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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2011 8:57 pm 
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Race isn't a factor. In fact, I think it's rather insipid to state that race is an issue with everything regarding his administration.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2011 9:16 pm 
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That's where the "a variation of" comes in RD - disregarding points of fact out of hand because they don't fit in with a person's perception of reality is how your statement can easily be read. You've been presented with a counterexample to your overly broad claim, and then said the equivalent of: "It's still racism because they are just 'token' (at the very least) blacks."

That don't fly.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2011 9:36 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Quite honestly, why on earth would you file an injunction against discovery if you had nothing to hide? And, no, that something does not have to be and probably isn't birth outside the United States.


Because it's the most efficient way to get the case against you killed, and minimizes expenditure and effort on the part of both Obama and his lawyers? His lawyers would be doing a rather crappy job if they didn't pursue a one hour's work method of "winning" their client's case.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 15, 2011 9:56 pm 
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No, giving out the requested documents minimizes expenditure and effort. Filing against discovery is the most cost (and effort) effective method of not complying.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 1:52 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Hannibal wrote:
No racism is what is being used as the justification to ignore things. Tea party pissed off about taxes and national debt? Theyre all racists thats why. Want to see Obamas birth certificate that he's spent far too much money to ignore and hide information on? Racism. Hate Obamacare? Racism.

I think believing that race isn't a factor is just as ridiculous as believing race is the only factor.


Are you serious?

Obviously you could go out and dig someone up, somewhere, that doesn't liek Obama because he is black. Probably more than one or even more than ten.

So what?

Race is "a factor" is meaningless. You need to show it is a mjaor factor among a statistically significant portion of public opinion at a minimum and even then it will be compared to other factors.

Race is a conveneint excuse to avoid examining the real positions of liberals, just like the elderly or the poor are always an excuse.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 7:17 am 
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Vindicarre wrote:
To add to DE's post:
...and who's Kenyan grandmother was heard to have said she was present for the birth?

Too many issues not to have just dealt with it long ago.


I thought that was also debunked. The guy who made that video couldn't even believe it had grown legs. (It was also selectively edited.) I don't have a source - I'd need to dig one up.

So, what about the previous official in Hawai'i who personally examined the long-form BC that's in the bound volume, and stated that the CoLB is perfectly valid, and that's what anyone born in the state gets? Why not lobby to change Hawaiian law, then, since that seems to be the sticking point? If they have the "long-form BC" in their files, but don't have provisions to copy it, then there's where the problem lies, not with the president.

(For the record, *I* never got a long-form BC. The CoLB is all that PA provided, yet it meets all of the requirements needed to use it as a basis for getting a passport, etc. How many Americans would also have similar documentation?)

Questions: What if they decide they don't like how NY or Hawaii or CA does things? They just decide not to accept those records? Wouldn't there be a constitutional issue if Arizona (a) tries to define for itself what citizenship is, and (b) doesn't honor the legal documents of another state or commonwealth?

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 7:36 am 
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Funny since the State department accepts the Hawaiian document as proof of citizenship to get a passport. A birth certificate is a generic term and states have different documents. Anyone still on this kick about him not being a qualified citizen by now is either an idiot or trying to push an political agenda.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 9:31 am 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Race is "a factor" is meaningless. You need to show it is a mjaor factor among a statistically significant portion of public opinion at a minimum and even then it will be compared to other factors.

Conservative freak outs over race-related b.s. stories like Obama's citizenship, Shirley Sherrod, the NBPP, Jeremiah Wright, Michelle Obama's senior thesis, Obama's supposed "Kenyan anti-colonial" worldview, more race-baiting rants than I could possibly link to from people like Hannity, Limbaugh, Malkin, etc....

There's a long-running theme of racially-tinged portrayals of Obama and complaints against him. The right hated Clinton too, but he was just a bleeding-heart, draft-dodging liberal. Obama is a Kenyan anti-colonialist using Alinsky-like tactics to infiltrate our government, undermine the American way of life, and get some racial payback. There's no way to quantify how much of a factor that crap is, but it's there, and it's not just limited to the fringes and fever swamps of the web.


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 9:36 am 
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All of those points could be argued without talking about skin color.

I'm not sure what you consider race baiting other than opposing him ideologically. If you'd like to provide an in context sample for debate perhaps I can come to terms with that part of your argument.

So are all the people who pile things on Bush (drunk driving, stupidity, supposed draft dodging, religious zealotry too much vacation) Racist toward white people or Texans then?

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 9:48 am 
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Rorinthas wrote:
All of those points could be argued without talking about skin color.

Sure, but taken together they add up to a pattern, and when you consider the intensity of the response to them, that pattern becomes even more clear.

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So are all the people who pile things on Bush (drunk driving, stupidity, supposed draft dodging, religious zealotry too much vacation) Racist toward white people or Texans then?

No, because these things don't occur in a vacuum; there's a long history of intense racism toward black people in particular in this country. There's no comparable history of widespread bigotry toward white people and Texans, despite the recent embrace of victim/identity-politics on the right.


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 9:55 am 
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Dave, I'm not a Racist and I don't even like the term Races anymore to be honest. It's against what I believe to be the truth of God and His Word that we are all from one blood. I find it disingenuous that just because I and other people disagree with Obama it must be because of some deep seated hatred of people with certain outward characteristics. Some people assuredly do, but I think its just as bad and pre-judgemental to paint us all with a wide brush and say it's about melanin amounts in someones historical line.

Not every dark skinned person that runs afoul of the law or is disliked is done so because of their melanin, right? Our President is no different.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 11:33 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Conservative freak outs over race-related b.s. stories like Obama's citizenship

We'll take these one by one. First, I already pointed out that Obama has a Kenyan father. The allegation that he was born in Kenya is hardly a "freak out", since his mother lacked the ability to transmit citizenship. Moreover, quite a few conservatives have issues not with the assertion that he was born in Hawaii since what evidence there is does support that, but with the legal tactics used in the case. How either of those points has anything to do with racism is beyond me; if his father had been german the exact same situation would exist.

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In this situation, almost everyone was lied to, including possibly even the blog poster that touched off the whole shitstorm. Sherrod later received a great deal of apology from both sides, including Bill O'Reilly, a favorite demon on the left.

Moreover, the case highlighted the hypocritical attitude towards racism on the left, who began ranting in outrage at a false allegation of racism against a black person, but are willing to drop charges of racism against whites/the right at the drop of a hat and essentially ignore it when later developments show the charge to be absurd. Your own article highlights this:

Quote:
Denver Post columnist David Harsanyi commented that "the Sherrod incident should be a teachable moment for the left... It illustrates how easily a reckless charge of racism can destroy someone" and expressed his belief that the incident brought an "onslaught of manufactured distress and outrage" – inconsistent with the lack of such outrage shown when those on the right were attacked for remarks also taken out of context.[87] David Limbaugh, writing for NewsMax, said that even though "two wrongs don't make a right"; still, "How about the irony in the castigation of Breitbart for smearing someone as a racist by people who routinely smear an entire group of people (conservatives) as racists?"[88] Journalist Ben Smith of The Politico remarked,

The America of 2010 is dominated by racial images out of farce and parody, caricatures not seen since the glory days of Shaft. Fox News often stars a leather-clad New Black Panther, while MSNBC scours the tea party movement for racist elements, which one could probably find in any mass organization in America. Obama's own, sole foray into the issue of race involved calling a police officer 'stupid,' and regretting his own words [the Henry Louis Gates incident]. Conservative leaders and the NAACP, the venerable civil-rights group, recently engaged in a round of bitter name-calling that left both groups wounded and crying foul. Political correctness continues to reign in parts of the left, and now has a match in the belligerent grievance of conservatives demanding that hair-trigger allegations of racism be proven.


The bottom line in this case was that the public was initially presented what appeared to be incontrovertible evidence of black racism. The fact that it was later revealed to be false hardly establishes that the reaction was motivated by racism against blacks; indeed the assertion that it does largely illustrates one of the points here: The left/blacks feel that only they are allowed to explore issues of race, much less make accusations of racism and any such activity by whites/the right must itself be racist because it does not agree with the left's position. In fact, this is precisely what Sherrod did to O'Reilly:

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Fox commentator Bill O'Reilly took issue with Sherrod's referring to the white lawyer she sent the white farmer to as "one of his own". He described her as a "long-time liberal activist", described her winning $300,000 "for her and her husband" when she sued the Department of Agriculture and expressed his belief that she should not be "doing the people's business [work in government]".[96] In response to Sherrod's statement that Fox News "would love to take us back where black people were looking down, not looking white folks in the face, not being able to compete for a job out there and be a whole person", Fox News journalist Bret Baier said: "Miss Sherrod, that is just not true. It's not true." Fox News commentator Charles Krauthammer said "She was a victim, but that doesn't entitle her to victimize others and to use these kinds of attack."


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This case was primarily about the response to the behavior of he two idiots in Philadelphia. Had they been white, the elft would ahve demanded strong action, but in fact the case showed that not only did the DoJ not give a **** if they were black, but also that mant DoJ lawyers have personal objections to prosecuting civil rights cases against blacks because it does not fit their worldview.

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Wright is an appalling racist, with an even more appalling excuse for theology. The right pointing out his behavior does not make anyone doing so racist any more than pointing out the WBC's behavior makes one anti-baptist or anti-christian.

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The only controversy I'm aware of here is the fact that it suddenly disappeared during the campaign, and the feeling was that there might have been something in it that someone wanted to hide, especially in light of an ill-advised comment or two by Michelle.

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Obama's supposed "Kenyan anti-colonial" worldview,

Never even heard about this one, and I really have no idea what it's all about, so I have a very hard time beleiveing it received much attention.

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more race-baiting rants than I could possibly link to from people like Hannity, Limbaugh, Malkin, etc....


What exactly is a "race-baiting rant"? What, in fact, is "race-baiting"? This is sounding suspiciously like "dog-whistle politics", a term that becomes whatever it needs to become to support it's users' assertions and which can never be demonstrated or disproven.

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There's a long-running theme of racially-tinged portrayals of Obama and complaints against him. The right hated Clinton too, but he was just a bleeding-heart, draft-dodging liberal. Obama is a Kenyan anti-colonialist using Alinsky-like tactics to infiltrate our government, undermine the American way of life, and get some racial payback. There's no way to quantify how much of a factor that crap is, but it's there, and it's not just limited to the fringes and fever swamps of the web.


You're demonstrating precisely what I'm talking about - the simple assumption of racism whenever it might convceivably be true in order to dismiss cricticism of the behavior of the left. Excepting the anti-colonial thing from comment since I still don't understand what that's all about, not a single one of these points can be attributed to racism. Every single one involves a call of attention to the hypocrisy that racism charges have become on the left.

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Sure, but taken together they add up to a pattern, and when you consider the intensity of the response to them, that pattern becomes even more clear.


They do add up to a pattern - the pattern of addiction to the use of racism as a bludgeon in political discussion by the left, and the attempt to hold onto it. Any attempt to point out hypocrisy or inconssitency is simply met with more charges of racism because the fact is not that there is still significant anti-black racism; the fact is that race politics has largely become about blacks continuing to be told there is racism by the press and politicians and holding onto that, and whites being sick and tired of there being no discussion, just decade after decade of lecture about "privilege" they supposedly have just because there are rich people with the same skin color, and and other racial groups are essentially ignored.

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No, because these things don't occur in a vacuum; there's a long history of intense racism toward black people in particular in this country. There's no comparable history of widespread bigotry toward white people and Texans, despite the recent embrace of victim/identity-politics on the right.
[/quote]

This doesn't make any sense. "There can't be racism against whites now because there is a long history of racism against blacks in the past". That's unsupportable; it relies on the notion that racism requires some power component, and that assertion exists for no purpose except to restrict charges of racism to those whom the users find it conveneient - a semantic trick to leave bad behavior in racial regard by nonwhites with no term to describe it and therefore immune from cricticism or even discussion.

More importantly, the right has not "embraced victim/identity politics"; what it has done is begun calling attention to how that has been used by the left over the past 20-40 years. 40 years ago, racism was still prevalent in this country, although vastly less so than it had been 40 years before that. By the time 20 years ago rolled around, racism in this country was essentially dead, but we first started seeing attempts to prop up its supposed continuation as a boogeyman, and a tool to suppress viewpoints that the politicians and press on the left didn't like.

The fact of the matter is that racism in this country is a joke anymore, and that "long history of intense racism" has been dead for about 30 years, while the pendulum has swung the other way - in some ways in overt discrimination on things like college scholarships, but far more importantly in using it's spectre to suppress serious discussion, because the left does not want a discussion or dialogue about race; it wants a lecture podium. The right has simply grown sick and tired of this, and these incidents you cite above are not anti-black freakouts; they are people simply making it clear that they will no longer tolerate certain behaviors being acceptable from blacks and the left, castigated when on the right or from whites, nor will people any longer tolerate "racism" being a term that means whatever the NAACP wants it to mean.

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Last edited by Diamondeye on Sat Apr 16, 2011 11:53 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 11:45 am 
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DE, seriously, I gotta ask ...

Is the Quote Tag in your world some institutionalized criminal named Bubba with 6 shoes sized, 300 lbs, and 6 inches on you?

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 11:51 am 
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Khross wrote:
DE, seriously, I gotta ask ...

Is the Quote Tag in your world some institutionalized criminal named Bubba with 6 shoes sized, 300 lbs, and 6 inches on you?


He gets his licks in, but eventually I managed to get him down. He's pretty muscle-bound.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 3:04 pm 
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You know what would have been an awesome way to end the situation also?

Let the Supreme Court hear it, and say the CoLB was enough. But seriously... my ONLY issue with this whole "birther" thing was the claim that the people of America do not have the standing to demand proof that their CIC is eligible to be CIC under the provisions of the Constitution.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 3:48 pm 
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darksiege wrote:
You know what would have been an awesome way to end the situation also?

Let the Supreme Court hear it, and say the CoLB was enough. But seriously... my ONLY issue with this whole "birther" thing was the claim that the people of America do not have the standing to demand proof that their CIC is eligible to be CIC under the provisions of the Constitution.


I don't necessarily have a problem with that because I don't want random idiots on each side contesting each and every election with frivolous claims.

I ahve a problem with the idea that the states cannot challenge his eligability. If citizens want eligibility challenged, they should get their state to do so.

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PostPosted: Sat Apr 16, 2011 3:58 pm 
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Congress, the States, Citizens, other Candidates ...

These groups have been ruled to not have standing to challenge a President's eligibility. And verification has been ruled to be the province of the nominating party.

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PostPosted: Mon Apr 18, 2011 10:29 am 
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Vindicarre wrote:
I don't know RD, if he'd just allowed his birth certificate to be shown it would go away. As for the citizenship/racist line of thought, I will remind you that before McCain was even nominated, it was becoming an issue for him, even though it was really a non-issue in that case. Yet, it died once evidence was presented ruling it out. If Obama had taken care of this from the get-go, instead of obfuscating, wrangling and dodging, it wouldn't be an issue either.

Thank you Vindi, for answering RD's question about what behavior I was alluding to, since I rarely read Hellfire over the weekend.

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PostPosted: Mon Apr 18, 2011 10:35 am 
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Wasn't it Hilliary's camp that brought it up in the first place?

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2011 12:36 am 
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Looks like it got vetoed.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2011/04 ... tizenship/

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2011 7:34 am 
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Nitefox wrote:
Wasn't it Hilliary's camp that brought it up in the first place?

Yes.

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 19, 2011 10:28 am 
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I could see potential for constitutionality concerns over this.

If adequate documentation exists to convince the USSC that the constitutional requirements are met, regardless of the form of that documentation, that should be adequate for Federal office.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 22, 2011 2:05 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
As for "a plurality of Republican primary voters say they wouldn't even consider voting for a Republican candidate who completely dismissed the birther theory.", I'd like to see that plurality.

Poll just came out today. Looks like I was mistaken on the numbers though. I had the 38% and the 23% backwards. Sad that only a minority are clearly willing to support a non-birther, but still, my plurality comment was wrong. Sorry about that.

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Only 38% of Republican primary voters say they're willing to support a candidate for President next year who firmly rejects the birther theory....the other 62% of Republicans- 23% of whom say they are only willing to vote for a birther and 39% of whom are not sure....


Just saw an interesting corollary to the belief that this all has racist underpinnings and to the more subtle "Republican plurality" line of defense.

In 2006, an Ohio University/Scripps Howard poll found that slightly more than half of Democrats said they suspected the Bush Administration of complicity in the Sept. 11 attacks. Politico

and

In 2007 a Rasmussen poll found that 35% of Democrats believe George W. Bush knew about 9/11 in advance.Rasmussen

Seems that rather than black or white, it's R or D.

RangerDave wrote:
Hell, the Senate passed a unanimous resolution endorsing McCain's natural born status, while Republican Senators today duck and weave whenever Obama's citizenship comes up...


Oh, come on, the House unanimously passed a resolution back in '09 stating that Obama was born in Hawaii.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 27, 2011 8:31 am 
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Oh look they finally found Obamas long form birth certificate.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 27, 2011 8:47 am 
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Yay, now the idiot chorus gets to change its refrain from "Where's the birth certificate?" to "Yes, but is it real?," with a net change of 0% in the annoyance factor for everyone else.


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