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Wright: Blacks Differently Abled From Whites

A transcript of the Revered Jeremiah Wright’s racist hate speech to the NAACP (as opposed to his racist hate speech to the National Press Club), courtesy of CNN:

The NAACP has an incomparable record. It has the longest list of achievements in the history of this country as being the undisputed champion in the fight against discrimination, racial prejudice, and unjust public policies, which have caused people made in the image of God to be treated as less than human or treated as second-class citizens.

In its early days, the NAACP and the black church in the United States of America were seemingly joined at the hip in the fight against injustice and the fight for equality on behalf of all people of color.

Many local chapters of the NAACP were started in black churches. Hundreds of black churches. The NAACP’s fight for justice and freedom, however, is not limited to the concerns of the black church, historically or contemporaneously. And when the truth is told, as Paula

Giddings does so powerfully in her book “When and Where I Enter,” there were times when the NAACP had to drag some timid black preachers along kicking and screaming as in the Montgomery bus boycott designed by the NAACP, not the SCLC.

Throughout its 99-year history, the NAACP has been built by people of all races, all nationalities, and all faiths on one primary premise, which is that all men and women are created equal. The nation’s oldest civil rights organization has changed America’s history. Despite violence, intimidation, and hostile government policies, the NAACP and its grassroots membership have persevered.

Now, somebody please tell the Oakland county executive that that sentence starting with the words “despite violence, intimidation, and hostile government policies” is a direct quote from the NAACP’s profile in courage. It didn’t come from Jeremiah Wright.

Otherwise, he will attribute the quote to me and continue to say that I and am one of the most divisive people he has ever of heard speak. When he has never heard me speak. And just to help him out, I am not one of the most divisive. Tell him the word is descriptive.

I describe the conditions in this country. Conditions divide, not my descriptions. Somebody say “Amen.” If you can’t say “Amen,” you’re too mad, just say “Ouch.”

The NAACP is nonpartisan. The NAACP is not beholden to, controlled by, or partial to any one faith tradition. The NAACP says proudly that it is a compound of people of all races, all nationalities and all faiths.

And it is for that reason that I am especially grateful to Reverend Dr. Wendell Anthony and the Detroit branch of the NAACP for honoring me by having me address their 2008 theme “A Change is Going to Come.”

One of your cities’ political analysts says in print that first just my appearance here in Detroit will be polarizing. Well, I’m not here for political reasons. I am not a politician. I know that fact will surprise many of you because many in the corporate-owned media have made it seem as if I had announced that I’m running to for the Oval Office. I am not running for the Oval Office. I’ve been running for Jesus a long, long time, and I’m not tired yet.

I am sorry your local political analysts and your neighboring county executives think my being here is polarizing and my sermons are divisive, but I’m not here to address an analyst’s opinion or a county executive’s point of view. I am here to address your 2008 theme, and I stand here as one representative of the African American religious tradition which works in concert with other faith traditions, believing as we work together that a change is going to come.

On that point, about other faith traditions, in addition to Pastor Anthony, Pastor Nicholas Hood (ph), Pastor Charles Adams (ph), Pastor William Revelly (ph), Pastor James Perkins (ph), Pastor Wilma Rudolph (ph), Pastor Holly (ph) who is suffering from a stroke, Father Michael Flager (ph), Father Jeremy Tobin (ph), Pastor Dee Dee Coleman (ph), Dr. Georgia Hill (ph) and Reverend Lonnie Peak (ph), I would also like to thank Sister Melanie Marah (ph), the former executive director of the Chicago chapter of the American Jewish Committee and the current executive director of the Washington, D.C., chapter of the American Jewish committee. I would like to thank my good friend and Jewish author Tim Wise for his support, and I would like to offer a special shookran (ph) to Imam Muhammad Ali Ilakhi (ph) of the Islamic House of Wisdom in Dearborn Heights for his courage, his conviction and his support.

The support of the Jewish community, the Muslim community, and the Christian community, Protestant and Catholic, is in concert with the credo of the NAACP and a definite sign that a change is definitely going to come. An additional special thank you is offered to Soledad O’Brien for CNN’s outstanding “Black in America” and my long-term friend Roland Martin.

I believe that a change is going to come because many of us are committing to changing how we see others who are different.

In the past, we were taught to see others who are different as somehow being deficient. Christians saw Jews as being deficient. Catholics saw Protestants as being deficient. Presbyterians saw Pentecostals as being deficient.

Folks who like to holler in worship saw folk who like to be quiet as deficient. And vice versa.

Whites saw black as being deficient. It was none other than Rudyard Kipling who saw the “White Man’s Burden” as a mandate to lift brown, black, yellow people up to the level of white people as if whites were the norm and black, brown and yellow people were abnormal subspecies on a lower level or deficient.

Europeans saw Africans as deficient. Lovers of George Friedrich Handel and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart saw lovers of B.B. King and Frankie Beverly and Maze as deficient. Lovers of Marian Anderson saw lovers of Lady Day and Anita Baker as deficient. Lovers of European cantatas — Comfort ye in the glory, the glory of the Lord (ph) — Lovers of European cantatas saw lovers of common meter — I love the Lord, He heard my cry — they saw them as deficient.

In the past, we were taught to see others who are different as being deficient. We established arbitrary norms and then determined that anybody not like us was abnormal. But a change is coming because we no longer see others who are different as being deficient. We just see them as different. Over the past 50 years, thanks to the scholarship of dozens of expert in many different disciplines, we have come to see just how skewed, prejudiced and dangerous our miseducation has been.

Miseducation. Miseducation incidentally is not a Jeremiah Wright term. It’s a word coined by Dr. Carter G. Woodson over 80 years ago. Sounds like he talked a hate speech, doesn’t it? Now, analyze that. Two brilliant scholars and two beautiful sisters, both of whom hail from Detroit in the fields of education and linguistics, Dr. Janice Hale right here at Wayne State University, founder of the Institute for the study of the African-American child. and Dr. Geneva Smitherman formerly of Wayne State University now at Michigan State University in Lansing. Hail in education and Smitherman in linguistics. Both demonstrated 40 years ago that different does not mean deficient. Somebody is going to miss that.

Turn to your neighbor and say different does not mean deficient. It simply means different. In fact, Dr. Janice Hale was the first writer whom I read who used that phrase. Different does not mean deficient. Different is not synonymous with deficient. It was in Dr. Hale’s first book, “Black Children their Roots, Culture and Learning Style.” Is Dr. Hale here tonight? We owe her a debt of gratitude. Dr. Hale showed us that in comparing African-American children and European-American children in the field of education, we were comparing apples and rocks.

And in so doing, we kept coming up with meaningless labels like EMH, educable mentally handicapped, TMH, trainable mentally handicapped, ADD, attention deficit disorder.

And we were coming up with more meaningless solutions like reading, writing and Ritalin. Dr. Hale’s research led her to stop comparing African-American children with European-American children and she started comparing the pedagogical methodologies of African-American children to African children and European-American children to European children. And bingo, she discovered that the two different worlds have two different ways of learning. European and European-American children have a left brained cognitive object oriented learning style and the entire educational learning system in the United States of America [sic]. Back in the early ’70s, when Dr. Hale did her research was [sic] based on left brained cognitive object oriented learning style. Let me help you with fifty cent words.

Left brain is logical and analytical. Object oriented means the student learns from an object. From the solitude of the cradle with objects being hung over his or her head to help them determine colors and shape to the solitude in a carol in a PhD program [sic] stuffed off somewhere in a corner in absolute quietness to absorb from the object. From a block to a book, an object. That is one way of learning, but it is only one way of learning.

African and African-American children have a different way of learning.

They are right brained, subject oriented in their learning style. Right brain that means creative and intuitive. Subject oriented means they learn from a subject, not an object. They learn from a person. Some of you are old enough, I see your hair color, to remember when the NAACP won that tremendous desegregation case back in 1954 and when the schools were desegregated. They were never integrated. When they were desegregated in Philadelphia, several of the white teachers in my school freaked out. Why? Because black kids wouldn’t stay in their place. Over there behind the desk, black kids climbed up all on them.

Because they learn from a subject, not from an object. Tell me a story. They have a different way of learning. Those same children who have difficulty reading from an object and who are labeled EMH, DMH and ADD. Those children can say every word from every song on every hip hop radio station half of who’s [sic] words the average adult here tonight cannot understand. Why? Because they come from a right-brained creative oral culture like the (greos) in Africa who can go for two or three days as oral repositories of a people’s history and like the oral tradition which passed down the first five book in our Jewish bible, our Christian Bible, our Hebrew bible long before there was a written Hebrew script or alphabet. And repeat incredulously long passages like Psalm 119 using mnemonic devices using eight line stanzas. Each stanza starting with a different letter of the alphabet. That is a different way of learning. It’s not deficient, it is just different. Somebody say different. I believe that a change is going to come because many of us are committed to changing how we see other people who are different.

What Dr. Janice Hale did in the field of education, Dr. Geneva Smitherman did in the field of linguistics. Almost 25 years ago now, Dr. Smitherman’s book published by Wayne State University talking and testifying the language of black America taught us the same thing. Different does not mean deficient. Linguists have known since the mid 20th century that number one, nobody in Detroit, with the exception of citizens born and raised in the United Kingdom, nobody in Detroit speaks English. We all speak different varieties of American. If you don’t believe me, go to the United Kingdom. As soon as you open your mouth in the United Kingdom, they’ll say oh you’re from America. Because they hear you speak in American. Linguists knew that nobody in here speaks English, but only black children 50 years ago were singled out as speaking bad English.

In the 1961, it’s been all over the Internet now, John Kennedy could stand at the inauguration in January and say, “ask not what your country can do for you, it’s rather what you can do for your country.” How do you spell is? Nobody ever said to John Kennedy that’s not English “is”. Only to a black child would they say you speak bad English. Kennedy got killed. Johnson stepped up to the podium and love feel, we just left love feel. And Johnson, said my fellow Americans. How do you spell fellow? How do you spell American? Nobody says to Johnson you speak bad English.

Ed Kennedy, today, those of you in the Congress, you know Kilpatrick. You know, Ed Kennedy today cannot pronounce cluster consonants. Very few people from Boston can. They pronounce park like it’s p-o-c-k. Where did you “pock” the car? They pronounce f-o-r-t like it’s f-o-u-g-h-t. We fought a good battle. And nobody says to a Kennedy you speak bad English. Only to a black child was that said. Linguists knew that 50 years ago and they also knew number two that every language, including the language of Jesus, Aramaic, was made up of five subsets, pragmatic, grammar, syntax, semantics and phonics and that African speakers of English and African speakers of French and African speakers of Portuguese and African speakers of Spanish in the new world had created languages, not dialect all with five different subsets.

Languages, not Creole or Patois, languages. And Dr. Smitherman compiled the findings of an interdisciplinary research along with her own brilliant findings to show us that the language of black Americans was different, not deficient. She combined the findings of early childhood education, linguistics, socio-linguistics and the pedagogy of the oppressed to demonstrate most powerfully that different does not mean deficient. It simply means what? Different. I believe a change is going to come because many of us are committed to changing the way we see others who are different.

What Dr. Janice Hale did in the field of education and what Dr. Geneva Smitherman did in the field of linguistics, Dr. (Eldon)ph [did] in the field of ethnomusicology, the field of music. He showed us 40 years ago what Wintley (Phipps) is teaching you for the first time 40 years later. African music is different from European piano music. It is not deficient, it is different. In most school systems today, the way most of us over 40 years of age were taught is still being taught. We were taught a European paradigm as if Europe had the only music that there was in the world. As a matter of fact, if you just say the term, classical music.

Today, most here, use of that term will automatically refer to Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, and already cited Mozart and Handel. European musicians. From grammar school to graduate school, we are taught in four, four time. That the dominant beat is on one and three. Our band directors, our choir directors, our orchestra director start us off how?

And One, two, three, four. One, two, three. Now, that’s the European dominant beat. For African and African-Americans, it is not one and three, it is two and four. I don’t have to teach you. Listen to black people clap to this song. Glory, glory hallelujah, you are clapping on beats two and four. If you got some white friends, they’ll be clapping like this. You say they can’t clap. Yes, they can. They clap in a different way. It’s the same fact holds true with six eight time. Europeans stress one, two, three, four, five, six. One, two, three, four, five, six. Dum dum, dum, dum, dum. The stress is on one and four. Not for black people. When you got six eight time, blacks stress two three and five six.

Listen to this — blessed assurance, Jesus is mine two, three for, five, six - oh, why are you clapping on the wrong beat? Africans have a different meter and Africans have a different tonality. European music is diatonic, seven tones. Do, re, mi, fa, so, la, ti, do. That’s Italian. Europe. In west Africa and south Africa, it is not diatonic, seven tones, it is pentatonic with five tones. Wintley [Phipps] points out that if you want to know black music, just look at the black keys on the piano. Do, re, fa, so, la. Just those five tunes. Those are the only five notes you’ll hear and somebody knows the trouble I’ve seen.

It only uses five notes the same with the river it also uses five notes. That’s all. I believe a change is coming. It’s not deficient, it’s just different.

Many of us are committed to changing how we see others who are different. When you look at and listen to - I’m in Michigan. OK. Here in Michigan, look at and listen to the University of Michigan and Michigan State University bands at halftime. Their bands hit the field with excellent European precision. Da, da, da, da, da, ta, ra, ra.

Now go to a Florida A&M and Gramling Band. It’s different. And you can’t put that in no book. I believe change is going to come because many of us are committed to changing how we see others who are different. One is not superior to the other. One is not normal with the other being abnormal. One is not deficient because it doesn’t follow the same methodology of the other. It is just different. Different does not mean deficient. Tell your neighbor one more time.

Now, what is true in the field of education, linguistics, ethnomusicology, marching bands, psychology and culture is also true in the field of homiletics, hermeneutics, biblical studies, black sacred music and black worship. We just do it different and some of our haters can’t get their heads around that. I come from a religious tradition that does not divorce the world we live in from the world we are heading to. I come from a religious tradition that does not separate the kingdom of heaven that we pray for from the devious kingdoms of humans that keep people in bondage on earth.

I come from a religious tradition that did not hold slaves, but preached against slavery and worked to end slavery. I come from a religious tradition that fought against (Lansing)ph like the NAACP, fought against discrimination like the NAACP and fought against skin privilege, fought against apartheid, fought again unfair labor practices, fought against segregation, fought against Plessy versus Ferguson.

I come from a religious tradition that fought for desegregation like NAACP. Fought for equality, fought for human dignity, fought for civil rights, fought for equal protection into the law and fought for the right of every citizen to have quality education regardless of the color of their skin. I also come from a religious tradition that say if you feel excited about something, be excited about it. Don’t stand there he has hate speech. Listen to how bombastic he is. Isn’t he bombastic? He’s stirring up hate.

You love somebody? Yes. Oh how I love Jesus because he first loved me. No. No. No. If you feel it - I come from a religious tradition where we shout in the sanctuary and march on the picket line. I come from a religious tradition where we give God the glory and we give the devil the blues. The black religious tradition is different. We do it a different way. 40 years ago, Dr. Anthony (inaudible) quoted in ‘68 the Kerner report stated that they were two different Americas. And for 40 years one of those Americas has acted as if they were the only America. But all of that now is in the past. I believe a change is coming. Because many of us are going to change how we see others who are different. I’ve got to hurry on. I’m taking too much of your time. So let me give you the outline of the rest of this message. You can either fill in the blanks for yourselves or you could wait for my book that will be out later this year.

I believe addressing your theme. I believe a change is going to come because many of us here tonight, at least 11,900 out of 12,000. Many of us are committed to changing how we see others who are different. Number one, many of us are committed to changing how we see ourselves. Number two, not inferior or superior to, just different from others. Embracing our own histories. Embracing our own cultures. Embracing our own languages as we embrace others who are also made in the image of god. That has been the credo of the NAACP for 99 years. When we see ourselves as members of the human race, I believe a change is on the way. When we see ourselves as people of faith who shared this planet with people of other faiths, I believe a change is on the way.

Many of us are committed to changing how we see others who are different. Number one, many of us are committed to changing how we see ourselves, not (step ship)ph children [sic], number too but God’s children. Many of us are committed to changing, number three, the way we treat each other. The way black men treat black women. The way black parents treat black children. The way black youth treat black elders and the way black elders treat black youth. We are committed to changing the way we treat each other. The way the so called haves and have mores, to use Bush’s speech writers term. Don’t you all think he made that up? The way the have and have mores treat the have notes [sic]. The way the educated treat the uneducated. The way those with degrees treat those who never made it through high school. The way those of us who never got caught treat those of us who are incarcerated. Making rehabilitation a priority over incarceration.

We are committed to changing the way we treat each other. The way we treat the latest immigrants because everybody in here who’s not an Indian do be an immigrant. Some of you all came on a decks of ship and some of us came on the bows and hauls of the ship, but we all are immigrants. The way we treat non Christians and folks who don’t believe what we believe, we’re committed to changing the way we treat each other. The way Sunis [sic] treat Shiites, the way Orthodox Jews treat reformed Jews. The way church folk treat other church folk. The way speakers of English treat speakers of Arabic. Maasalam al hal (ph).

Please run and tell my stuck on stupid friends that Arabic is a language, it’s not a religion. Barack Hussein Obama. Barack Hussein Obama. Barack Hussein Obama. They are Arabic-speaking Christians, Arabic-speaking Jews and Arabic speaking atheists. Arabic is a language, it’s not a religion. Stop trying to scare folks by giving them an Arabic name as if it’s some sort of a disease.

Same [sic] people thought that the Irish had a disease. When the Irish came here. Did you hear my me O’Malley? O’Reilly? They thought you were - well they might have been might, the way we treat each other, many of us are committed to changing the way we treat each other. The way Christians treat you. The way straights treat gays. We are committed to changing the way we treat each other. And we are committing number four to changing the way we mistreat each other. We can do better, you all. There is a higher standard, you all. We know that and we are stretching to reach that standard. I believe a change is going to come because many of us are committed to changing how we see others who are different.

Many of us are committed to changing how we see ourselves. Many of us are committed to changing the way we treat each other. Many of us are committed to changing the way we mistreat each other. And many of us finally are committed to changing this world that we live in so our children and our grandchildren will have a world in which to live in to grow in, to learn in, to love in and to pass on to their children. We are committed to changing this world that’s God’s world, in the first place. Not ours. And I believe we can do it. It’s going to take hard work, but we can do it.

It’s going to take people of all faiths including the nation of Islam, but we can do it. It’s going to take people of all races, but we can do it. It’s going to take Republicans and Democrats, but we can do it. It’s going to take the wisdom of the old and the energy of the young, but we can do it. It’s going to take politicians and preachers, the government and NGOs, but we can do it. It’s going to take educators and legislatures, but we can do it. If I were in a Christian Church, I would say we can do all things through Christ who strengthens us. If I were in a Jewish synagogue, I would say is anything too hard for Elohim. If I were in a Muslim mosque, I would say Sha Allah we can do it. If I were pushing one particular candidate, I would say yes, we can.

But, since this is a nonpartisan gathering and since this is neither a mosque, a synagogue or a sanctuary, just let me say, we can do it. We can make it if we try. We can make the change if we try. We will make a change if we try. A change is going to come. Can you feel it? Can you see it? Can you imagine it? Then come on, let’s claim it. Give yourselves a standing ovation while the transformation that’s about to jump off [sic]. A change is going to come.

How odd that a man who is so bitter doesn’t cling to guns or any god — but money.

I come from a religious tradition that does not divorce the world we live in from the world we are heading to.

And this Mr. Wright’s excuse for hating this country and lying about its history — and its current actions?

He is claiming to live in a different (not deficient) reality? Perhaps he is right.

But what a deep thinker the Reverend Doctor is. He is positively Farrakhan-ish.

I don’t know about you, but I can’t wait for his forthcoming “book.”

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30 Responses to “Wright: Blacks Differently Abled From Whites”

  1. notunderabushel

    These comments are directly in line with the eugenics movement in the United States esp rampant in the 20’s, 30’s, and 40’s. This movement descended from Frances Galton in the 1860’s who argued that intelligence, and most redeeming human characteristics, were genetically controlled and encouraged artificial selective breeding of humans. He described this taking “cognizance of all influences that tend in however remote a degree to give to the more suitable races or strains of blood a better chance of prevailing speedily over the less suitable than they otherwise would have had”

    Also later Josef Mengeles a Nazi German Scientist, who performed abhorrent human experiments against minorities sequestered in concentration camps, furthered the idea of eugenics and it was quickly used to justify the dominance of one race over the other, and therefore approve of extermination of the “less fit” racial group,

    The idea in the United States was grasped by the scientific majority and used, not unlike modern global warming fanaticism, to enact broad social changes in the country. Including mass sterilization of disabled individuals, extremely racially prejudice immigration policies, and the meteoric rise of abortion as an acceptable procedure.

    This way of thinking is not only extremely uneducated, but also proves once again the lack of recognition of the sanctity of honest behavior as a distinctly important human attribute.

  2. BannedbytheTaliban

    I’m reminded of a passage that says: you shall know a tree by the fruit it bears. And his are truely bitter fruit. But the imcomperable “Rev” Wright should know this.

  3. studmuffin

    “Jesus” in a reverend Wright speech is like an elevator in an outhouse–it just doesn’t belong.

  4. Musette

    So, it would be wrong to judge all black people by the huge numbers who keep children in fatherless homes, all blacks who are gang-bangers, all the drugs in the black community, (not being facetious. It would be wrong–but universalisms are different from generalizations.)But we’re supposed to believe that ALL black people learn in exactly the same way? That’s really rational.

  5. Clarissimus

    It seems ironic to me that someone speaking at an NAACP dinner would advocate what is basically a “separate but equal” approach to race.

  6. suscepit

    World-famous neurophysiologist Jeremiah Wright recommended today ….

    Ethnomusicologist J. Wright spoke that ….

    Educational theorist Dr. Wright proposes ….

    World-renowned atmospheric physicist Al Gore has weighed in ….

    Celebrated cinematographer OH STOP IT ALREADY.

  7. DEZ

    And Wright thinks with which side of his brain?
    Oh wait…..

  8. JohnMG

    Wright is one bitter SOB. Maybe it was him that BO Movement was talking about. I mean, clinging to “black religion”, “gangbangers and their guns”, and “being suspicious of others who are different”, sounds just like ol’ Jerimiah to me. What a hate-merchant. Just what the country needs–an unrepentant bigot with a bull horn. Of all the intelligent, accomplished blacks in the world, the NAACP has to pick that asshole to stir up the pot. The founders of that organization would scarcely recognize what it has become, but it is no less recognizable than Wright’s “Christain” sermons and behavior.

    Disgusting!

  9. DEZ

    ” I describe the conditions in this country. Conditions divide, not my descriptions.”
    No sir, You run off at the mouth like a run away train jumping the tracks, your flock following like a caboose in tow.
    Your grasp of science is so astoundingly uninformed that I am surprised you don’t pray to the four winds.
    You scream some of the most ridiculous BULL S**T since Hitler, and have the nerve to ask for an Amen.
    If you had any sense of honor or dignity you would go shank yourself.

  10. ptat

    Wright is just not very bright. Obviously,he got where he is today, degrees and all,with a wink and a nod and Clintonian charm. He is not a legitimate intellect–he simply gives lip service to convenient and suspect theories and junk science/theology. While Algore may be one of the leading proponents of junk science(Big Junk Science?), we now have a guru of junk theology. Oh well, the more he talks, the more people will realize he is a phony and he can fade into obscurity in his $1.6 million home in a (predominately white) gated community! Hypocrite!!

  11. wardmama4

    -’John Kennedy could stand at the inauguration in January and say, “ask not what your country can do for you, it’s rather what you can do for your country.”’- ala (not-so-right) Rev Wright. . .

    -’ And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you–ask what you can do for your country.’-JFK Inagural Address. . .

    Those who do study history are doomed to repeat it - Maybe Rev Wright should actually ponder that statement for a while. . .He can’t even get an extremely famous quote right - just to make anyone else not him sound stupid or look bad or simply to blame them.

    BTW, isn’t he doing EXACTLY what he claims whites and America have been doing forever - blankly stereotyping a whole race based on one little claim, story or rumor?!? And now he is also thrusting that really wrong behavior unto his own - by claiming that they all ‘learn’ in one particular way - wow, talk about an intolerent, rigid and close minded individual.

  12. Icarus

    Differs = Different Effys = Efficient Defys = deficient

    Test you I.Q …or ask Pastor Wright!

    If all the Differs are Effys; and all Defys are definitely Differs; since they are the total opposite of the Effys then is it true that all who are Defys are definitely Differs?

    J.W’s argument has truths in it. It has to to survive. And on the face of it - of course, Difference does not equals deficiency. But deficiency is definitely different from efficiency.

    Wright uses analogies that are apples to Oranges and forcefully tries to draw parallels where there aren’t any.

    In regard to this quote from his speech – “Christians saw Jews as being deficient”

    If Pastor Wright really read his Bible; he’d have read the parable of the leased vineyard.
    Does God see a difference; and a deficiency with the first tenets, as opposed to the new tenets he leases the Vineyard to?

  13. Noyzmakr

    You really need to see the video of this nut. I can’t wait until it’s posted somewhere. I’ve looked but haven’t seen it anywhere but TV so far.

    Eugenics is exactly what Wright is talking about and that brought us Evolution, abortion, NAZI’s, communism, socialism, Marxism and all of the other liberal religious beliefs.

    I wrote a little play by play last night. I was appalled and so was CNN, initially.
    http://sweetness-light.com/arc.....ent-109473

  14. platypus

    Just do what all good intelligence gathering agents do - sit unobtrusively and take down names of who likes this guy.

    You’ll know who not to trust if these loons ever get their hands on real power.

  15. GetBackJack

    Rev. Wright asked ‘when is this country going to apologize for slavery?’ I say that wrong was righted everywhere there is a National memorial battlefield Cemetary, like Chickamauga, Kennesaw, Gettysburg, Antietam, Day’s Gap, Jenkins Ferry, Ringgold Gap, Vicksburg, Shiloh, Brice’s Crosss Roads Manassas, Peeble’s Farm and hundreds more. Men lie in graves all over this nation in silent testimony to this nation’s determination to be rid of the foreign-spawned curse of slavery. Their wives, sweethearts, families and children equally ruined ina titanic struggle to set other men free. The vicious, contemptible practice of slavery was eradicated by men Jeremiah Wright curses, real Christians who marched, fought, died and set the United States upon a new course and wrote history with their blood and treasure.

    And not one word of thanks from Mr. Wright, for he is no Reverend.

    When called by God to do the right thing, American men and women put down their lives and picked up the cross it required. Mr. Wright has four years and 600,000 lives of blood on his hands if he doesn’t respect what was accomplished that he might be Free.

  16. DEZ

    ” When called by God to do the right thing, American men and women put down their lives and picked up the cross it required. Mr. Wright has four years and 600,000 lives of blood on his hands if he doesn’t respect what was accomplished that he might be Free.”

    Now thats a great post!

  17. Noyzmakr

    “Now thats a great post!”

    Amen!

    I applaud you GetBackJack! -standing ovation-

  18. bousquem

    There’s a difference in the “english” people speak depending on where you go in the world and even in this country. The difference is the words used, ie. torch and flashlight, or pop and soda. Different english terms doesn’t not give one the right to butcher the language gramatically and claim that its fine that way. Of course if you want a good example, just turn on COPS when they bust some drug dealer and listen to the poor grammar and eubonics used. I also have to say that it is truely sad the the civil rights movement originally was about being equal but this idiot seems to think that blacks are different and should be given everything they want regardless of if they deserve it or not. I’ve also heard the bag of hot racist air was claiming that the goverment has done nothing to “atone” for the crime of slavery. Seems like a safety blanket for people like Wright, when somone complains about you (Wright) or such you cry racism and run back to being calling everyone a racist so they’re the bad person. Wright is a racist bigoted pig and I wouldn’t shed a tear if he keeled over.

  19. imnewatthis

    That picture of Rev. Wright at the top- isn’t that the same dance move John Travolta made in that movie with Uma Thurman?

  20. wardmama4

    GetBackJack - I have to go with the group - Great words and people, if you are confused -’When called by God to do the right thing, American men and women put down their lives and picked up the cross it required. Mr. Wright has four years and 600,000 lives of blood on his hands if he doesn’t respect what was accomplished that he might be Free.’- These words are Truth. Not some lunatics twisted opinion which might somewhere have a small grain of truth in it.

  21. TheChicagoWay

    I’ll say it again…Hillary is a “lock”

  22. Sharps Rifle

    There are indeed different learning styles, and sometimes the primary style found has cultural influences, but that’s a matter of nurture, not of nature. Wright is full of crap.

    Any good teacher understands that there are three domains of learning: Aural, Visual and Kinesthetic (ears, eyes, hands). This is one reason why most lessons have had three componants, and why intense hand note-taking results in better retention of material presented: The student has to listen (aural) to what the instructor is saying, he has to write it down (kinesthetic), and is processing the material by reading as he writes (visual). These domains aren’t just white, or black or yellow…they’re HUMAN. Black students have no greater percentage of right brain learners (and right brained is actually more organized and less random than left brain), nor do blacks “clap differently” than do other races, to toss out another of Wright’s blatherings.

    Wright proves his racism every time he opens his filthy sewer. Aspects that are cultural he somehow bastardizes into being genetic, and aspects that are nurture he bastardizes into being nature. A white child raised in a home where music is revered will have a better sense of musical timing than a black child raised in an environment where music is absent…equally, dance ability is not inherited, so there goes the classic “white folks can’t dance” shibboleth we’ve all heard so often.

    While Wright makes mention of the black church’s role in the civil rights movement, he ignores one major fact: It was also heavily populated by white churches, as well. Perhaps not so much in the south, but many northern Protestant congregations, as well as Catholic diocese and many synagogues were also heavily invested in seeing the success of the civil rights movement. And something else he fails to acknowledge: Not all whites are Klansmen. The Klan was at its peak in the 1920’s, but by the 1950s and 1960s, the two decades this throwback seems to be stuck in, even southern whites viewed Klansmen with revulsion and embarassment and the Klan was a shadow of its former self. My guess would be that the Black Panthers, SNCC and SDS had more membership than the Klan…and that today there would be far more black racists than white ones, based solely upon the prevalence of race baiters such as Wright, Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Cynthia McKinney, Alcee Hastings, Maxine Waters, John Conyers, and some of those loudmouthed idiots who always seem to find a voice on Fox News, such as that idiot from Temple University whose name escapes me, and that putz from the “New Black Panther Party” whose name also mercifully escapes me at the moment.

    What’s repulsive to me is that this is the 21st Century and we still have to deal with troglodytic morons like Wright, and that we’re still being hammered for things that ended up to 150 years ago! If the race industry weren’t about money and power, and about keeping an underclass convinced that they have no future (well, frankly, anyone who can’t speak proper English, puts “grilles” on their teeth, acts as though an entry level job is beneath them until something better comes along, has a 75 to eighty percent illegitimacy rate among births, reveres a crime-committing lifestyle, and wastes money on $300.00 sneakers, Tommy Hilfiger, FUBU, South Pole and other “designer” clothes, as well as on cheesey “bling,” the latest “pay-as-you-go” cell phones, iPods, “pimped out” “rides” and crack cocaine HAS no future. Stupidity is self-defeating, and there’s a LOT of stupidity in these behaviors) we might actually be getting somewhere. Until filth like Wright and his ilk are placed on the trash heap of society where they belong, we won’t be one country of Americans…we’ll be two countries: Americans and hyphenated Americans, who maintain that hyphenation because they are told they don’t have to accept the culture of this country. Like it or not, there IS a dominant culture here…and EVERYONE, whether Irish, German, Italian, Spanish, Norwegian or whatever accepted it. They never shed their love of where they came from, but they never expected to find signs in Polish or be told that because they were Hungarian that their self-destructive behaviors were acceptable and laudable, nor did they demand slave reparations from Egypt. They were in the most free country on Earth and wanted to be part of it, not apart from it! Bluntly, Mr. Wright, if you’re so blasted “African,” you know how to buy a plane ticket and re-settle yourself in your “motherland”! Oh, wait…we know why you won’t do that…no million-plus dollar houses and no white liberals to fawn all over your every raving…

    If Wright represents the “black church” and “black values,” then I want nothing to do with either. He’s a disgrace to Christianity, and to the human race.

  23. Noyzmakr

    Excellent post SR!

    The last few days on this site have had some of the most intelligent and thought provoking posts I’ve ever read anywhere.

    I mean, it’s always great, but lately it’s been phenomenal.

    You people are brilliant!

  24. SG

    “The last few days on this site have had some of the most intelligent and thought provoking posts I’ve ever read anywhere.

    You people are brilliant!”

    I agree, Noyz.

    My only nit is that this is an every day thing here.

  25. Noyzmakr

    Hence the edit. I had the same thought as soon as I posted and you must have posted while I was adding my qualifier.

    You’re right SG; It’s always great.

  26. GuppyNblue

    Same here, great comments with Sharps Rifle’s being particularly great.

    IMO Rev. Wright doesn’t even buy into his own words and he does nothing for blacks but exploit them. He uses fiery rhetoric and clever word play, not evidence, to push things like conspiracy theories. His AIDS theory is the most ridiculous. It’s a sexually transmitted disease, not racially transmitted. When someone’s argument fails the test of logic, you have to call them on it or you allow them to proceed from false assumptions. Our politicians and media are to politically correct to make that call but we do it here.

    Race is the most notable difference between black and white people due to the striking visual difference. It’s the first thing two strangers would understand about each other until they become more familiar. Rev. Wright exploits this (like the devil whispering in your ear) by assigning everything to that difference. All of us have hardships at one time or another, but too often a black person will automatically associate his problems with his race and fail to notice that the same happens to white people. I notice something similar in my own life. I don’t like to be very social in my workplace (for good reason but that’s another story) and some take it personally. If they would take a second to think, they would see that I don’t socialize with anyone no matter their race, age, or gender. But race baiters hammer into their heads that whites live privileged and carefree lives because the system favors them over blacks.

    Just being a minority doesn’t automatically mean you are underprivileged. There are many examples of successful minority populations that thrive in nations they’re not indigenous to. The Chinese in Indonesia, while in the minority, are the most successful ethnic group in that nation. They’re probably more successful than they would be living in China. But unlike minorities in America, they receive no special entitlements and actually have to put up with a legal system that favors natives. Would that be the case if they were put on welfare and held to a lower standard?

    One more point. There are so-called left and right brainers WITHIN the races. This doesn’t mean that some are doomed to become failures in education. It’s more like some will be successful mathematicians and some brilliant painters but their success is more likely to depend how hard they apply their talents, not differing mental empathies. This is just another baseless theory of Wrights that will only hinder those blacks that accept it. I wonder how many gifted black children never grow into their potential because they do. How does one achieve anything great if they are mentally defeating themselves before they even try?

    Rev. Wright is an exploiter of his own race. While he’s telling his congregations they have no opportunities in racist America, he has set himself up quite nicely. He leaves them angry and distraught about a country they (and everyone else) should be grateful for. There are poor in every nation but no country offers more opportunity for them than this one. While he has convinced many blacks that they can’t succeed, he is a millionaire living in a rich white neighborhood, in an elevator equipped mansion. If it wasn’t so disgusting it would be hilarious.

  27. DEZ

    Sharps, That post is worth a tall cold one.
    Shame I cant share one with you.

  28. patricko

    Well, I for one had no idea he was such an accomplished linguist, psycologist, genticist and phisiologist.

  29. suek

    This isn’t about racism, it’s about socialism. You can’t have a revolution without revolutionaries. You get revolutionaries by fomenting discontent and anger with the system. “Change” = “revolution”.
    I think the Reverend - like OBL jumped the gun and showed his hand a little too early. We’ll see.

  30. Beemish

    As a teacher, I find Reverend Wright’s commentary on his own race rather disturbing. There are different learning styles but they are not split along racial divides. Each child learns in a different way. Still the kind of thinking which excuses children from learning in traditional ways only handicaps those children and lowers expectations. I teach children who are of a variety of racial groups. I have had a great many black children excel in a traditional classroom environment. This man is a cancer on racial relations in this country. Not only does he condemn whites for events that happened before most of us were born, he also degrades his own people. As for his protege, B. Hussein Obama, I have never seen a bigger demonstration of lack of judgement than attending the Reverend Wrong’s church.


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