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A Friend of a Friend in Pennsylvania

April 28, 2008 -- Denunciation politics and the hypocrisy of guilt by association.

Shouldn't there have been some renoucing, denoucing, or rejecting going on here?
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I'm indebted to Sam Stein of The Huffington Post for unearthing  this YouTube video  of Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell in 1997 showering praises on….drum roll, please…MINISTER LOUIS FARRAKHAN!

Yes, Louis Farrakhan, the same Louis Farrakhan about whose links to Barack Obama Hillary Clinton and George Stephanopoulos made such a fuss a few weeks ago.

I've been rolling on the floor laughing my bitter ass off ever since I watched this video. If only  it had surfaced before the Pennsylvania primary, when Rendell's powerful machine was propelling Clinton to a near 10-point victory as the Governor famously predicted that some white Pennsylvanians "are probably not ready to vote for an African American candidate." Would Clinton have been forced to disassociate herself from the governor for sucking up to the most divisive Negro in the land? Would John McCain, who has ripped Obama for his tenuous ties to William Ayers, the 1960s bomber, be on Hillary's case for depending on a Farrakhan lover like Rendell to deliver a crucial state?

It gets even better, thanks to Colbert King of The Washington Post, who has been keeping  track of the Black Muslim leader's undisclosed links to the Clintons. In March, King columnized about the nice things Bill Clinton had to say about Farrakhan in 2005, when the Muslim leader was organizing a ten-year-anniversary commemoration of the Million Man March. The former first black President made no mention of the nasty anti-Semitic speech Farrakhan had delivered only a few months before. Noting that Hillary Clinton had demanded that Obama denounce Farrakhan's unsought endorsement, King asked, "Did Hillary get on Bill's case, too?"

I could write more, if I could just stop chortling.  But every time I think I've got my act together, I remember that picture of Bill Clinton shaking hands with Rev. Jeremiah Wright in the White House and I start giggling again.  And my sides split when I start wondering why no one in the Pennsylvania news media brought up Rendell's complimentary remarks about Farrakhan in time to make a potential difference in the primary.  It's too bad that unfair accusations of guilt by association - and the hypocritical politicians who exploit them - can't be laughed off so easily.  Come to think of it, there's nothing funny about this at all.

Jack White is a former columnist for TIME.

Also on the Root: Kai Wright on police scare tactics,  Kevin Powell on that sickening feeling, and

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A Friend of a Friend in Pennsylvania

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  • Posted By:
    PaulS at 04/29/2008 8:27:58 PM
    Comment:
    Dr. James Beyer, who performed the autopsy and, hundreds of millions of taxpayer funds have shown nothing nefarious about a sad man's tragic self destruction. We will always get the politicians we deserve because the masses are only swayed by fear and lies. If you want to help your candidtate it is time to start swaying voters to your point of view not turning their stomach with contempt at your ignorance. Thank you for not telling us who you are voting for as I am sure it would only further alienate me from your candidate.
  • Posted By:
    Italian Revolutionary at 04/29/2008 8:16:49 AM
    Comment:
    God forbid that I accuse anyone of cynicism, but I can't help but be pissed off that you find guilt-by-association attacks hilarious. And your last sentence reminds me of a fourth grader's "and then I woke up" at the end of an endless story. Own it or don't write it. I'm exhausted by the feckless attempt to prove the political process in the US is of paramount importance and "what makes us great."

    Italian Revolutionary
  • Posted By:
    Nosacredcow at 04/28/2008 5:09:23 PM
    Comment:
    Mr. White raises some very valid points here. I've asked the same questions myself. Why is it ok for John McCain receive endorsements from hateful "christian" leaders such as Falwell and no one seems to bat an eye, but Rev Wrights comments are willingly taken out of context and portrayed as divisive?
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