Monday, May 12, 2008
Is Obama really the man blacks need?
By Star Parker
It appears that Barack Obama has survived a tough couple of weeks. In the words of some, he's shown that "he can take a punch."
But, frankly, I think Senator Obama is still getting kid gloves treatment from a press corps that tilts left.
Despite the hounding about his "bitterness" remarks, and the ongoing
story of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, there's been hardly 10 seconds of
attention about his incredible statement that he wouldn't want his
daughters "punished with a baby" if they "make a mistake."
This in a discussion about HIV/AIDS in which he said that
contraception should be included alongside of abstinence in sex
education.
Regarding his two young daughters, Obama said, "I am going to teach them first about values and morals."
First? What are values and morals if there is a second? Faith,
of course, includes forgiveness. But values and morals are absolutes.
There is a world of difference between forgiveness and teaching
alternative paths.
There have been questions, appropriate questions, about how
Barack Obama could have been sitting in the Rev. Jeremiah Wright's
church for 20 years and suddenly, today, realize he does not agree with
him. How so?
We have a good possible answer here. Religion for Senator Obama
is not something too serious. It may satisfy some social needs and
provide intellectual and emotional salve. But it doesn't translate into
behavioral absolutes.
The arena for addressing life's dilemmas for Obama is politics
not religion. So, in this sense, Pastor Wright had it right. His former
congregant is first and foremost a politician.
In answering a question about abortion while campaigning in
Iowa last year, the always deliberative Obama said: "I think the
American people struggle with two principles: There's the principle
that the fetus is not just an appendage, it's potential life ... They
also believe that women should have some control over their bodies ..."
The fetus is "potential life?"
Shortly after the Supreme Court's decision last year upholding
the constitutionality of the ban on partial birth abortions, Obama
spoke at a Planned Parenthood conference in Washington, D.C. Condemning
the court's decision, he said that it was part of "a concerted effort
to steadily roll back" legal abortions.
Criticizing Justice Anthony Kennedy, who wrote the majority
opinion in the case, Obama said, "Justice Kennedy knows many things,
but my understanding is that he does not know how to be a doctor."
Of course, Kennedy's job is not to be a doctor, but to be a
judge. And in doing so, he included in his opinion testimony of a nurse
who participated in a partial birth abortion procedure:
"The baby's little fingers were clasping and unclasping, and
his little feet were kicking. Then the doctor stuck the scissors in the
back of his head, and the baby's arms jerked out ...The doctor opened
up the scissors, stuck a high powered suction tube into the opening,
and sucked the baby's brains out ... Now the baby went completely limp.
He threw the baby in a pan, along with the placenta, and the
instruments he had just used."
Thus the end of what, for Obama, was "potential life."
Nat Hentoff, no conservative, but a libertarian who writes for the "Village Voice,'' calls Obama the "infanticide candidate."
In a recent column, Hentoff noted that, while in the Illinois
State Senate, Obama voted against the Born Alive Infant Protection Act.
This Act addressed cases where, during an abortion procedure, the live
infant was actually born. The Act would have banned killing the living
child.
Responding to John McCain's remarks delivered the other day at
Wake Forest University about law and judges, Obama contrasted McCain's
pledge of "judicial constraint" with his own concept of legal activism.
Obama said he'd seek out judges "who are sympathetic to those
who are on the outside, those who are vulnerable, those who are
powerless."
Aside from this bizarre idea about the role of law, what irony
there is in hearing this from a man with zero empathy for our most
vulnerable -- the helpless infant in the womb.
For the 90 percent of blacks who are casting votes for Obama,
know that almost 50 million children have been aborted since Roe V.
Wade in 1973, a third of which were black babies. Is this really the
man whom our community needs?
Star Parker is the founder and president of CURE, the Coalition on
Urban Renewal & Education, a 501c3 non-profit organization that
provides national dialogue on issues of race and poverty in the media,
inner city neighborhoods, and public policy.
"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed, second it is violently opposed, and third, it is accepted as self-evident."
Arthur Schopenhauer, Philosopher (1788-1860)