Because We Are The Media

7:15 pm just me, news, opinion

From Darlene (A Homeless Vet With A Laptop)
Green Darlene

What are the international papers and news saying.?

ENGLISH PLEASE!!!!!

WHILE FRENCH LOOKS AND SOUNDS SO PRETTY I LIKE MOST AMeRICANS -HAVEN’T GOT A CLUE.
IM JUST A DUMB LADY WITH HOMELESSNESS AND MULTI -DISABILITY.

In America THE ELITE LEARN FRENCH . and thats who we don’t want in the white house.

This is some more bad, bad stuff (Racist Incidents Give Some Obama Campaigners Pause).

A few of the ugly Americans, fueled by comments like Hillary made, not worried kentuck is blue collar ,white; all she had to do was just say blue collar; and she knows this.
Both the Clintons have made racist statements using careful innuendo and then tried to deny and claim the victim is the aggressor. Typical bully ploy; its just another example of the the kind of dirty pool we need to get rid. of.

And more proof Clintons will do and say anything f vioalte every thing they “believe in ” for the win /for power.

they are for that elite group ONLY they belong to including the DLC AND THE BUSHES.

Darlene

http://www.washingtonpost.com

Racist Incidents Give Some Obama Campaigners Pause

The Farmers for Obama headquarters in Vincennes, Ind., was vandalized on the eve of that state's May 6 primary.

The Farmers for Obama headquarters in Vincennes, Ind., was vandalized on the eve of that state’s May 6 primary. (By Ray Mccormick)

Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 13, 2008; Page A01

Danielle Ross was alone in an empty room at the Obama campaign headquarters in Kokomo, Ind., a cellphone in one hand, a voter call list in the other. She was stretched out on the carpeted floor wearing laceless sky-blue Converses, stories from the trail on her mind. It was the day before Indiana’s primary, and she had just been chased by dogs while canvassing in a Kokomo suburb.

But that was not the worst thing to occur since she postponed her sophomore year at Middle Tennessee State University, in part to hopscotch America stumping for Barack Obama.

Here’s the worst: In Muncie, a factory town in the east-central part of Indiana, Ross and her cohorts were soliciting support for Obama at malls, on street corners and in a Wal-Mart parking lot, and they ran into “a horrible response,” as Ross put it, a level of anti-black sentiment that none of them had anticipated.

“The first person I encountered was like, ‘I’ll never vote for a black person,’ ” recalled Ross, who is white and just turned 20. “People just weren’t receptive.”

For all the hope and excitement Obama’s candidacy is generating, some of his field workers, phone-bank volunteers and campaign surrogates are encountering a raw racism and hostility that have gone largely unnoticed — and unreported — this election season. Doors have been slammed in their faces. They’ve been called racially derogatory names (including the white volunteers). And they’ve endured malicious rants and ugly stereotyping from people who can’t fathom that the senator from Illinois could become the first African American president.

The contrast between the large, adoring crowds Obama draws at public events and the gritty street-level work to win votes is stark. The candidate is largely insulated from the mean-spiritedness that some of his foot soldiers deal with away from the media spotlight.

Victoria Switzer, a retired social studies teacher, was on phone-bank duty one night during the Pennsylvania primary campaign. One night was all she could take: “It wasn’t pretty.” She made 60 calls to prospective voters in Susquehanna County, her home county, which is 98 percent white. The responses were dispiriting. One caller, Switzer remembers, said he couldn’t possibly vote for Obama and concluded: “Hang that darky from a tree!”

Documentary filmmaker Rory Kennedy, the daughter of the late Robert F. Kennedy, said she, too, came across “a lot of racism” when campaigning for Obama in Pennsylvania. One Pittsburgh union organizer told her he would not vote for Obama because he is black, and a white voter, she said, offered this frank reason for not backing Obama: “White people look out for white people, and black people look out for black people.”

Obama campaign officials say such incidents are isolated, that the experience of most volunteers and staffers has been overwhelmingly positive.

The campaign released this statement in response to questions about encounters with racism: “After campaigning for 15 months in nearly all 50 states, Barack Obama and our entire campaign have been nothing but impressed and encouraged by the core decency, kindness, and generosity of Americans from all walks of life. The last year has only reinforced Senator Obama’s view that this country is not as divided as our politics suggest.”

Campaign field work can be an exercise in confronting the fears, anxieties and prejudices of voters. Veterans of the civil rights movement know what this feels like, as do those who have been involved in battles over busing, immigration or abortion. But through the Obama campaign, some young people are having their first experience joining a cause and meeting cruel reaction.

On Election Day in Kokomo, a group of black high school students were holding up Obama signs along U.S. 31, a major thoroughfare. As drivers cruised by, a number of them rolled down their windows and yelled out a common racial slur for African Americans, according to Obama campaign staffers.

Frederick Murrell, a black Kokomo High School senior, was not there but heard what happened. He was more disappointed than surprised. During his own canvassing for Obama, Murrell said, he had “a lot of doors slammed” in his face. But taunting teenagers on a busy commercial strip in broad daylight? “I was very shocked at first,” Murrell said. “Then again, I wasn’t, because we have a lot of racism here.”

For the full story go here.


I have been in contact with Darlene for some time, she contacted me from a post I made in a forum. We remained friends even when I supported Ron Paul who she explained doesn’t have a chance, though I was hopeful, she was correct.
In my day, a female disabled vet would make the front page news paper all over the country, everybody would want to know what she has to say, but now, because most disabled vets don’t have a lot of good things to say in support of Bush and his wars, they are silenced by a media owned not by the people, but an elite group who stands to profit greatly off of our current conflicts. So I decided she should be heard and I would share this and ask you to do the same, pass it on, because we are the media.

Roger The Okcitykid
A Peaceful Vet

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