Dirty
Tricks
101
John McCain's Dirty Tricks
Both Hillary Clinton and John McCain are using the race
issue to try to instill fear into the minds of the voters that Barack
Obama is (a) a Muslim, not a Christian, (b) a fanatic supporter of Louis
Farrakhan, and (c) a terrorist in disguise. This is an old political
trick that has worked for far too many politicians - such as Richard
Nixon when he launched his own political career in 1947 by smearing his
opponent as a communist.
It is ironic that Condoleeza Rice's father, also a
Republican, in his role as a professor, invited Farrakhan to one of his
own seminars - yet no one has accused Rice of being a "terrorist in
disguise."
On the issue of race, both the McCain and Clinton campaigns have teamed
up to pile up on Obama. It's ironic that Bill Clinton was
gushing praise for Obama's minister in the wake of the Monica Lewinsky
scandal, according to the New
York Times. The photogrpah was provided to the Times by
the Obama campaign, the newspaper wrote, noting: "In providing the
photograph to The New York Times, the Obama campaign appeared to be trying
to divert some attention to the Clintons after a week in which Mr.
Obama’s relationship with Mr. Wright has left him facing one of the
biggest challenges of his campaign. "

The Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. and President Bill
Clinton
at a prayer breakfast at the White House in September 1998.
During one of the most difficult periods in the presidency of Bill
Clinton, he addressed a group of clerics at an annual prayer breakfast in
September 1998 just as the Starr report outlining his dalliance with Monica
Lewinsky was about to be published.

Among those in attendance, was the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., who is seen
shaking hands with Mr. Clinton in a photograph provided today by the Obama
campaign. Mr. Wright’s relationship with Senator Barack Obama, as his
longtime pastor, has been the subject of considerable controversy in recent
days because of incendiary excerpts of sermons Mr. Wright gave at their
church, Trinity United Church of Christ, in Chicago.
In providing the photograph to The New York Times, the Obama campaign
appeared to be trying to divert some attention to the Clintons after a week
in which Mr. Obama’s relationship with Mr. Wright has left him facing one
of the biggest challenges of his campaign. There is nothing in the picture
or the note that addresses whether Mr. Clinton had met Mr. Wright prior to
the White House meeting or whether he or Mrs. Clinton knew anything about
Mr. Wright’s views.
Asked for a response tonight through email, Howard Wolfson, a top aide to
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, wrote, “Urgent indeed — a picture —
oooooooo!”
Senator Clinton’s spokesman, Phil Singer, sent along this reply to a
request for comment:
In the course of his two terms in office, Bill Clinton met with,
corresponded with and took pictures with literally tens of thousands of
people.
[NOTE: This is the same response Hillary gave when a photo turned up of
her, Bill and Tony Rezko.]
Mr.
Wright was invited to the 1998 prayer breakfast, and in addition, he
received a thank-you note from former President Clinton for his expressions
of support about six weeks later.
[NOTE: The Clinton documents clearly show the President regarded Rev.
Jeremiah Wright as a religious "leader."]
According to an account
by James Bennet, former White House correspondent who has since left The
Times:
With tears in his eyes, President Clinton told a roomful of clerics
this morning that he had sinned, speaking just hours before the world was
presented a painstaking account by prosecutors of when, where and how.
Addressing an annual prayer breakfast at the White House, Mr. Clinton
drew on the New Testament, the Yom Kippur liturgy and Ernest Hemingway as
he made his most abject confession yet of personal failure, while
declaring that he would defend and redeem his Presidency.
‘’I don’t think there is a fancy way to say that I have
sinned,'’ he admitted softly, saying that after resisting expressions of
contrition he had reached ‘’the rock-bottom truth of where I am.'’
For the first time, Mr. Clinton also asked for forgiveness from Monica S.
Lewinsky, on the day that the details of their intimate relationship —
details that he had denied and struggled to suppress — poured out
through the Internet, whose wonders as a tool of communication he has so
often extolled.
Mr. Wright is not mentioned in the article. Also visible in the
photograph is Vice President Al Gore.
And according to the newly
released schedules of Mrs. Clinton by the National Archives of her years
as first lady, she was in attendance, too.
Her schedule reads:
“Religion Leaders Breakfast (w/POTUS)” in the East Room from
9-10:30 a.m.
Format:
- The President and First Lady are announced into the East Room and
proceed to their tables.
- The Vice President makes remarks and introduces The President.
- The President makes remarks and introduces Dr. Reverend Gerald Mann.
- Dr. Reverend Gerald Mann gives blessing.
- Breakfast is served.
- Following breakfast, The President opens discussion.
- Upon conclusion of the discussion, The President introduces Dr. Reverend
James Forbes.
- Dr. Reverend James Forbes gives benediction.
- The President, First Lady, and Vice President depart.
PARTICIPANTS: Approx. 130 guests to attend.
The
wording of Mr. Clinton’s thank-you note to Mr. Wright, dated Oct. 28,
1998:
Dear Pastor Wright:
Thank you so much for your kind message.
I am touched by your prayers and by the many expressions of encouragement
and support I have received from friends across our country.
You have my best wishes.
Sincerely,
Bill Clinton
It is ironic that Hillary Clinton's campaign has made it
quite clear that they are doing everything possible to spread the
race-tinged controversy in hopes of getting Obama's super-delegates and
uncommitted delegates to vote for her.
It's also ironic that, despite years of
blatantly racist Republican commercials against Democrat candidates, it
took a Republican, Mike Huckabee, to stop and say "give Rev. Wright a
break."
Huckabee says cut Jeremiah Wright 'some
slack'
Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, who won Tennesee’s Republican
primary, said that Americans should remember the South’s segregated past
before judging the Rev. Jeremiah Wright too harshly.
Speaking yesterday on MSNBC's Morning Joe program, Huckabee said that
statements made by Senator Barack Obama’s former pastor were unacceptable
but understandable.
“I'm going to be probably the only conservative in America who's going to
say something like this,” he said, “but I'm just telling you: We've got to
cut some slack to people who grew up being called names, being told, "You
have to sit in the balcony when you go to the movie. You have to go to the
back door to go into the restaurant. And you can't sit out there with everyone
else. There's a separate waiting room in the doctor's office. Here's where you
sit on the bus."
Huckabee, a former pastor, said that Obama should not be held accountable for
his pastor’s “vitriolic” statements.
But he also said that Wright’s statements were lifted out of context.
“Sermons, after all,” he said, “are rarely written word-for-word by
pastors like Rev. Wright, who are delivering them extemporaneously, and caught
up in the emotion of the moment. There are things that sometimes get said,
that if you put them on paper and looked at them in print, you'd say, ‘Well,
I didn't mean to say it quite like that.’ ”
Huckabee, who grew up in the segregated South, added that if he had
experienced the kind of discrimination African Americans have in American
history, he would probably have become bitter.
“Sometimes people do have a chip on their shoulder and resentment,” he
said. “And you have to just say, I probably would too. I probably would too.
In fact, I may have had a more, more of a chip on my shoulder had it been
me.”
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