Republican Senate Candidate Endorses Hate Speech!

I received the following email from the Maryland Democratic Party Chair Terry Lierman and it is truly shocking.  Apparently Michael Zak, a speaker at a GOP dinner in Calvert County, said that "mastery over blacks has always been Democratic policy."  And get this: Lt. Governor Michael Steele, a likely candidate for Senate and favorite of the rightwing blogosphere, called Zak's book "his favorite book!"

And so much for our SCLM.  Howard Dean mispeaks a few times and they are all over him but Steele endorses a crazy speaker like Zak and it doesn't get a peep of media coverage even by the major Maryland papers.  Read the whole thing below and sign the petition.  And then recommend this diary.  Maybe then the conservative media will actually pay attention.  I suppose it couldn't hurt to write the Post's ombudsman or letters to the editor too.


"Mastery over blacks has always been Democratic Policy.   Before it was cotton.   Now it is misery."
-Michael Zak, Republican Keynote Speaker

Shockingly, the man who delivered these offensive remarks last month to the Calvert County Republican Women's Club is now idolized by Maryland's senior Republican officials, including Lieutenant Governor Michael Steele.

A Republican Leader of the House of Delegates also defended propagandist Michael Zak, who made several other deceptive and divisive statements during his keynote address.

Zak Said Democrats Want to Keep Children Poor and Uneducated. "Democrats are socialists and we should call them socialists. It's to the Democrats' advantage children grow up poor and uneducated."

[Calvert Recorder, 5/25/05]

Zak Says Democrats Want to Keep an Underclass of Poor Blacks. "Trapped in the role once filled by slaves before the war and then afterward by poor blacks during the Jim Crow era, an underclass today maintains the political and economic power of the Democratic Party elite and those in their employ, if indirectly, in the government bureaucracy."

[Zak, Back to Basics for the Republican Party]

Zak Says Democrats are Unpatriotic and Don't Respect the Constitution. "The unpatriotic tendencies of the Democratic Party did not begin recently."

[Calvert Recorder, 5/25/05]

The common perception that Democrats are somehow less respectful of the Constitution, that they often revel in stretching and twisting it to suit their purposes, is valid." [Zak, Back to Basics for the Republican Party]

It is not sufficient to dismiss this character as a crack pot.

Prominent Republicans are heralding Zak's work and promulgating his rhetoric of hatred and fear in Maryland and around the country.  Read for yourself on Zak's website (http://www.republicanbasics.com/comments.html) how our own Republican Lt. Governor Michael Steele praised Zak's extremist viewpoints -- using the words "Phenomenal" and "Outstanding" to characterize Zak's book, which Steele also says is "my favorite book".

Now Steele wants to be Maryland's next U.S. Senator.

I believe all Marylanders expect and deserve more from a U.S. Senator. More dignity and honesty, less divisiveness and misinformation.  Michael Steele has failed an important test of character by aligning himself with Michael Zak's dangerous, deceptive and racially divisive commentary.

Steele must immediately disavow Zak's offensive, outrageous remarks and he should withdraw his endorsement of Zak's inflammatory book.

If you agree with me, please sign our petition to Lieutenant Governor Steele today and demand that he openly reject Michael Zak's shameful hate speech and fear tactics.

Click here to sign the petition.

Please, please, stand up proudly for your Democratic values and our Democratic Party.  Stand up for the priciples we share: unity, inclusiveness and an abiding commitment to helping those in need.

Democrats in Maryland can take pride in what out Democratic Leaders are doing to fight for Maryland families. Whether it's working for a fair, sensible plan for Social Security, raising the minimum wage, protecting health care access and affordability, ensuring adequate benefits for our veterans, or fighting for full funding for education, we have a positive agenda for moving our State and our nation forward.

Unfortunately, we live in a new era dominated by the politics of personal destruction. If we stand by and allow attacks on Democrats and our Party to go unanswered, the citizens of our State may come to believe these lies.

Please join our petition and tell Michael Steele that we expect much more from our leaders.

Thanks for your support!

Terry Lierman
Chair
Maryland Democratic Party




Display:


A View from an Afro-American Columnist (1.00 / 1)

Victimhood: Rhetoric or reality?
Walter E. Williams (back to web version) |  Send

June 8, 2005

If you listened to the rhetoric of black politicians and civil rights leaders, dating back to the Reagan years, you would have been convinced that surely by now black Americans would be back on the plantation. According to them, President Reagan, and later Presidents Bush I and II, would turn back the clock on civil rights. They'd appoint "new racists" dressed in three-piece suits to act through the courts and administrative agencies to reverse black civil rights and economic gains. We can now recognize this rhetoric as the political equivalent of the "rope-a-dope."

As my colleague Tom Sowell pointed out in a recent column, "Liberals, Race and History," if the Democratic party's share of the black vote ever fell to even 70 percent, it's not likely that the Democrats would ever win the White House or Congress again. The strategy liberal Democrats have chosen, to prevent loss of the black vote, is to keep blacks paranoid and in a constant state of fear. But is it fear of racists, or being driven back to the plantation, that should be a top priority for blacks? Let's look at it.

 Only 30 to 40 percent of black males graduate from high school. Many of those who do graduate emerge with reading and math skills of a white seventh- or eighth-grader. This is true in cities where a black is mayor, a black is superintendent of schools and the majority of principals and teachers are black. It's also true in cities where the per pupil education expenditures are among the highest in the nation.

 Across the U.S., black males represent up to 70 percent of prison populations. Are they in prison for crimes against whites? To the contrary, their victims are primarily other blacks. Department of Justice statistics for 2001 show that in nearly 80 percent of violent crimes against blacks, both the victim and the perpetrator were the same race. In other words, it's not Reaganites, Bush supporters, right-wing ideologues or the Klan causing blacks to live in fear of their lives and property and making their neighborhoods economic wastelands.

 What about the decline of the black family? In 1960, only 28 percent of black females between the ages of 15 and 44 were never married. Today, it's 56 percent. In 1940, the illegitimacy rate among blacks was 19 percent, in 1960, 22 percent, and today, it's 70 percent. Some argue that the state of the black family is the result of the legacy of slavery, discrimination and poverty. That has to be nonsense. A study of 1880 family structure in Philadelphia shows that three-quarters of black families were nuclear families, comprised of two parents and children. In New York City in 1925, 85 percent of kin-related black households had two parents. In fact, according to Herbert Gutman in The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom: 1750-1925, "Five in six children under the age of 6 lived with both parents." Therefore, if one argues that what we see today is a result of a legacy of slavery, discrimination and poverty, what's the explanation for stronger black families at a time much closer to slavery -- a time of much greater discrimination and of much greater poverty? I think that a good part of the answer is there were no welfare and Great Society programs.

 Since black politicians and the civil rights establishment preach victimhood to blacks, I'd prefer that they be more explicit when they appear in public fora. Were they to be so, saying racists are responsible for black illegitimacy, blacks preying on other blacks and black family breakdown, their victimhood message would be revealed as idiotic. But being so explicit is not as far-fetched as one might think. In a campaign speech before a predominantly black audience, in reference to so many blacks in prison, presidential candidate John Kerry said, "That's unacceptable, but it's not their fault."

©2005 Creators Syndicate, Inc.

by shadow1 on Thu Jun 09, 2005 at 01:56:17 PM EST

Dyson or Cosby? (none / 0)

If you were any shallower you'd make a crickets piss stream look deep.

Bill Cosby vs. Michael Eric Dyson:

New York Times InterviewMSNBC: Excerpt & VideoNPR Radio: InterviewNewsweek Online ReviewTalking Points
Bill Cosby vs. Michael Eric Dyson
Michael Eric Dyson takes Bill Cosby on head-to-head with each issue that he brings up in his now infamous NAACP speech from May 17, 2004. Here are some highlights:

Cosby: "Just forget telling your child to join the Peace Corps. It's right around the corner. (laughter) It's standing on the corner. It can't speak English. It doesn't want to learn English. I can't even talk the way these people talk."

Dyson: "Cosby's poisonous view of young folks who speak a language he can barely parse [Ebonics] simmers with hostility and resentment." And "Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids, Cosby's lauded '70s television cartoon series, won greater acceptance for a new cast of black identities and vernacular language styles. Cosby has made money and gained further influence from using forms of black English he now violently detests."

Cosby: "Those people are not Africans, they don't know a damned thing about Africa. With names like Shaniqua, Shaligua, Mohammed and all that crap and all of them are in jail."

Dyson: "Names like Shaniqua and Taliqua are meaningful cultural expressions of self-determination.I think that it does have something to do with African roots of black identity, and perhaps with Cosby's ignorance and discomfort with those roots.Cosby's ornery, ill-informed diatribe against black-naming is a snapshot of his assault on poor black identity." And "Given the vicious way blacks have been targeted for incarceration, Cosby's comments about poor blacks who end up in jail are dangerously naïve and empirically wrong."

Cosby: "I don't know who these people [poor African Americans] are."

Dyson: "The poor folk Cosby has hit the hardest are most vulnerable to the decisions of the powerful groups of which he has demanded the least: public policy makers, the business and social elite and political activists. Poor black folk cannot gain asylum from the potentially negative effects of Cosby's words on public policy makers and politicians who decide to put into play measures that support Cosby's narrow beliefs."

Cosby: "God is tired of you."

Dyson: "No matter how you judge Cosby's comments, you can't help but believe that a great deal of his consternation with the poor stems from his desire to remove the shame he feels in their presence and about their activity in the world. There's nothing like a formerly poor black multimillionaire bashing poor blacks to lend credence to the ancient assaults they've endured from the dominant culture."

Unfortunately, there have always been self loathing blacks who are ashamed of their own roots and the misery that black people suffer.

by Gary Boatwright on Thu Jun 09, 2005 at 06:27:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I try to ignore those Cosby comments (none / 0)

I'm not saying what Cosby say was right. He wasn't. However, if you look at what Cosby said in the terms of a generation gap instead of anything related to race, it isn't quite as damning. If you put Cosby's comments next to other similar generation gap comments, they suddenly just seem plain old-fashioned rather than anything sinister. Kinda like, "You kids need to get a haircut" comments to activists in the 60's

I'd like to point out that back in the 60's civil rights struggle, there were many Blacks that were very specific in regards to their advice to activists regarding dressing well and dressing conservatively. Were those individuals wrong then?

Bill Cosby rose up in a time where he must have dealt with hellish abuse to him personally. He's given away just a ton of money. I just don't feel like I can judge Bill Cosby.

by afs on Fri Jun 10, 2005 at 09:56:01 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Dyson or Cosby? (none / 0)

Cosby can go too far in simplifying things, but i characterize the simplicity of some of his rants to frustration that has built over the years. He has contributed millions to the United Negro College fund and has helped black individuals in their time of need on a personal basis.

Dyson needs to criticize the other black leaders who pander and are patronizing to the black community. Let's face it. We will continue to hav unfair prejudice to blacks over the next few years. Racists who took part in lynchings are STILL ALIVE and their attitudes get passed on to some extent to the next generation. When I buzzed my hair, cops have pulled me over more often thinking I am black. When I had long hair, I was rarely pulled over. So yes, there are legitimate problems. That doesn't excuse black underachievement in schools and a culture that perpetuates it. I believe in affirmative action because you need to get a generation of blacks in all professions to serve as an example for the next generation. Why are so many of my community doctors and engineers? Part of it is because most of the Indians who came here belong to those professions. We got something to aim for by just observing our peers.

 There has to be good black leaders out there and the democrats need to do a better job of mentoring them and bringing them to the forefront. True, we are saddled with a lot of the old guard in the white leadership, but the white leadership can afford more missteps by the old guard in the black leadership. They need better leaders now. And I blame the democratic party for not nurturing fresh leadership.

by Pravin on Fri Jun 10, 2005 at 12:26:02 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Cultural Bias on the SAT (none / 0)

In my previous entry, I supported Cosby even if I think Dyson has some decent points. Still Cosby is more right than wrong. The fact is this. There will be racism. Life will be unfair on the average to blacks. I agree with that and this is where I differ from the conservatives who tend to minimize that.  What African Americans can't afford to have is vocal leaders who assume big positions in the party and give credence to crap like the SATs are culturally biased and other baseless allegations. If Chinese and Indian immigrants(hell I would think Jamaican immigrants too) can do better than American Blacks in the SAT, how can one say African Americans are at a disadvantage because of cultural bias on the SATs. I am using this issue to illustrate how african american leaders are not stepping up in big enough numbers to counter this kind of rhetoric.

So when Cosby attacks cultural norms in parts of the black community, I tend to side with him more than with Dyson. And the responsibility to improve the black community should be on all of us, not just African American leaders even if I think more African American leaders should step up.

by Pravin on Fri Jun 10, 2005 at 02:27:46 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Bill Cosby is a an idiot and he is wrong (none / 0)

How can you possibly be that stupid? The SAT is culturally biased. I don't know why you even question that.

If Chinese and Indian immigrants(hell I would think Jamaican immigrants too) can do better than American Blacks in the SAT, how can one say African Americans are at a disadvantage because of cultural bias on the SATs.

Your comparison to Chinese and Indian immigrants has a racist component. You are comparing apples and oranges. Chinese and Indian immigrants tend to be the intellectual cream of the crop. You won't find a whole lot of untouchables mmigrating to America. Do you think poor, uneducated Chinese peasants are flooding to America?

Before you express an opinon on a subject, you should really try to become better informed. Your ignorance is frankly appalling. We have had a caste system in America for centuries and it still exists. Blacks still do not have access to the same advantages as most whites. Blacks are still discriminated against in housing, jobs and business opportunities.

One third of young black men end up in prison. Young blakcs go to jail and prison for offenses that young white kids are regularly given probation for. White suburban kids use as much or more cocaine and crack than urban black kids. Blacks go to jail, whites go to treatment.

by Gary Boatwright on Sat Jun 11, 2005 at 02:21:17 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Bill Cosby is a an idiot and he is wrong (none / 0)

We are not talking about cream of the crop. We are talking about cultural bias. What questions on the SAT are culturally biased in the math department? Yes, some of the reading comprehension stuff used to be rather dull to read, but then that stuff bored the crap out of me too. If there is cultural bias, then even the cream of the crop of the immigrants should have problems answering more than an isolated question on the SAT because bias is just that.

Your reply is ridiculous considering my original message was not extreme by any means. I know you have read my entries and I HAVE ACKNOWLEDGED racism and prejudice still exist and I even gave the police example. I support affirmative action for african americans in schools even though I do not benefit from it and I don't even have the networking opportunities afforded the white americans. However, I refuse to patronize any race. The only reason I stick with democrats is I can't stand the racial hostility of the republicans to minority programs. So why you think you need to educate me on prejudice in America is ridiculous when I have already acknowledged.

You can rant about it, nothing will change in terms of the pace of improvement in race relations in America. While there has to be a serious effort to continue to make white America aware that affirmative action is not some undeserved award to black people because the barriers they face are real and the day to day stress over even minor situations is not there at the same level for whites, it doesn't mean that is the only track we should follow. While White America takes its time to improve their attitudes, black america needs to adopt a parallel track and try to overcome it regardless.

One thing I am not is politically correct. I can't stand it on the right, and i can't stand it on the left. You do remember when black lawmakers made a guy resign because of the use of the word "niggardly" which had nothing to do with race. For you to ascribe a racist component to my message is inexcusable.  If you wanted to disagree with me, there are better ways to do so especially as you already know I am not some racist troll here.  The stuff you lectured me on after implying I am grossly uninformed is stuff I already acknowledged. That is the kind of broad based hectoring that has gotten the liberals in trouble in the first place. You didn't even spend a second to assess whether I was discussing this issue out of concern or hate. I could have been even more blunt in my original message if I was as rash as you were in your reply.

As far as untouchables, dont talk about what you dont know. Indians of all castes actually form this cream of the crop. Indian immigrants who are taxi drivers have kids who excel in schools at a pretty high percentage. They do have an affirmative action program in India and untouchables take advantage of it and some of them even take the SAT or GRE and never complain about the cultural bias despite being from an impoverished country with very little cultural similarity to the US.

by Pravin on Wed Jun 15, 2005 at 02:01:37 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: cultural bias in SAT (none / 0)

Specifically on that issue,whatever points your brought up were points I brought up in my original message adn had nothing to do with bias on the exam itself. Yes, there is cultural bias. but it's in our society which fails to nurture enough young african americans to be prepared for the SATs. That's where the bias is. If you get rid of that bias, then the so called bias on teh SATs itself will be insignificant. I am sure you can nitpick and find one or two questions on the SAT that could be construed as culturally biased. But to any significant level? I highly doubt it.
by Pravin on Wed Jun 15, 2005 at 02:07:26 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Interesting.... (none / 0)

Wow. If a white guy like me were to say any of what you've said, or even suggest it, there'd be an excrement storm visible from space. I can hear the howls of "We were brought to this country against our will!" even now, and many's the opinion I've read that all but claims that blacks have some sort of telepathic link: if a black man in Seattle commits a crime, it's because he's angry over something that happened to a black woman in Tampa. Time and again, I read that the psychic scars of slavery are far from healed. I snort when I hear black voices say, "It happened 150 years ago to people I never knew, but I remember as if it were yesterday." That sure sounds like crap to me, but I'm white, so what do I know?

Yet now you write that it's the Democrats who are conspiring to preserve their hold on black voters by preaching fear. I wonder how your intimation that blacks are their own damn fault ("In other words, it's not Reaganites, Bush supporters, right-wing ideologues or the Klan causing blacks to live in fear of their lives and property and making their neighborhoods economic wastelands") has been received? I think the vast majority of people, no matter what their color, are indeed their own fault; how ironic that I should actually admire the Republican idea of personal responsibility (not that they're any better at that then the Dems). So more than ever, I don't know what to think.

by GaryHobson on Thu Jun 09, 2005 at 03:30:16 PM EST

unbelievable! (none / 0)

recommended.

and they say howard is outrageous and divisive - whatever!

Visit us at TexasKAOS, where we're taking Texas back!
by annatopia on Thu Jun 09, 2005 at 06:26:53 PM EST

How about a petition to Biden? (3.00 / 1)

Maybe one to Obama and Richardson as well?
by Gary Boatwright on Thu Jun 09, 2005 at 06:28:26 PM EST

Signed (none / 0)

and recommended. A poster here brought this over to CCN (Clark Community Network) - I hope everyone there comes and signs.

I think things are going to continue to get uglier and uglier. The thugs know they're going down. Like a cornered animal, they're not going to go down quietly.

by jen on Thu Jun 09, 2005 at 10:52:26 PM EST


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