Herman Cain and Al-Sharpton
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
Well this just goes to show that the real racists are Democrats.
Mr. Sharpton raises some good points, and all you can do is play the race card?
Excuse me but saying someone is "not black enough" because they have a different opinion than you, is not even remotely legitimate criticism, putting it mildly.
The fact you think it is legitimate criticism and perfectly acceptable, isn't surprising to me, given some of your other comments.
Inuyasha wrote:
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
Well this just goes to show that the real racists are Democrats.
Mr. Sharpton raises some good points, and all you can do is play the race card?
Excuse me but saying someone is "not black enough" because they have a different opinion than you, is not even remotely legitimate criticism, putting it mildly.
The fact you think it is legitimate criticism and perfectly acceptable, isn't surprising to me, given some of your other comments.
Mr. Sharpton did not say that anyone was "not black enough." Mr. Sharpton's criticism's were perfectly legitimate and acceptable.
Listen again to the interview.
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
Well this just goes to show that the real racists are Democrats.
Mr. Sharpton raises some good points, and all you can do is play the race card?
Excuse me but saying someone is "not black enough" because they have a different opinion than you, is not even remotely legitimate criticism, putting it mildly.
The fact you think it is legitimate criticism and perfectly acceptable, isn't surprising to me, given some of your other comments.
Mr. Sharpton did not say that anyone was "not black enough." Mr. Sharpton's criticism's were perfectly legitimate and acceptable.
Listen again to the interview.
Saying someone is not "authentically black" is pretty much the same thing as saying someone is not "black enough."
Inuyasha wrote:
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
Well this just goes to show that the real racists are Democrats.
Mr. Sharpton raises some good points, and all you can do is play the race card?
Excuse me but saying someone is "not black enough" because they have a different opinion than you, is not even remotely legitimate criticism, putting it mildly.
The fact you think it is legitimate criticism and perfectly acceptable, isn't surprising to me, given some of your other comments.
Mr. Sharpton did not say that anyone was "not black enough." Mr. Sharpton's criticism's were perfectly legitimate and acceptable.
Listen again to the interview.
Saying someone is not "authentically black" is pretty much the same thing as saying someone is not "black enough."
Mr. Sharpton also doesn't state that anyone is not "authentically black."
You want to focus on the superficial, false accusation of racism so that you can avoid dealing with the substance.
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
Well this just goes to show that the real racists are Democrats.
Mr. Sharpton raises some good points, and all you can do is play the race card?
Excuse me but saying someone is "not black enough" because they have a different opinion than you, is not even remotely legitimate criticism, putting it mildly.
The fact you think it is legitimate criticism and perfectly acceptable, isn't surprising to me, given some of your other comments.
Mr. Sharpton did not say that anyone was "not black enough." Mr. Sharpton's criticism's were perfectly legitimate and acceptable.
Listen again to the interview.
Saying someone is not "authentically black" is pretty much the same thing as saying someone is not "black enough."
Mr. Sharpton also doesn't state that anyone is not "authentically black."
You want to focus on the superficial, false accusation of racism so that you can avoid dealing with the substance.
It's more of I consider Al Sharpton to be highly partisan, and his ranting about Mr. Cain actually further raises my opinon of Herman Cain.
Inuyasha wrote:
It's more of I consider Al Sharpton to be highly partisan, and his ranting about Mr. Cain actually further raises my opinon of Herman Cain.
Ah, a chance that we might actually get somewhere.
Which part of the discussion succeeded most in raising your opinion of Mr. Cain?
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
It's more of I consider Al Sharpton to be highly partisan, and his ranting about Mr. Cain actually further raises my opinon of Herman Cain.
Ah, a chance that we might actually get somewhere.
Which part of the discussion succeeded most in raising your opinion of Mr. Cain?
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGE_DMkeP1A[/youtube]
Pretty much the entire clip whenever Rev. Sharpton said something derogatory towards Herman Cain.
Also the "pandering to whites" garbage is what really ticked me off towards Rev. Sharpton.
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
Also the "pandering to whites" garbage is what really ticked me off towards Rev. Sharpton.
It was the woman who used the phrase "pandering to white people", and she actually said that Mr. Cain was not "pandering to white people."
I actually listened to the whole interview, so don't try to tell me that Sharpton wasn't implying things when it was blatently obvious that he was.
Inuyasha wrote:
pandabear wrote:
Inuyasha wrote:
Also the "pandering to whites" garbage is what really ticked me off towards Rev. Sharpton.
It was the woman who used the phrase "pandering to white people", and she actually said that Mr. Cain was not "pandering to white people."
I actually listened to the whole interview, so don't try to tell me that Sharpton wasn't implying things when it was blatently obvious that he was.
Congratulations on having listened to the whole interview, but you are accusing Mr. Sharpton of having said things that he did not say. And, your opinion of Herman Cain is going up as a result of things that were never said. Only things that you imagined.
Joker
Veteran
Joined: 19 Mar 2011
Age: 35
Gender: Male
Posts: 7,593
Location: North Carolina The Tar Heel State :)
*sigh* Okay. I will do your work for you. Here is an actual quote from Al Sharpton.
Quote:
How could anyone in their right mind — they grew up in the south and saw what they saw — and act like everyone that is unemployed and that is not rich did it to themselves? So I would assume he is either socially ignorant or playing games to get votes, that he couldn’t possibly have grown up and come to that conclusion unless he was one or the other.
So, how would this statement succeed in raising anyone's opinion of Herman?
Joker
Veteran
Joined: 19 Mar 2011
Age: 35
Gender: Male
Posts: 7,593
Location: North Carolina The Tar Heel State :)
Joker wrote:
Herman Cain has my vote
Does this mean that it is now OK for Cain to have "border-crossing" babies and "unborn babies" electrocuted and shot as a joke???
"The Future" by Leonard Cohen:
"Kill another [illegal] fetus now, we don't like [illegal] children anyhow"
Tadzio
Tadzio wrote:
Joker wrote:
Herman Cain has my vote
Does this mean that it is now OK for Cain to have "border-crossing" babies and "unborn babies" electrocuted and shot as a joke???
"The Future" by Leonard Cohen:
"Kill another [illegal] fetus now, we don't like [illegal] children anyhow"
Tadzio
Ever heard of sarcasm?
Inuyasha wrote:
Tadzio wrote:
Joker wrote:
Herman Cain has my vote
Does this mean that it is now OK for Cain to have "border-crossing" babies and "unborn babies" electrocuted and shot as a joke???
"The Future" by Leonard Cohen:
"Kill another [illegal] fetus now, we don't like [illegal] children anyhow"
Tadzio
Ever heard of sarcasm?
He didn't try to hide behind the idea of a "joke" until a few semi-conscious citizens came to a higher level of consciousness of his projected atrocities:
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/20 ... cain-says/
versus the earlier "his joke" and his real later "final solution" above
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMfpU19h ... r_embedded
Non-Liberals have already tried to confound this issue by confusing "later" as coming before "earlier".
Tadzio