someone post some of the article here?  I hate visiting HuffPo and feel the need for Purell after I go there...YUK!

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Huffington Post isn't worth the time.

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No desire to go over there either . . . I am sure it is the same spin that the rest of msm is putting on Van Jones' resignation.

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Thank you, HMG, for getting that for us. We need to stay informed!!
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I'm not going to read the moronic article - that WOULD bother me.  How can I know it's moronic if I didn't read it?  Because I trust HMG when she says this person Pope says it was all about race.  But I am able to go over there, especially since the tide is mightily turning.  Here's a comment I think will illustrate that:

"ReasonablenessRules

There are 2 things about this article that prompted me to post for the first time in my life...

First,I have followed the story of Van Jones for the past several weeks, and I agree that he needed to go. His comments and past statements about being a communist do not belong in the government of a nation that prides itself on it's democracy. the two are like oil and water...they don't mix.

This is not a racist statement because I don't agree with Van Jones...if you don't know what is in someone's heart, can you honestly call them a racist because they don't agree with your point of view? That's rubbish and only shows that those pulling the race card don't really want to discuss the issues.

Secondly, the statement "an attack on the president an attack on America" set me on my heels. I mean really? Thinking back on the past 8 years of the Bush presidency, you really want to go there? I will close with a quote from Theodore Roosevelt: "To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public."

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusivePosted 12:29 PM on 09/07/2009 "


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RE: We All Blew It (9-6-09 Huffington Post) Van Jones was all about race (give me a break)
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what a fking moron~

I am a minority, person of color myself... I am getting sick and tired of everything agn that radical fraud in the WH being about RACE!

I swear, this is going to create such a backlash agn the dems.. they are going to drive out sooooooooooooooooooooooo many moderate dems out of the party!

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Here it is from the Sierra Club site (via riverdaughter).  The links in the article may or may not work.  They were placed there by Pope and I just cut and pasted the article, so who knows. 

http://sierraclub.typepad.com/carlpope/2009/09/we-all-blew-it.html


September 06, 2009

We All Blew It

Washington, D.C. -- Thursday evening I got worried. Friday I put in a call to ask Van Jones how to help. Saturday I started writing a blog post, which would have appeared this morning. (I've attached it below because it goes into more detail on the history of the "Bush as addict" meme.) But on Saturday night, Van resigned, and this morning I was sick at heart. Collectively we -- the environmental community, progressives, and the Obama administration -- blew this, and we let our cause, our president, and Van Jones down.

This was a lynch mob and, when it started forming a month ago, we didn't take it seriously enough. When I saw the first Glenn Beck piece on Van Jones and the Apollo Alliance as the new vast left-wing conspiracy, I could not take it seriously. Silence enabled Fox to keep pushing. The statements for which Jones apologized -- the reference to the right as "*******s" and saying that Bush was talking "like a crack-head" were such ordinary political discourse -- think Rahm Emmanuel, think Dick Cheney saying "**** yourself" to Senator Leahy, think Tom Friedman dubbing Bush "the addict-in-chief" -- that I didn't understand why an apology was necessary; I assumed it would blow over.

Well, that was a mistake. So was the decision by the White House to treat the initial attacks not as part of an assault on the president but, instead, to allow them to be viewed as being about Van Jones. What we underestimated was the power of the fact that both Jones and the Barack Obama are black. Yes, the hysteria was about politics -- I don't think Fox News really cares about Jones's ethnicity -- but it was enabled by race. Calling Bush a "crack-head" is seen by a large part of America as worse than calling him "addict-in-chief" because crack is not just a drug -- it is a drug used largely by black people. It reminds those Americans who are still uncomfortable with Barack Obama that we have a black president.

What was the reactionary right up to on Friday? They sent operatives out to San Quentin prison to obtain videotapes of workshops that Van Jones conducted there while he was working to help prisoners transition back to society. (The inmates wouldn't let them get their hands on them -- they knew, before I did, how serious this was.) They were cuing up video clips from teenagers that Jones taught in the Oakland ghetto in 2000. If you watch the infamous "*******s" video carefully, it's clear that what Jones was saying was that Republicans play hardball better than Democrats, and that we need to start playing by their rules. He said it, though, in the language of his own community -- and that, at the end of the day, was his crime. He spoke to and was of a part of an America that Fox and the reactionary right would like to put back on the plantation or pretend is not part of our nation.

Anyone who has been an effective advocate for these communities has said things that will sound shocking to people in some other parts of America -- just as anyone who genuinely represents certain evangelical communities will have beliefs about morality that more-secular Americans might have a hard time with.

So lynch mobs can form up from all perspectives. This one, though, was clearly not spontaneous. It was organized by the Republicans as part of a conscious strategy, and it is only the first. We should be critical of ourselves for having blown this one. But we shouldn't forgive either ourselves or the Administration if the next time we sense this happening we don't fight back harder, faster, and in a way that calls a mob a mob, racism racism, and an attack on the president an attack on America.

 

 

Here's the post I started yesterday:

Breaking News: "George W. Bush Says Americans Are Crack-Heads"

Well, of course, that quote is not breaking, and it's not news. It's a slight paraphrase from the ex-president's 2006 State of the Union message. The full quote was, "America is addicted to oil, which is often imported from unstable parts of the world."  Of course, for two more years Bush presided over a "drill baby drill" energy policy. 

Even so, presidential candidate John McCain sort of went along for a while with the addiction idea, saying our dependence had been thirty years in the making.  And later, when McCain, too, jumped on the "drill, baby drill" bandwagon, California Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger told the country: "America is so addicted to oil it will take us years to wean ourselves from it, and to look for new ways to feed our addiction is not the answer." By June 2008, New York Times columnist Tom Friedman was calling Bush "our addict in chief."

So, somehow, describing former President Bush as being an oil addict  shouldn't reallybe breaking news.

So why is the reactionary right in a complete frothing tizzy this summer that, more than year ago, Van Jones, one of the key rising clean-energy advocates in the country, acerbically described Bush's "drill baby drill" rhetoric as sounding like "a crack-head"? 

(Full disclosure: I once called Mike Curb, the lieutenant governor of California, "an uninformed turkey" for wanting to increase the amount of lead in gasoline. Fuller disclosure, I am a friend of Van Jones, I have been featured with him in a video dialogue on our political upbringings,and I served with him on the board of the Apollo Alliance.)

And why did Fox News go after Jones but not Friedman, not Schwarzenegger, not even Presidential Science Advisor John Holdren, who in July of '06 criticized the president for failing to follow through and help us kick our "oil addiction"?

There are three possible reasons. They are connected, and it is their connection that is important.

1) Van Jones, unlike everyone else I have quoted on the topic of our oil addiction and George Bush's complicity with it, is African-American.

2) By specifying that Bush's addiction was "crack-head"-like, Jones linked Bush to a drug largely used in the black community.

3) Van Jones works for the first black man to be elected president.

This is about politics, but it is empowered by race. If you doubt that, consider that Fox and Glenn Beck have been after Jones for a month -- but only since Beck began losing advertisersover his accusations that Obama was a racist.

The campaign to get advertisers to cancel their sponsorship of Beck's program was launched by Color of Change, a grassroots organization that Van Jones helped found.

This trumped-up controversy has been bounced back and forth for the last month in the right-wing echo chamber -- from one Fox show to another, off to the reactionary blogs, but dangerously it broke out into CBS this week.

How did the reactionaries get CBS to pick this up? In part by screaming "coverup" when the mainstream media ignored this non-news as, well, non-news.

Jones is an extraordinarily important leader. He cares, passionately, about helping young men and women find their way in the world, even if they had the misfortune to grow up in bad neighborhoods or make bad choices -- and he sees in a new green economy a powerful instrument to heal their lives. But that kind of hope is profoundly threatening to Glenn Beck and people like him. When it comes from a black man, they reach back to an old and ugly instinct.

This is a lynch mob in the making.




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gold

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BTW, everything after the title ("We All Blew It") is by Pope, but I tried several times to place the article in quotations and it didn't work for some reason.

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I posted part of this article in another thread, but this addresses the boycott of Beck's show.  It seems the boycott was actually retaliation for researching and bringing the truth to the public:

 

"Two days later, the stakes got higher when another Jones-founded organization, Color of Change, called for a boycott of the Beck show.  Amazingly, many in the mainstream media would report the fiction that Beck's coverage of Jones was retaliation for the boycott, even though coverage of Jones started first.  Given the chronology, if there is any connection we should consider whether the boycott was retaliation for the coverage."

 

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2009/09/06/phil-kerpen-van-jones-resign/



"How did the reactionaries get CBS to pick this up? In part by screaming "coverup" when the mainstream media ignored this non-news as, well, non-news."

Well, it is a cover-up by msm, plain and simple . . .  non-news . . . I think NOT.  The spinning is getting to be ridiculous . . . it is as if these people are living in another world . . . one without reality.


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I don't want to go to Huff Puff this time of night I have to walk down the street to go take a shower.

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Talk about political insanity! I'm on board, couldn't even go to Huffpo.

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I don't do HuffPo. As for the race baiting, if there's one advantage to living in the Detroit area, it's that I've been hearing variations on this theme my whole life and it has no effect on me, just like a kid who has seen all the Friday the 13th movies won't get freaked out by Nightmare On Elm Street.

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