blackascoal
The Force is With Me
BUT it shows that I was wrong. Obama is getting the same thing that cosby did but just not as public. Jackson's whole Obama "can come off as speaking down to black people" and that there were other important issues to be addressed in the black community, such as unemployment, the mortgage crisis and the number of blacks in prison.
Isn't the problem of fatherless children also an equally important problem. Why is it when a strong black man that has stayed with his wife and his children mentions the problem he is "talking down" to people?
I agree with Jackson, but it comes from more than talking about fatherless children. Everyone wants to talk about black fatherless children but no one wants to talk about how a proven racist criminal system impacts many of those children.
Obama and Cosby aren't the only black people talking about the problem. Louis Farrakhan did a far better job of not only talking about it to black people, but he and the Nation of Islam have a LONG track record of producing families that stay together and foster well-mannered, educated, and violence free children .. and he and the Nation have a LONG track record of rehabilitating men who have been seperated from their families by prison.
Farrakhan not only talked about the problems of black fatherhood, but he also got about two million of us to travel across country to talk about it with him. It was the most spititual event I have ever attended.
But white people don't want to talk about Farrakhan nor the Nation unless they can be painted in a negative light.
Obama had the perfect opportunity to speak to the PROVEN racism of the criminal system and how it affects black children within the context of his "fatherless" comments .. but he didn't do that .. because his comments were meant for white people, not black people.
Obama is never going to mention the name Farrakhan in a positive light because his comments are meant for white people, not black people.
Often I find many well-meaning non-racist whites who maintain a paternalistic, sort of condescending view of black people they aren't aware of.
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