http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/01/how_obama_glossed_over_his_greatest_failure.html



January 26, 2015
How Obama Glossed Over His Greatest Failure

By Jack Cashill <http://www.americanthinker.com/author/jack_cashill/>

What amazed me is that Obama mentioned it all.

Deep into his predictably Panglossian State of the Union speech on Tuesday,
the president reminded the audience of the vision he shared at his breakout
2004 convention speech – namely, that there not be a "a black America or a
white America , but a United States of America."

Pundits, he conceded, faulted him for failing to deliver on this vision,
but curiously, Obama did not say the pundits were wrong.  Instead, he
criticized them for their cynicism, their failure to take his vision
seriously.  This, of course, was nonsense.  The great majority of those who
did not vote for Obama, pundits or otherwise, wanted him to succeed in
making America "one people" as pledged.

The silver lining critics saw in an Obama presidency was his potential to
confirm the viability of the American dream and the value of a two-parent
family.  Had Obama succeeded in confirming either, he could have gone a
long way in easing racial tension and healing the pathologies plaguing
black America.  Unfortunately, Obama failed.  He failed because he was
afraid to try.

Only toward the end of the State of the Union speech did Obama serve up a
single paragraph on race.  It began with a sentence with which a more
serious president might have opened a more serious discussion: "We may have
different takes on the events of Ferguson and New York."

"We" do indeed.  By a three-to-one margin, whites thought the decision not
to charge Officer Darren Wilson in the shooting of Michael Brown the right
decision.  By an eight-to-one margin, blacks thought it the wrong one
<http://pewrsr.ch/1w6wxFv>.  A year earlier, 62 percent of whites thought
the not-guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman trial a just one.  Only 5
percent <http://pewrsr.ch/QVfANr> of blacks did.  Although the decisions in
either case were transparently just, one reason blacks rejected them was
because their president failed to endorse them.

For Obama, fear was as much a motive as ideology.  Always insecure in his
identity as an African-American, Obama yielded readily to the pressure from
his more authentic brethren.  In the Zimmerman case, after Congressional
Black Caucus head Emanuel Cleaver called the shooting of Trayvon Martin "an
horrific precedent of vigilante justice," Obama felt he had to say
something.

The White House had access to all the information the Sanford Police
Department did.  The courageous step for Obama would have been to defend
the Sanford PD and to demand an end to the left-wing lynching of George
Zimmerman.

As an African-American, Obama had more latitude to do this than a white
president.  He chose not to.  Concluded Obama <http://bit.ly/GJAF6l> four
weeks after the shooting: "But my main message is to the parents of Trayvon
– if I had a son, he would look like Trayvon."

Six days after the verdict came down in July 2013, Obama sent his "thoughts
and prayers" to Martin's family and once again identified himself with
Martin.  "Trayvon Martin could have been me thirty-five years ago," said
Obama.  As to Zimmerman and his extended family, still in hiding after a
year and a half of death threats, Obama offered not a word of hope or
encouragement.

If the president had called attention to the fractures in Martin's domestic
life, his suppressed criminal record, his all but unseen descent into drugs
and violence, and especially his reckless attack on Zimmerman, Obama might
have lent a dollop of moral seriousness to his remarks.  But he did not.
Instead, he tacitly encouraged his audience to project their anger and
anxiety on to a racial scapegoat, the "white Hispanic" George Zimmerman.

Nor did Obama rebuke those whose threats forced the Zimmermans into exile.
No one expected him to.  In 2009, his Department of Justice let the New
Black Panther Party walk after its thugs blatantly intimidated voters in
Philadelphia.

A year later, Obama behaved just as cravenly after the shooting death of
Michael Brown.  Before the grand jury returned its verdict, Obama met
secretly with Ferguson activists, clown prince Al Sharpton included.

Sharpton said after the early November meeting that Obama "was concerned
about Ferguson staying on course in terms of pursuing what it was that he
knew we were advocating."  As to what "on course" meant, it was hard to
say.  Protestors in Ferguson had already burned down one hundred buildings.

After the Ferguson grand jury decided not to charge Wilson, Obama said
lamely, "Part of the rule of law is that I'm not putting my thumb on the
scale of justice." This too was nonsense.  Through his various meetings,
speeches, and DOJ deployment, he had left thumbprints all over the case.

Here too, Obama aligned himself not with "one America," but, in the person
of Michael Brown, with "black America."  Said the president, "I want my
children to be seen as the individuals that they are, and I want them to be
judged by the content of their character."  As he knew, however, Brown *had
*been judged on the content of his character.

In the half hour before his death, the "gentle giant" roughed up a store
clerk whose goods he had brazenly stolen, punched a police officer in the
face, and charged that officer despite repeated orders to stop.  As with
the Martin case, Obama could have endorsed the rule of law and explored the
consequences of defying it.  Again, he chose not to.

In New York, unlike Missouri, the proceedings of a grand jury are not made
public.  Outside observers judged the death of rogue cigarette salesman
Eric Garner on the viewing of a single video.  For many blacks and random
leftists, the grand jury's failure to charge Officer Daniel Pantaleo was
seen not as an anomaly or the result of evidence unknown to them, but as
the third act in an ongoing saga of racial oppression.

When the subsequent protests turned violent, and the protestors threatened
to kill police, Obama kept his silence.  When one protestor made good on
the threats and assassinated two New York City cops, Obama perfunctorily
condemned the murders from Hawaii and chose not to attend either funeral.
The nation's police noted.

In his State of the Union address, in considering why blacks and whites
responded differently to the Martin and Brown case, Obama perpetuated the
false narrative he and his media allies had been peddling all along.  Said
the president, "Surely we can understand a father who fears his son can't
walk home without being harassed."

And who might that father be?  Like most young black males, neither Martin
nor Brown lived with his father.  Both had been bouncing around among
friends and relatives for years.  Obama has long known fatherlessness to be
the single greatest source of dysfunction in black America, the reason why,
in a given year, six thousand or so blacks will be murdered by other
blacks, their names unknown to anyone but family and friends.

Once upon a time, Obama talked about such things.  On Father's Day in 2008,
candidate Obama took his campaign to a church on Jesse Jackson's home turf,
the South Side of Chicago.  Obama's message was unequivocal.  To murmurs of
approval from the almost entirely black congregation, Obama preached, "If
we are honest with ourselves, we'll admit that too many fathers are also
missing."

Lest the listeners think Obama was speaking in general, he added, "You and
I know this is true everywhere, but nowhere is it more true than in the
African-American community."  He then spelled out the consequences,
including the fact that boys who grow up in fatherless homes are "twenty
times more likely to end up in prison."

An absentee father himself, Jackson took Obama's comments as a personal and
professional insult.  A few weeks later, awaiting a remote interview with
Fox News, Jackson made his feelings known on a hot mic.

"I want to cut his nuts out," Jackson whispered.  "Barack, he is talking
down to black people."  This was all most people were allowed to hear, but
there was more.  Almost universally, the media edited out the participle
phrase <http://bit.ly/X5OeWl> that followed "black people," specifically,
"telling n*****s how to behave."

Valuing his nuts, Obama has apparently felt it a safer course to tell white
people how to behave, especially white police.  As a result of his
one-sided messaging, even law-abiding African-Americans see themselves as
oppressed, and ordinary thugs see themselves as revolutionaries.

"I'd like to say sorry to the families of Aiyana Jones, Michael Brown, and
Eric Garner and I want to apologize to them for not being able to get
justice for their loved ones who were murdered in cold blood."  So said
Frederick Young this week when asked to comment upon being sentenced for
the cold-blooded murder of two innocuous white teens in Detroit.  Added
Young, "And in respect for the people protesting, I want to say, 'Hands up,
don't shoot. Black lives matter.'"

Thus wrought Obama.


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