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Last post 12 years ago by DrMaddVibe. 22 replies replies.
I love it when a plan comes together!
Kawak Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 11-26-2007
Posts: 4,025
I love how Breitbarts team lets Liberals fall on their own swords! This could not have gone any better for Mr. Pollack. As usual the Libby reporters don't do their homework about guests or subjects! Unless you count what Media Matters supplies them!

http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-TV/2012/03/08/The%20Vetting%20CNN%20Implodes%20Over%20Obama%20Bell%20Video

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Journalism/2012/03/08/Soledad%20OBrien%20Was%20A%20Derrick%20Bell%20Fan

http://www.breitbart.com/

http://news.yahoo.com/breitbarts-last-depth-interview-msnbc-plot-paint-obama-001006386.html

Get the popcorn!
rfenst Online
#2 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,431
Kawak wrote:
I love how Breitbarts team lets Liberals fall on their own swords! This could not have gone any better for Mr. Pollack. As usual the Libby reporters don't do their homework about guests or subjects! Unless you count what Media Matters supplies them!

http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-TV/2012/03/08/The%20Vetting%20CNN%20Implodes%20Over%20Obama%20Bell%20Video

http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Journalism/2012/03/08/Soledad%20OBrien%20Was%20A%20Derrick%20Bell%20Fan

http://www.breitbart.com/

http://news.yahoo.com/breitbarts-last-depth-interview-msnbc-plot-paint-obama-001006386.html

Get the popcorn!


What are those links about- before I take the time to watch them?
DrMaddVibe Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
rfenst wrote:
What are those links about- before I take the time to watch them?



Use the Google.

Too bad you didn't waaaay back when. As a result we have the Kenyan King and his henchmen.
rfenst Online
#4 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,431
DrMaddVibe wrote:
Use the Google.

Too bad you didn't waaaay back when. As a result we have the Kenyan King and his henchmen.



OK. You finally win: Obama won because I voted for him.
Now, if you will just give me another few days I will decide who our next President will be!




Sarcasm
FuzzNJ Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 06-28-2006
Posts: 13,000
Breitbart using race again. Oh no, Obama hugged a black professor who had views that we don't get nor understand. He must want to kill all white people. The horror.
daveincincy Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
FuzzNJ wrote:
Breitbart using race again. Oh no, Obama hugged a black professor who had views that we don't get nor understand. He must want to kill all white people. The horror.



Are you saying this is a black thing, and we wouldn't understand? Anxious
FuzzNJ Offline
#7 Posted:
Joined: 06-28-2006
Posts: 13,000
daveincincy wrote:
Are you saying this is a black thing, and we wouldn't understand? Anxious


No, I'm saying it's a scholarly thing, and you wouldn't understand.
daveincincy Offline
#8 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
thank God I'm not a scholar. You can't tell them anything...they think they know EVERYTHING.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#9 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
FuzzNJ wrote:
No, I'm saying it's a scholarly thing, and you wouldn't understand.


Nobody's asking for Debbie Field's Chocolate Chip recipe or anything so I really don't believe for one flipping' second that YOU would be in any possession of any type of useful "scholary knowledge"!

Just like the Nickelodeon turned CNN "anchor" didn't cough up that she was biased in her "interview".

Amazing how the "free" press isn't so free, and when it's there for all to see you go all in with the "turtle act" and run for your shell.
dubleuhb Offline
#10 Posted:
Joined: 03-20-2011
Posts: 11,350
FuzzNJ wrote:
Breitbart using race again. Oh no, Obama hugged a black professor who had views that we don't get nor understand. He must want to kill all white people. The horror.

Fuzz using race again, anytime someone criticizes Obama it's because they are racist. Anything new ? It's not the hug, although it makes sense, but the association with this guy and his racist view of America. horse
DrMaddVibe Offline
#11 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
dubleuhb wrote:
Fuzz using race again, anytime someone criticizes Obama it's because they are racist. Anything new ? It's not the hug, although it makes sense, but the association with this guy and his racist view of America. horse



Another brick in the "wall".

They'll turn their head because he's one of "theirs". They offer support and cover. Sad thing is they'll do all of that and the Kenyan King wouldn't even fart in the same room as them. That's how full of contempt he is!
jetblasted Offline
#12 Posted:
Joined: 08-30-2004
Posts: 42,595
daveincincy wrote:
thank God I'm not a scholar. You can't tell them anything...they think they know EVERYTHING.

+1
jetblasted Offline
#13 Posted:
Joined: 08-30-2004
Posts: 42,595
http://tinyurl.com/74lpuo3
daveincincy Offline
#14 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
I can't wait to have a white guy back in the office of President. That way we can talk bad about him and the crappy job he's doing, and not be called a racist. Frying pan
Kawak Offline
#15 Posted:
Joined: 11-26-2007
Posts: 4,025
What's really awesome is the fact if you read more and then look into Mr. Pollack. He is actually married to a really hot black women! So the fact that neither of these blithering Liberal idots did any research and yet made him out to be racists is to funny.

Oh and for you Libs, yes that gives him cred just like when you white libs yell racism at every turn you think somehow that gives you street cred and free tickets to a 50 cent show.
jpotts Offline
#16 Posted:
Joined: 06-14-2006
Posts: 28,811
FuzzNJ wrote:
Breitbart using race again. Oh no, Obama hugged a black professor who had views that we don't get nor understand. He must want to kill all white people. The horror.



I understand the man's views. He believes that the rule of law is secondary to external factors like "social justice." And that when a judge rules from the bench, he should impose prevailing leftist attitudes as opposed to what the law states.

So, if black people are oppressed, and a black guy kills his white neighbor in a fit of anger, the black guy should be let go because his people are "oppressed."

What's the point of having laws if they can be countermanded by transient social concerns? The answer is: there is no point.

And what if the wind of those social concerns blow in the opposite direction (as winds sometimes do)? Well, it may lead to the EXACT opposite of what was intended. Because it is human nature for people to take the path of least resistence, and that often means following process as opposed to conscience. And when the process is that you subjugate the freedoms of others to what the current social trend may be, you can go from excusing one race of all it's ills, to executing them in droves.

And this black professor "teaches" law. Frankly speaking, they should have taking him up on his numerous threats to leave a long time ago. He was an angry black socialist with cottage cheese for an intellect.

There's a reason why the lady holding the balance on the front of the courthouse has a blindfold over her eyes. And it isn't so that she can't see the truth.

Fuzz, you are a complete idiot.
jpotts Offline
#17 Posted:
Joined: 06-14-2006
Posts: 28,811
"How can you call yourself an intellectual and not find anti-Semitism nauseating?”


Henry Louis Gates to Bell.
daveincincy Offline
#18 Posted:
Joined: 08-11-2006
Posts: 20,033
Kawak wrote:
What's really awesome is the fact if you read more and then look into Mr. Pollack. He is actually married to a really hot black women! So the fact that neither of these blithering Liberal idots did any research and yet made him out to be racists is to funny.



OMG...if that is true then I can see how it was even easier for Mr. Pollack to stay composed. Nothing like giving all of those accusers a little more rope to hang themselves. d'oh! Classic!
DrMaddVibe Offline
#19 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
Derrick Bell in 1994: ‘Jewish Neoconservative Racists’

The controversy over the videotape of Harvard Law School student Barack Obama speaking in support of his professor Derrick Bell during Bell’s one-man 1990 uprising against the law school’s failure or refusal to hire a black woman as a professor has caused a predictable back-and-forth about what it might mean for Obama to have a favorable view of Bell. Michael Powell of the New York Times reflected conventional opinion in liberal media circles when he tweeted: “Derrick Bell, Radical? We’re to pretend our history cleansed? He fought 4 Civil Rights in Mississippi.”

It is incumbent on Powell and others, if they want to get in on the conversation about Bell, to explain what on earth is mainstream about comments he made in an eye-opening New York Observer interview published on October 10, 1994, that is not available online. Among other remarks, Bell denounced Henry Louis (Skip) Gates for writing a New York Times op-ed condemning black anti-Semitism:

I was furious. Even if everything he said was true, it was inexcusable not to mention what might have motivated blacks to feel this way, and to fail to talk about all the Jewish neoconservative racists who are undermining blacks in every way they can.

Bell went on to say, “Now, that wouldn’t excuse anti-Semitism, which is awful, but it would at least provide a context for this anger…”


It might seem nice of Bell to acknowledge the awfulness of anti-Semitism, but he didn’t mean it. The very same interview began as follows: “We should really appreciate the Louis Farrakhans and the Khalid Muhammads while we’ve got them.” Khalid Muhammad was Farrakhan’s right hand, who made a name for himself referring to Jews as, among many other things, “bloodsuckers” whose “father was the devil.” As for Farrakhan, if you need a refresher course in his vileness, look here.

Why exactly were we supposed to appreciate them? Quoth Bell: “While these guys talk a lot, they don’t do anything. The new crop of leaders are going to be a lot more dangerous and radical, and the next phase will probably be led by charismatic individuals, maybe teenagers, who urge that instead of killing each other, they should go out in gangs and kill a whole lot of white people.”

Note how he seemed to relish this prospect even as he tut-tutted it. Note also how almost unimaginably wrong he was. For no marauding gangs of black teenagers went around killing white people after he spoke; in fact, the ongoing crime drop that followed his words had its most remarkable impact in black communities, where the number of murders fell, by some counts, as much as 80 percent over the decade that followed.

And of course, 18 years after he spoke these words, a black man who gave him a nice hug back in 1990 was elected president of the United States.

Bell, in the same interview: “Blacks will simply never gain full equality in this country.”


http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/03/09/derrick-bell-jewish-neoconservative-racists/




All in all it's just a...nuther brick in the Wall.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#20 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
The Racist Ravings of Derrick Bell


By now, you may already have seen the 1991 video footage of Barack Obama, who was then a 30-year-old student at Harvard Law School, speaking in glowing terms about Harvard professor Derrick Bell, whom Obama described as a man known for “speaking the truth” and for an “excellence of … scholarship” that had not only “opened up new vistas and new horizons,” but had “changed the standards [of what] legal writing is about.” “Open up your hearts and your minds to the words of Professor Derrick Bell,” Obama urged the sizable crowd which had gathered to show their support for Professor Bell that day.

Since the release of the video, Obama’s backers have been quick to dismiss it as nothing more than a young scholar’s affectionate tribute to a liberal academic icon who not only made major intellectual contributions to his profession, but who also was a leading champion of racial “diversity” in higher education. For instance, CNN host Soledad O’Brien, when interviewing Breitbart.com’s editor-in-chief Joel Pollak yesterday about the significance of the video, described Bell benignly as “the first tenured African American professor of law at Harvard University,” and characterized the gathering merely as “a rally in support of racial equality among the faculty at Harvard Law School.” O’Brien then asked her guest, with apparent bewilderment, “What part of that was the bombshell? Because I missed it. I don’t get it. What was a bombshell?”

In a similar spirit of willful blindness, Media Matters describes Derrick Bell as “a respected academic” and “an influential figure in the Civil Rights movement.” This portrayal is reminiscent of Barack Obama’s pathetic characterization, a few years back, of Bill Ayers as “just a guy who lives in my neighborhood.” But just as the reality of Bill Ayers was far more interesting than Obama indicated at that time, the truth about Derrick Bell is likewise far more compelling than the pablum the left has provided in the wake of this latest video. For you see, by the time Barack Obama was delivering his glowing remarks about Derrick Bell in 1991, the professor had already established—and would continue to cultivate for another two decades—a reputation as someone who thoroughly, resolutely detested the United States and who viewed the nation’s institutions and its people as irremediably racist. In short, until his death last October at the age of 80, Bell was secular academia’s version of Jeremiah Wright—a raging, fulminating racist without the clergyman’s robe. And something about his philosophy resonated strongly with Barack Obama.

Derrick Bell is best known as the founding father of Critical Race Theory, an academic discipline which maintains that society is divided along racial lines into (white) oppressors and (black) victims, similar to the way Marxism frames the oppressor/victim dichotomy along class lines. Critical Race Theory contends that America is permanently racist to its core, and that consequently its legal structures are, by definition, racist and invalid. A logical derivative of this premise, according to Critical Race Theory, is that the members of “oppressed” racial groups are entitled—in fact obligated—to determine for themselves which laws and traditions have merit and are worth observing. Such a perspective’s implications for the ability of civil society to function at all, are nothing short of monumental.


http://frontpagemag.com/2012/03/09/barack-obamas-first-jeremiah-wright/


But...but...but Snickerdoodles thinks it's Breitbart? The reporter's version of Jesus...back from the dead to rule the Earth.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWyCCJ6B2WE


Frying pan Frying pan Frying pan Frying pan


Yes, I too love it when it all falls into place and the thoughtless minions like Snickerdoodles expose themselves for what they are out in the open!
DrMaddVibe Offline
#21 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
Bell, via Kagan, on Critical Race Theory: The Constitution Is the Problem


In November 1985, the Harvard Law Review published an article by Derrick Bell that was a "classic" in the development of Critical Race Theory. The article was edited by then-student Elena Kagan, and was cited by Prof. Charles Ogletree in support of her nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court by President Barack Obama in 2010. The article makes clear that Critical Race Theory sees the U.S. Constitution as a form of "original sin"--a view later embraced by Obama as a state legislator, and reflected in his actions and appointments. The following is an excerpt from the non-fiction portion of the article; much of what follows is a fictional story that Bell intended as a parable of racial "fantasy." (99 Harv. L. Rev. 4)
At the nation's beginning, the framers saw more clearly than is perhaps possible in our more enlightened and infinitely more complex time the essential need to accept what has become the American contradiction. The framers made a conscious, though unspoken, sacrifice of the rights of some in the belief that this forfeiture was necessary to secure the rights of others in a society embracing, as its fundamental principle, the equality of all. And thus the framers, while speaking through the Constitution in an unequivocal voice, at once promised freedom for whites and condemned blacks to slavery....

The Constitution has survived for two centuries and, despite earnest efforts by committed people, the contradiction remains, shielded and nurtured through the years by myth. This contradiction is the root reason for the inability of black people to gain legitimacy -- that is, why they are unable to be taken seriously when they are serious and why they retain a subordinate status as a group that even impressive proofs of individual competence cannot overcome. Contradiction, shrouded by myth, remains a significant factor in blacks' failure to obtain meaningful relief against historic racial injustice.

The myths that today and throughout history have nurtured the original constitutional contradiction and thus guided racial policy are manifold, operating like dreams below the level of language and conscious thought. Much of what is called the law of civil rights -- an inexact euphemism for racial law -- has a mythological or fairy-tale quality that is based, like the early fairy tales, less on visions of gaiety and light than on an ever-present threat of disaster. We are as likely to deny as to concede these myths, and we may well deny some and admit others. They are not single stories or strands. Rather, they operate in a rich texture that constantly changes, concealing content while elaborating their misleading meanings.

When recognized, these myths often take the form of the missing link between the desire for some goal of racial justice and its realization. Black civil rights lawyers propound the myth that this case or that court may provide the long-sought solution to racial division. They fantasize and strategize about hazy future events that may bring us a long-envisioned racial equality. White people cling to the belief that racial justice may be realized without any loss of their privileged position. Even at this late date, some find new comfort in the old saw that "these things" -- meaning an end to racial discrimination -- "take time." The psychological motivations behind the myths perpetrated by people of both races can be sufficiently complex to engender book-length explanations by psychiatrists. Racial stereotypes are also part of this suffocating web of myth that forms the rationale of inaction, but it is not necessary to catalogue here the myriad stereotypes about black people that have served since the days of slavery to ease the consciences of the thoughtful and buoy the egos of the ignorant.

The contemporary myths that confuse and inhibit current efforts to achieve racial justice have informed all of our racial history. Myth alone, not history, supports the statements of those who claim that the slavery contradiction was finally resolved by a bloody civil war. The Emancipation Proclamation was intended to serve the interests of the Union, not the blacks, a fact that Lincoln himself admitted. The Civil War amendments, while more vague in language and ambiguous in intent, actually furthered the goals of northern industry and politics far better and longer than they served to protect even the most basic rights of the freedmen. The meager promises of physical protection contained in the civil rights statutes adopted in the post-Civil War period were never effectively honored. Hardly a decade later, the political compromise settling the disputed Hayes-Tilden election once again left the freedmen to the reality of life with their former masters. Finally, the much-discussed "40 acres and a mule," hardly extravagant reparations for an enslaved people who literally built the nation, never got beyond the discussion stage.

The reason that the Civil War amendments failed to produce equality for blacks remains an all-too-familiar barrier today: effective remedies for harm attributable to discrimination in society in general will not be granted to blacks if that relief involves a significant cost to whites. Even in northern states, abolitionists' efforts following the Revolutionary War were stymied by this unspoken principle. Today, affirmative action remedies as well as mandatory school desegregation plans founder as whites balk at bearing the cost of racial equality.

Throughout this history of unkept promises and myth-making about the possibility and proximity of racial equality, racial policy via fantasy has not been the exclusive province of "the perpetrator perspective." Black victims of racial oppression also subscribe to myths about racial issues. The modern civil rights movement and its ringing imperative, "We Shall Overcome," must be seen as part of the American racial fantasy. This is not a condemnation. Much of what advocates call the "struggle" to throw off the fetters of subordinate status is simply an age-old effort to uncover the reality beneath the racial illusions that whites and blacks hold both about themselves and about each other.Clutching for ideological straws is understandable, but, unfortunately, the result is as predictable as that of the framers' fantasy...


http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/03/11/Derrick%20Bell%20Critical%20Race%20Theory%20Constitution%20Elena%20Kagan%20Harvard%20Obama#disqus_thread





Elena Kagen now sits on the Supreme Court. Talk about chickens coming home to roost!
DrMaddVibe Offline
#22 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,554
http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-TV/2012/03/19/Prager-Schools-Soledad-Over-Failed-Critical-Race-Theory-Segment


I love it when the talking head goes to the tool shed and takes a beat down!
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