Everyone knows “Four score and seven years
ago” and “I have a dream,” but only Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s “God damn America!” will live forever in infamy. Unlike O.J., Obama has mesmerized Americans of all colors into backing a president that worships weekly a message that rich white (and some Asian) people hate poor black (and some Asian) people. Obama supporters can be assured of their moral superiority to the ignorant
racist rednecks, creationists and neocon wackos that show up at McCain events.
As people who have been hated by both blacks and whites, Asian Americans need to put a stop to this good race-bad race nonsense. My
parents came to this country to help build
the American dream, not fight the white power
structure.
That smiley-faced Obama in the Boondocks
comics is in reality a radical in moderate
clothing, a disciple of the same black
liberation theology that was founded by James
Cone, who recast Jesus into a black
revolutionary against white oppression.
You’ll find Korean Methodists finding
salvation through Christ, not driving out
your corner grocer. Wright got his degree in
“blacks can’t be racist” divinity from the
University of Chicago, where Dwight Hopkins
today teaches that “damn” comes from original
Hebrew. Obama’s book Dreams of My Father describes his very first Wright sermon, which introduced him to Jesus feeding the poor and “white folks greed” from Hiroshima to Sharpesville. Cone’s goofy ideas have merely
been morphed into a man who has repackaged
such a suspect spiritual foundation as his
plan for national unity.
Abraham Lincoln would never throw his grandmother off the bus to get elected. Martin Luther King Jr. never defended race preferences. While some whites might blame immigrants and welfare mothers, Wright clearly blames “rich white people,” even though Obama is as white as he is black and has million-dollar tax returns.
Compare Obama’s backpedaling to John McCain’sbook Faith of My Fathers: “Glory belongs to the act of being constant to something greater than yourself, to a cause, to your principles. No misfortune, no injury, no humiliation, can destroy it. … A filthy, broken man, all I had left of my dignity was the faith of my fathers. It was enough.” You can choose between the man whose faith is in the church built on Cone’s war against America, or the man who would give his life for his fellow Americans.