Esther Sarah had breakfast (or was it lunch?) with a lefty friend, and to her surprise, she found that the friend had never heard about Jeremiah Wright's newest antisemitic slur. Don't ask, don't tell.
(Shhh... here's the story in case you missed it)
Rev. Jeremiah Wright says "Jews" are keeping him from President Obama
6:19 PM EDT, June 10, 2009
HAMPTON - Same brashness. Same spontaneity. Same lightning-rod remarks.
If you were thinking the Rev. Jeremiah Wright had been tempered by a national backlash that nearly derailed Barack Obama's trip to the White House, guess again.
In an exclusive interview at the 95th annual Hampton University Ministers' Conference, Wright told the Daily Press that he has not spoken to his former church member since Obama became president, and he implied that the White House won't allow Obama to talk to him.
"Them Jews ain't going to let him talk to me," Wright said. "I told my baby daughter that he'll talk to me in five years when he's a lame duck, or in eight years when he's out of office. ...
"They will not let him to talk to somebody who calls a spade what it is. ... I said from the beginning: He's a politician; I'm a pastor. He's got to do what politicians do."
Wright also said Obama should have sent a U.S. delegation to the World Conference on Racism held recently in Geneva, Switzerland, but that the president did not for fear of offending Jews and Israel. He specifically cited the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, an influential pro-Israel lobbying group.
"Ethnic cleansing is going on in Gaza. Ethnic cleansing (by) the Zionist is a sin and a crime against humanity, and they don't want Barack talking like that because that's anti-Israel," Wright said.
Reactions to Wright's comments regarding Jews and Israel lit up Internet message boards and political blogs around the nation on Wednesday, and sparked national TV requests for an audio recording of the interview.
In Newport News, Rabbi Scott Gurdin at Temple Sinai said Wright "is missing an opportunity to build alliances and bridges."
"I want to be cautious about what I say, because I don't want to sound like Rev. Wright," Gurdin said. "But my goodness, if a prominent Jewish person said something at a rabbinical conference that was disparaging against blacks, he (Wright) would be all over it."
Richard Gordon, chairman of the Community Relations Commission of the United Jewish Community Center, said: "My impression is that Barack Obama ... is doing what he thinks is in the best interest of the country, and his advisers are telling him the best way to accomplish that."It would also be my opinion that he wants to distance himself from Rev. Wright because of these spurious and ridiculous accusations that he consistently and persistently makes."In the interview after a nighttime sermon Tuesday at the ministers conference, Wright offered that he has no regrets over the controversy that resulted in a severed relationship with Obama, a former member of the Chicago church of which Wright was the longtime pastor."Regret for what ... that the media went back five, seven, 10 years and spent $4,000 buying 20 years worth of sermons to hear what I've been preaching for 20 years?"Regret for preaching like I've been preaching for 50 years? Absolutely none."Wright said that when he went to the polls, he did not hold any grudge against Obama."I've got five biological kids. They all make mistakes and bad choices. I haven't stopped loving any of them.
"He made mistakes. He made bad choices. I've got kids who listen to their friends. He listened to those around him. I did not disown him."
The son of a pastor, Wright has attended the HU ministers conference since he was a child — though he was not spotted at the conference in 2008 during the heat of the campaign debate over comments he made that many branded racially divisive.
The Rev. William Curtis, president of the ministers conference, said the Wright controversy is a "personal matter" for the Chicago pastor.
"Dr. Wright is a part of the church and he is a friend of the church and his views are personal," Curtis said. "And they don't represent the statements and views of the entire African-American pulpit.
"And whether or not he believes or perceives there were some strategies behind President Obama's campaign, we are grateful to have an African-American president."Copyright © 2009, Newport News, Va., Daily Press
Don't ask, Don't tell. It's the leftist maxim. Don't ask what the bill says; don't tell what it will cost. Don't ask where the money will come from; and don't tell where all that money went. Don't ask about the czars, and don't tell that they lack oversight. Don't ask what Cap and Trade will do to Americans already in poverty; and don't tell that it will make Al Gore even richer. Don't ask why all AmeriCorps members are issued steel-toed boots at taxpayer expense; and don't tell how they go about "foreclosure prevention." And for goodness sake, don't ask about Obama's birth; and don't tell how McCain was treated.*
Just believe in The Won. . .
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*McCain's eligibility is disputed by professor - The New York Times
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