OBAMA'S PASTOR DISASTER - by Mark Steyn

(My congratulations to syndicated columnist Mark Steyn for this OUTSTANDING article!)
 
The Rev. Jeremiah Wright thinks that, given their treatment by white  America, black Americans have no reason to sing "God Bless America." "The  government gives them the drugs, builds bigger prisons, passes a three-strike  law and then wants us to sing 'God Bless America.' No, no, no, God damn  America," he told his congregation. "God damn America for treating our  citizens as less than human."
 
I'm not a believer in guilt by association, or the campaign vaudeville of  rival politicians insisting this or that candidate dissociate himself from  remarks by some fellow he had a 30-second grip'n'greet with a decade ago. But  Jeremiah Wright is not exactly peripheral to Barack Obama's life. He married  the Obamas and baptized their children. Those of us who made the mistake of  buying the senator's latest book, "The Audacity Of Hope," and assumed the  title was an ingeniously parodic distillation of the great sonorous banality  of an entire genre of blandly uplifting political writing discovered circa  page 127 that in fact the phrase comes from one of the Rev. Wright's sermons.  Jeremiah Wright has been Barack Obama's pastor for 20 years – in other words,  pretty much the senator's entire adult life. Did Obama consider "God Damn  America" as a title for his book but it didn't focus-group so well?
 
Ah, well, no, the senator told ABC News. The Rev. Wright is like "an old  uncle who says things I don't always agree with." So did he agree with goofy  old Uncle Jeremiah on Sept. 16, 2001? That Sunday morning, Uncle told his  congregation that the United States brought the death and destruction of 9/11  on itself. "We nuked far more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon,  and we never batted an eye," said the Rev. Wright. "We have supported state  terrorism against the Palestinians and black South Africans, and now we are  indignant because the stuff we have done overseas is now brought right back to  our own front yards."
 
Is that one of those "things I don't always agree with"? Well, Sen. Obama  isn't saying, responding merely that he wasn't in church that morning. OK,  fair enough, but what would he have done had he happened to have shown up on  Sept. 16? Cried "Shame on you!" and stormed out? Or, if that's a little  dramatic, whispered to Michelle that he didn't want their daughters hearing  this kind of drivel while rescue workers were still sifting through the rubble  and risen from his pew in a dignified manner and led his family to the exit?  Or would he have just sat there with an inscrutable look on his face as those  around him nodded?
 
All Sen. Obama will say is that "I don't think my church is actually  particularly controversial." And in that he may be correct. There are many  preachers who would be happy to tell their congregations "God damn America."  But Barack Obama is not supposed to be the candidate of the America-damners:  He's not the Rev. Al Sharpton or the Rev. Jesse Jackson or the rest of the  racial grievance-mongers. Obama is meant to be the man who transcends the  divisions of race, the candidate who doesn't damn America but "heals" it – if  you believe, as many Democrats do, that America needs healing.
 
Yet since his early twenties he's sat week after week, listening to the  ravings of just another cookie-cutter race-huckster.
 
What is Barack Obama for? It's not his "policies," such as they  are. Rather, Sen. Obama embodies an idea: He's a symbol of redemption and  renewal, and a lot of other airy-fairy abstractions that don't boil down to  much except making upscale white liberals feel good about themselves and get  even more of a frisson out of white liberal guilt than they usually do. I  assume that's what Geraldine Ferraro was getting at when she said Obama  wouldn't be where he was today (i.e., leading the race for the Democratic  nomination) if he was white. For her infelicity, the first woman on a  presidential ticket got bounced from the Clinton campaign and denounced by  MSNBC's Keith Olbermann for her "insidious racism" indistinguishable from "the  vocabulary of David Duke."
 
Oh, for cryin' out loud. Enjoyable as it is to watch previously expert  tossers of identity-politics hand grenades blow their own fingers off, if  Geraldine Ferraro's an "insidious racist", who isn't?
 
The song the Rev. Wright won't sing is by Irving Berlin, a contemporary of  Cole Porter, Ira Gershwin and Lorenz Hart, all the sophisticated rhymesters.  But only Berlin could have written without embarrassment "God Bless America."  He said it directly, unaffectedly, unashamedly – in seven words:
 
"God Bless America
Land that I love."

Berlin was a Jew, and he suffered slights: He grew up in the poverty of New  York's Lower East Side. When he made his name and fortune, his marriage to a  Park Avenue heiress resulted in her expulsion from the Social Register. In the  Thirties, her sister moved in with a Nazi diplomat and proudly flaunted her  diamond swastika to Irving. But Berlin spent his infancy in Temun, Siberia  (until the Cossacks rode in and razed his village), and he understood the  great gift he'd been given:
 
"God Bless America
Land that I love."

The Rev. Wright can't say those words. His shtick is:
 
"God damn America
Land that I loathe."

I understand the Ellis Island experience of Russian Jews was denied to  blacks. But not to Obama. His experience surely isn't so different to Berlin's  – except that Barack got to go to Harvard. Obama's father was a Kenyan, he  spent his childhood in Indonesia, and he ought to thank his lucky stars that  he's running for office in Washington rather than Nairobi or Jakarta.
 
Instead, his whiny wife, Michelle, says that her husband's election as  president would be the first reason to have "pride" in America, and complains  that this country is "downright mean" and that she's having difficulty finding  money for their daughters' piano lessons and summer camp. Between them, Mr.  and Mrs. Obama earn $480,000 a year (not including book royalties from "The  Audacity Of Hype," but they're whining about how tough they have it to couples  who earn 48 grand – or less. Yes, we can. But not on a lousy half-million  bucks a year.
 
God has blessed America, and blessed the Obamas in America, and even  blessed the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, whose bashing of his own country would be  far less lucrative anywhere else on the planet. The "racist" here is not  Geraldine Ferraro but the Rev. Wright, whose appeals to racial bitterness are  supposed to be everything President Obama will transcend. Right now, it sounds  more like the same-old same-old.
 
"God Bless America
Land that I love."

Take it away, Michelle.
 
©MARK STEYN


 

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