John McLaughlin: Racist "Oreo" Comment on Sen. Obama
In case you missed this. From Media Matters:
As the cable news channels began filling up valuable airtime Monday with discussions of the appropriateness of a New Yorker cover depicting Barack Obama burning an American flag in the Oval Office, under a portrait of Osama bin Laden, another important story was largely ignored by the mainstream media - that of a veteran media personality injecting racially divisive stereotypes into a discussion of Sen. Obama.
This weekend on The McLaughlin Group, the program's host, John McLaughlin, asserted that Obama "fits the stereotype blacks once labeled as an Oreo -- a black on the outside, a white on the inside."
McLaughlin: "Question: Does it frost Jackson, Jesse Jackson, that someone like Obama, who fits the stereotype blacks once labeled as an Oreo -- a black on the outside, a white on the inside -- that an Oreo should be the beneficiary of the long civil rights struggle which Jesse Jackson spent his lifetime fighting for?"
Call John McLaughlin and demand he apologize on-air during next week's broadcast.
McLaughlin's statement was so obviously out of touch and inappropriate that two members of the McLaughlin panel refuted the basic premise. Panelist and Council on Foreign Relations senior fellow Peter Beinart said: "Who knows what Jesse Jackson is thinking? But that's a completely unfair depiction of Barack Obama."
Later in the discussion, Michelle Bernard, president of the Independent Women's Forum, said: "I want to go back to the point you made about whether or not Obama is an Oreo, because if Barack Obama is an Oreo, then every member of this generation of African-Americans is an Oreo, because we stand on the shoulders of the people who fought for our rights."
Call John McLaughlin and demand he apologize on-air during next week's broadcast.
The all-important weekend political talk shows set the agenda for our nation's newsrooms and the acceptable terms of our public discourse -- McLaughlin's comments weren't just offensive, they were a relic of politics past.
I hope you will take a moment and make your voice heard on this important issue.
Comments
I don't resort to ad hominem attacks. Clarence Thomas was not the first black Supreme Court justice. Arguably, there was enough lacking in his legal qualifications and other issues for me to have opposed his nomination. That some people resorted to racist remarks should be condemned.
Now, fast forward to 2008. How far have we come in racial relations? I'm 60yo and I grew up in Jim Crowe Georgia. Racism is still alive here now. But, to steal a phrase from the LGBT movement, racism has mostly gone into the closet. Few people would admit to racism, however I believe we all possess some degree of it. Like sexism, ageism, heterosexism, classism, skin color discrimination, etc., to some degree all of these isms are sadly part of our society.
We have to call people on racism wherever we read it, hear it, see it, to overcome it. We have to have dialog to move forward. I will be as outraged about racism today as I was when an African born friend of mine was denied entrance into a Macon, GA Baptist church by deacons in front of the church calling him "damned nigger" and "communist" for all the world to hear.
This is not a left or right issue. This is a very human issue.
My intent here was to let people know what was said on a newsy weekend when they may have missed it.