It is with no pleasure that I put in writing what I have long believed:
Though many individual liberals have only goodwill toward black Americans, the
liberal world since the late 1960s (i.e., after the major civil rights
legislation of the mid-1960s) has done incalculable damage to black America and
to race relations in this country. Whether out of guilt or because of its own
racist views (i.e., the unspoken but regularly implied belief in the inferiority
of African-Americans), the left-of-center's general attitude toward black
Americans has been that they cannot be judged by the same standards as
others.
From lowering standards of admission to universities to blaming the high
number of black men in prison for violent crimes on white racism to decades of
cultivating black victimhood and the subsequent Wright-like rage against
America, liberals and their party, the Democrats, have immeasurably hurt
African-Americans and America.
Should a non-black oppose race-based lowered standards or blame black
criminals rather than white racism for their criminality, the liberal world
dismisses that individual as a racist; and should a black express these views,
he is dismissed as an "Uncle Tom," a "traitor to his
race."
In just the past week, two prominent men of the left provided
examples.
Appearing on "Larry King Live," Michael Moore, the adored hero of the
2004 Democratic Convention, explained the Rev. Wright's anger and racism this
way:
I'm a white guy. And I think I've got to tell you something. If you were
black in this country, especially if you are of his age, of his era or even
times before that or even kids today, when you look at the situation in our
inner city schools, I mean, you have to ask yourself, Larry, what's it like to
be black in America? And what kind of rage would you feel? And if you did feel
that rage, what kind of things would you say that, at times, would be
outrageous, crazy even, because you've had to live through this for so long?
"And I do not believe, as a white guy, that I am in any
position to judge a black man who has had to live through that .
(Italics added.)
To the liberal world, the black American is so oppressed that his rage
against whites specifically and America generally is completely understandable,
and therefore no white has the right to judge black outrage and its subsequent
expressions. Blacks are not to be judged by the moral standards one judges
others.
In more sophisticated language, The New York Times columnist Frank Rich
also sought to dismiss the general outrage at Wright's racist and anti-American
diatribes. In Rich's view, American society's outrage at Wright is but one more
example of American racism. His proof? America is not as angry at a white
pastor, the Rev. John Hagee, who has endorsed Sen. John McCain, as it is at
Wright and his 20-year bond with Sen. Barack Obama.
In Rich's words, "Mr. Hagee's videos have never had the same circulation
on television as Mr. Wright's. A sonorous white preacher spouting venom just
doesn't have the telegenic zing of a theatrical black man. It is disingenuous to
pretend that there isn't a double standard operating here. If we're to judge
black candidates on their most controversial associates -- and how quickly,
sternly and completely they disown them -- we must judge white politicians by
the same yardstick."
Thus, according to Rich, Hagee is just as worthy of censure as Wright;
and McCain's relationship to Hagee is equivalent to Obama's relationship to
Wright.
Yet nothing Hagee has said is comparable to what Wright has said. For
example, in Wright's Detroit NAACP address, he said that African brains differ
from white brains, that black English is no more different from standard English
than John Kennedy's New England English was, and that America's repeated acts of
terrorism are what brought 9-11's terrorism to America. And, at his own church
he was recorded saying, "God damn America" and asserting that we cannot believe
government denials that America started AIDS and infected African-Americans with
the disease.
Moreover, the totality of Wright's views is virtually entirely
race-based, including his continuing praise for Louis Farrakhan, his church's
advocacy of "Black values" rather than Christian values, and his teaching that
Christianity is rooted in black Africa and that Jesus himself was
black.
Most Americans find such views racist. But to Rich, this reaction is
"hypocrisy," since a white pastor, Hagee, whose endorsement McCain has accepted,
has said equally immoral and bigoted things. Rich provided two examples --
Hagee's criticisms of the historical anti-Semitism of the Catholic Church in
Europe and Hagee's statement that Hurricane Katrina may have been God's will as
a result of the New Orleans gay parade that had been scheduled for the Monday
after the storm.
As it happens, Hagee has completely retracted his objectionable comments
on Katrina. Wright, on the other hand, has not only not retracted any of his
anti-American and racist comments, he has reaffirmed them. Does this matter to
Frank Rich? Of course not. What matters is indicting America for racist double
standards.
As for Rich's attack on Hagee for the pastor's "anti-Catholicism," the
Times columnist got his facts wrong. Hagee was not calling the Catholic Church
"the Great Whore." That is an eschatological New Testament term in the Book of
Revelation. Hagee
teaches that the "Great Whore" will be an "apostate church" and a "false cult
system" made up of all those who claim Christianity yet reject the gospel, whether Catholic or Protestant. He
has stated explicitly and publicly -- and should continue to reassure Catholics
-- that he does not believe that the "Great Whore" of Revelation is the Catholic
Church. For Hagee, the sure sign that a Christian has rejected the gospel is an
embrace of anti-Semitism. In the video referenced by Rich, Hagee chooses his
examples of "apostate" behavior -- the Crusades, the Inquisition and a Hitler
quote referencing the Catholic Church -- not because they are Catholic, but
because they are anti-Semitic.
But while Rich and others could have honestly, if mistakenly, believed
that Hagee was referring to the Catholic Church in that video, it borders on
slander to compare John Hagee with Jeremiah Wright. Hagee has been preoccupied
with the suffering of the Jews at the hands of Christians. One would think that
the preoccupation of a major Christian leader with Jewish suffering at the hands
of Catholics and Protestants -- Hagee has been just as critical of Martin
Luther's anti-Semitism as with that of the Church -- would be welcomed by a
liberal Jew such as Frank Rich. After all, liberal Jews and liberal non-Jews
have been unsparing in their criticism of Christian, especially the European
Catholic Church's, oppression of Jews. But for Rich, pointing out historical
anti-Semitism is apparently less important than exaggerating contemporary
American racism.
The sad irony of all the liberal attacks on white racism and subsequent
justification of black rage against America is that it only increases black rage
and sometimes even black racism. But it does keep 'em voting Democrat.