Follow Neal Boortz on

The world-famous Internet site of the Nationally Syndicated Neal Boortz Show!

Boortz is on now:

Nealz Nuze

Posted: 8:08 a.m. Monday, July 30, 2012

That's Raaacist 

  • comment(22)

Previous Posts

By Neal Boortz

It’s time to add to our “That’s Raaacist” list we’ve been compiling for months now.  These are claims by the ObamaMedia of various things that are considered racist on the campaign trail.  Here’s where our list currently stands…

AP reporter droppin’ G’s from Obama speech is racist

Bill Maher: "Denying Racism Is The New Racism"

MSNBC’s Ed Schultz: The Word “Break” Is “Racist”…

NYT Editorial Page Editor Calls Boehner Racist for Asking Obama to Delay Speech to Congress

Dem Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee: Gingrich Calling Obama Food Stamps President Has “Underlying Suggestions,” He’s Developing An “Explosiveness” In America…

Mitt Romney’s ‘Obama Isn’t Working’ Banner Evokes Racial Stereotypes

NBC Panelist: Ad Calling Obama A Celebrity 'Another Attempt' to Paint Him As 'Other'

Mediaite Lib Tommy Christopher Says BuzzFeed Calling Obama a “Tabloid Cover Boy” Is Racist…

NY Daily News Columnist: Racist Nation Prepares To Reject Obama Because He Is Black

Lefty Blogger Accuses Ann Romney of “Racism” After She Says They Won’t Take As Many Vacations As The Obamas…

MSNBC guest suggests Romney’s use of the term ‘kitchen cabinet’ is racist

The latest offender comes from New York Magazine.  An article by Jonathan Chait epitomizes the desperate attempts of the ObamaMedia to defend their guy.  Jonathan Chait claims that he has gotten to the bottom of this back-and-forth of this “you didn’t build that comment.”  He accuses Mitt Romney of lying about Obama’s comment – the same thing the Democrats and much of the ObamaMedia has taken to doing in recent weeks.  But then he goes on to explain that a Republican ad featuring small business owners reacting to Obama’s comment has a “broader subtext” of racism?

Chait explains: The key thing is that Obama is angry, and he’s talking not in his normal voice but in a “black dialect.” This strikes at the core of Obama’s entire political identity: a soft-spoken, reasonable African-American with a Kansas accent. From the moment he stepped onto the national stage, Obama’s deepest political fear was being seen as a “traditional” black politician, one who was demanding redistribution from white America on behalf of his fellow African-Americans.

Chait concludes: The entire key to the rise of the Republican Party from the mid-sixties through the nineties was that white Americans came to see the Democrats as taking money from the hard-working white middle class and giving it to a lazy black underclass. Reactivating that frame is still the most mortal threat to the Democrats and to Obama. That is why Obama is reacting so urgently to reestablish himself.

So there you go, folks.  The reason why Republicans are hammering this “you didn’t build that” quote is because it is an inherent reaction of a Republican Party, which gains its power by exploiting the sub-plot of government taking money from whites in the middle class and giving it to lazy black people.

Neal Boortz

About Neal Boortz

Neal Boortz chronicles his 42 years of talk radio in his book "Maybe I Should Just Shut Up and Go Away" Available on line and printed from Barnes and Noble and Amazon.

Connect with Neal Boortz on:Twitter

  • comment(22)

 
 

Neal Boortz's Latest Tweets

 
 

© 2013 Cox Media Group. By using this website, you accept the terms of our Visitor Agreement and Privacy Policy, and understand your options regarding Ad ChoicesAdChoices.