NOTE TO WALTER
WILLIAMS EDITORS: THE FOLLOWING COLUMN CONTAINS LANGUAGE IN THE FIRST GRAF THAT
MAY BE OFFENSIVE TO SOME READERS. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION. -- CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2007, AND THEREAFTER
Insulting Blacks
"I don't
feel no ways tired. I come too far from where I started from. Nobody told me
that the road would be easy. I don't believe He brought me this far,"
drawled presidential aspirant Hillary Clinton, mimicking black voice to a black
audience, at the First Baptist Church of Selma, Alabama. I'm wondering if Mrs.
Clinton visits an Indian reservation she might cozy up to them saying,
"How! Me not tired. Me come heap long way. Road mighty rough. Sky Spirit
no bring me this far." Or, seeking the Asian vote she might say, "I
no wray tired. Come too far I started flum. Road berry clooked. Number one
Dragon King take me far."
The occasion
of Mrs. Clinton's speech was the 42nd anniversary of Bloody Sunday, on March 7,
1965, when 600 civil rights marchers were attacked by police with billy clubs,
cattle prods and tear gas, one of the high points in the black civil rights
struggle. Commemorating a key point in American history is one thing, but a
white person mimicking black dialect is demeaning and insulting. And, if it
buys her votes from those in attendance, not much flattering can be said about
them.
Mrs. Clinton
later explained her drawl, around black audiences, to a meeting of the National
Association of Black Journalists, "I lived all those years in Arkansas,
and, you know, I'm in this interracial marriage." The interracial marriage
bit has to do with the frequent reference to former President Clinton, by the
Congressional Black Caucus and others, as the "first black
president."
Mrs. Clinton
is not alone in demeaning talk to black people; she's in good company with
Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, who talk of "going from the outhouse to the
White House" and "from disgrace to amazing grace" and other such
nonsense. Neither Clinton nor Revs. Sharpton and Jackson address white
audiences in that manner. Before a predominantly black audience, during his
2004 presidential bid, Sen. John Kerry said, in reference to so many blacks in
prison, "That's unacceptable, but it's not their fault." I doubt
whether Kerry would have told a white audience that jailed white people were
faultless. Kerry probably holds whites responsible for their criminal behavior.
In 2004,
NAACP President Kweisi Mfume said of President George Bush, "We have a
president that's prepared to take us back to the days of Jim Crow segregation
and dominance." During the 2000 presidential campaign, Rev. Jesse Jackson
warned black audiences by telling them that a Bush win would turn the civil
rights clock back to the days of Jim Crow. Now that Bush's two-term presidency
is near its end, why wouldn't someone ask Jesse and Kweisi about the accuracy
of their predictions?
Suppose some
demagogue in 2000 told Jewish Americans that a Bush presidency would mean
concentration camps, or told Japanese-Americans that his presidency would mean
internment? Do you think such pronouncements would have been welcomed and
applauded? I'm sure that had someone made such a stupid prediction to Jewish
and Japanese-Americans, they would have had ridicule and scorn heaped upon
them.
What does it
say about blacks who can be taken in by pandering, alarmist nonsense from both
whites and blacks as a means to get their votes? As a black man, I don't find
the most obvious answer very flattering.
Walter E.
Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out
more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT
2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.