misterearl
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Barack Obama shows amazing grace
Wednesday, March 19th 2008, 4:00 AM
Tears flow down the face of Barack Obama supporter Marty Nesbitt Tuesday in Philadelphia. The presidential contender distanced himself from negative remarks made by his Chicago minister.
LOS ANGELES - Barack Obama talked about race Tuesday in Philadelphia - talked about it in a way he should have long before this. It was only one of the best speeches, in its best moments about race, any man or woman running for the highest office in this land has given lately.
Obama stood at the National Constitution Center and talked about race as it really is, the third rail in this country, the exposed conductor that does not change even in a time like this, with the war in Iraq about to go past 4,000 American casualties, with the casualty that the economy has become under George W. Bush.
Obama talked about race in this way because he had to, because it was time, not just because his pastor from Chicago had said things in his church for which Obama was now forced to apologize, a church Obama ought to think about quitting.
In the process Obama said more than most of the other candidates in this campaign have said in a year and that stands today whether you think it should be him or Hillary Clinton to run against John McCain in November. Even though Obama has to know that the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's good works aren't enough for him to beat the rap on the hateful and divisive things he has said about race in America. It doesn't work that way.
In Philadelphia on Tuesday, Barack Obama said, "I am the son of a black man from Kenya and a white woman from Kansas. I was raised with the help of a white grandfather who survived a depression to serve in Patton's army during World War II and a white grandmother who worked on a bomber assembly line in Fort Leavenworth while he was overseas. I've gone to some of the best schools in America and lived in one of the world's poorest nations."
Obama said, "I am married to a black American who carries within her the blood of slaves and slave owners - an inheritance we pass on to our precious daughters. I have brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews, uncles and cousins of every race and hue, scattered across three continents, and for as long as I live, I will never forget that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible." He said, "If we walk away now [from the subject of race], if we simply retreat into our respective corners, we will never be able to come together."
On this day he reminded you once again that he is the one running for President. Not his wife, not his pastor. He runs not just out of Chicago and not just out of the Rev. Wright's church on the South Side, but out of being black in America. It is why, so far into this process, you still don't know how it will go for him, whether he even gets the nomination.
We know from the results from all the primaries and caucuses that black voters in this country are ready to elect the first African-American candidate, especially one with this much game. What we do not know, despite all the polls, polls where people lie routinely when asked about race, is whether or not white America is ready to do the same.
Bill Clinton was on "Good Morning America" with Robin Roberts the other day saying that the media misrepresented what he said about Jesse Jackson and Obama in South Carolina.
No, we did not. We understood him perfectly. Black guy won South Carolina twice, another black guy wins now, what's the news? With a single line, Clinton, who was a hero himself to black voters, shows you his cards, race and otherwise, when he thinks the nomination might go to someone other than his wife.
At the finish Tuesday from Obama was the story he told about a young white woman named Ashley Baia, who organized for his campaign in Florence, S.C. About how Ashley Baia fought amazingly across her young life to make a better world for a mother stricken by cancer and by poverty in America. One day in South Carolina, she told her story to some voters, then went around the room and asked why other people there were supporting Obama's campaign. Finally, Obama said in his speech Tuesday, she came to an elderly black man. And when asked why he was there, he did not talk about Iraq or the economy or health care or education.
Or even about Barack Obama.
"I am here because of Ashley," the old man said.
Obama's speech Tuesday was about race, about young whites and old blacks. But it was more than that. It was not a perfect speech. He has said that he is not a perfect candidate, and maybe he has no chance to beat McCain even if he holds on against Hillary Clinton. It does not change something: There were things Obama said Tuesday that nobody has said as eloquently since the Rev. King
- Mike Lupica
once a knick always a knick
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