Of course, it is understandable that a really fragile person might just assume we're dangerous. We really are that scary, to those who've never seen our kind before.
Bigotry is a problem in this country, all right. Obama is bigoted against white people. And I am bigoted against shrieking, hysterical little men who let their xenophobia rule them.
The problem is, this pathological dread of people who are not like him is just too deep at the heart of the Obama campaign. As Sean Wilentz writes:
The main difference between now and then is the openness of the condescension with which many of Obama's supporters - and, apparently, the candidate himself - hold the crude "low information" types whom they believe dominate the white working class. The sympathetic media coverage of Obama's efforts to explain away his remarks in San Francisco about "bitter," economically-strapped voters who, clinging to their guns, religion, and racism, misdirect their rage and do not see the light, only reinforced his campaign's dismissive attitude. Obama's efforts at rectification were reluctant and half-hearted at best - and he undercut them completely a few days later when he referred derisively, on the stump in Indiana, to a sudden "political flare-up because I said something that everybody knows is true.""Everybody" means - well, him.
(emphasis mine)
All of which is just one more way of saying what people have been saying about Obama for some time now: one way or another, anything and everything anyone does, it always ends up being all about him.
Is runaway ruling egocentrism really a quality anyone wants in a President?
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