QUOTE(Bikerdad @ Sep 27 2007, 05:47 AM)

The questions for debate are:
1. Are Giuliani, Thompson, Romney and McCain making a mistake by skipping the Tavis Smiley-hosted debate?
No, they aren't, although black poverty pimps and racebaiters, similar to those who charge the Republicans as telling Black America to "drop dead", will try to make it into a mistake.
Simply put, there is no "black issues block" within the Republican Party. The candidates are running for the Republican nomination, and very few are the registered black Republicans who vote based on "black issues." The vast majority of citizens who vote based on "black issues" are Democrats, and don't vote in the Republican primaries.
Precisely. That is the point. Equally there is no "black issues block"
within the Ku Klux Klan, since
very few Klan members are Black. That is why Klan is not going to go recruit at Morgan State.
One fully understands the Klan's attitude toward the Black race, concerning which it is entirely open. What is less clear to some people is the
Republican Party's position on these questions, concerning which it is not entirely open; I mean its real position, not what they say in their press releases. And we can judge that, among other things, by this. And by the Willie Horton add; by the famous ad run against Harold Ford in Tennessee; by Ronald Reagan's kicking off his campaign with a "states rights" speech in Philadelphia, Mississippi; by the treatment that Black people in Florida received during the 2000 elections; and by many other things.
The Republican Party self-consciously appeals to White, Southern racism and its friendly cousins in backwoods Pennsylvania, rural Indiana and so forth. That was the whole Southern Strategy, so-called, to which the Democratic Party exposed itself by passing the civil rights laws of the 1960s. So naturally, the Republican party now must its turn back on Blacks, since doing otherwise would alienate its racist base. It certainly would not serve any of the Republican contenders to go and be seen in public soliciting the approval of Black people -- that is the opposite of what is necessary to obtain the Republican nomination.
QUOTE(Bikerdad @ Sep 27 2007, 05:47 AM)

An analogy would be conservatives attempting to make hay out of the Democrat candidates refusing to do a debate at Liberty University, hosted by Phyllis Schafly, with Linda Chavez, Laura Ingraham and Ann Coulter handling the questions. Ooohhh, those bad, bad, silly Democrats telling the Traditional Women of America to "sod off!"
The analogy fails because Falwell and his university, Schafly, and so forth, are identified by their
ideology, not by the color of their skin. The Democrats do not propound political ideas consistent with this ideology, and the Party, with the exception of Holy Joe Lieberman, makes no pretense of trying to appeal to these people.
There is, on the other hand, no Black ideology; and Morgan State is merely a historically Black institution, not an institution such as Liberty, established to promote an ideology. Tavis Smiley is a Black person and talk-show host of very moderate and courteous demeanor (I sometimes listen to his radio show); he is not the like of Ann Coulter or Phyllis Schafly at all. Further, the Republican party and, I assume, its potential candidates avow that they are not only not racist, but indeed are highly welcoming to African Americans and that Republican ideas are deeply consistent with the values of these people, if only they would see it. But it appears from the
actual conduct of the most important people in the Republican Party that the reality is something quite different.
Oh certainly next year, after there is a nominee, we will hear a great chorus of Republicans chanting how inclusive and broad-minded their party is, but thanks to such events as this, nobody will believe them. In fact, when the White folks in Philadelphia hear that on the radio, they'll wink at each other.