2/29/2008

Why I oppose Obama as President of the United States

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Why I oppose Obama as President of the United States
David Duke

Barack Obama has stressed continually that he is a candidate for President for “all the people” and for the new day of a “colorblind society.” It is the identical rhetoric used by every serious candidate both Democrat and Republican. In order to win a significant percentage of the 70 percent White electorate that he needs, what else could he say? But, does Obama really mean it?  Or, is it just another lie in what must qualify as the most hypocritical profession on earth: politics?

Compelling evidence shows that Barack Obama is an Afro-American whose ultimate loyalty is not to “all the people of the United States,” but primarily to his fellow African-Americans.

A candidate with racial loyalty is not extraordinary in itself, but it is quite amazing in a nation in which it is presented as the worst of crimes. Apparently though, according to the media and the political establishment, racial loyalty is only reprehensible when practiced by we White folks, the descendants of our European American forefathers.

The media has given Obama a free pass on his participation and close association with Black racist organizations and leaders. Few Americans are even aware yet of this side of Obama. Here is quick rundown of the undisputed facts:

Barack Obama is an active member of an extremist, Afro-Centrist Black church in Chicago and is admittedly very close to its Afro-centrist and unarguably (by media standards) racist pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright, Jr.  Obama has frequently spoken of his closeness to Rev. Wright, Jr. and his active important participation in the church.  He credits Rev. Wright and his church as having a vital role in the development of his own religious faith as well as his moral and ethical convictions.

Obama’s church proudly proclaims its quote “Blackness” and its ultimate loyalty to what it refers to as Black people, Black culture, the Black family, the Black community, Black institutions, Black values, and Black ethics.  (more…)


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