Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Who's the Coward?

Obama's attorney general, Eric Holder, had the audacity to call America "a nation of cowards" today as he was talking to Justice Department employees. He said that although we integrate well in the workplace, he laments that we self-integrate on the weekends.

He bloviates this bullshit during Black History Month, which I feel is racist on his part. After all, blacks only make up about 12% of the total population: there are several other races that far surpass this percentage, yet he aims this at black and white.
America has made tremendous advancements in race relations in the last 50 years. Of course, the stigma of racism's past will always be here, but until the black community stops being held down by the likes of Rev. Jackson and other so-called black leaders we will always have the race card being played by these people. 

It is a sad fact that the black leaders of this country, those who could and should promote the assimilation of all people into society continue to bash those blacks who actually succeed in America. To wit:

Colin Powell: the most powerful black man to ever serve in the U.S. military, a brilliant tactician in warfare, the first and only black man to server on the Joint Chief of Staff, was the first black Secretary of State under George W. Bush, served as National Security Advisor, and was Commander in Chief, Army Forces Command. General Powell was labeled an Uncle Tom by the black community ... until he jumped ship and put his support behind Obama.

Clarence Thomas: The most powerful black man in the world, serving on the U.S. Supreme Court. Vilified by the left as an Uncle Tom (pretty immature, don't you think?) and falsely accused by Anita Hill as groping her, Clarence Thomas has been ostracized by not only the Democrats, but the so-called black leadership to include the illustrious Jesse Jackson, the racist Louis Farrakhan, Charley Rangel the tax cheat Democrat House member from New York, the Reverend Al Sharpton (who I actually have some respect for ... at times), and a plethora of other black people in the lime light.

Dr. Condoleezza Rice ... I will expand on this brilliant political science master later.

And so many more.