http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2003/10/22/barbours_racist_links_tar_bush_too?mode=PF

DERRICK Z. JACKSON 

Barbour's racist links tar Bush too 

By Derrick Z. Jackson,   10/22/2003 

AT THE ASIAN economic summit in Bangkok, President Bush condemned the recent 
anti-Jewish tirade of Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. Bush said it 
was "wrong and divisive" and "stands squarely against what I believe." 

When Bush gets home, there is more wrong and divisive politicking he should 
stand squarely against: The good ol' boy antics of   Haley Barbour. 

Barbour is the former chairman of the Republican National Committee who is 
running for governor of Mississippi. In mid-September Bush spoke at a 
fund-raiser for Barbour in Jackson, Miss., that attracted 1,100 people and raised at 
least $1.2 million. 

At the luncheon, Bush said he was "proud to be on stage with the future 
Mississippi governor." 

Bush continued: "I know him. This isn't just your typical hot air. I know him 
well. He recounted some of our history. We've been friends for a long time. . 
. . he never forgot his roots." 

Some of Barbour's roots were exposed this month when it was reported that a 
photo of Barbour is on the home page of the Council of Conservative Citizens, 
the racist group that is an offshoot of the old segregationist white citizens 
councils that tried to hold back the civil rights movement. The photo was taken 
at a county political barbecue. Barbour is pictured along with five other 
men, including CCC field director Bill Lord. 

The CCC gained notoriety in the mid-1990s when it became known that Trent 
Lott, the former Senate majority leader, also from Mississippi, had spoken before 
it. Nothing has changed about the CCC. Its website is full of direct links to 
blatant racism, anti-Semitism, and homophobia. 

The home page features an article titled "In Defense of Racism." The article 
maintains that "certain racial groups show a marked proclivity for physical 
violence. Generally, those racial groups possess lower IQs. . . . No amount of 
learning, welfare, affirmative action, or socialization will interfere with the 
behavioral response of lower IQ races. . . . Blacks, who are given to 
physical violence at a rate 50 times that of whites, Mexicans, and certain Pacific 
Islanders, are among these groups." 

Among the things that Mohamad said that White House spokesman Scott McClellan 
condemned as "hate-filled" was that "Jews rule the world by proxy. . . . they 
have now gained control of the most powerful countries." 

You can find almost exactly the same notions in the "Defense of Racism." The 
article says, "Even the seemingly amenable Jew carries the DNA which will 
cause his progeny to want to control our offspring." 

Particularly galling is that Barbour has refused to ask the CCC to take the 
photo of him off its home page. "I don't care who has my picture," Barbour was 
quoted as saying in an Associated Press article. He continued: "Once you start 
down the slippery slope of saying `That person can't be for me,' then where 
do you stop? Old segregationists? Former Ku Klux Klan like Robert Byrd?" 

That tired reference to the Democratic senator from West Virginia, who, like 
President Johnson, matured out of his racist roots to support policies meant 
to overcome the effects of racism, cannot mask the fact that Barbour is in bed 
with today's segregationists. It cannot mask the fact that the Republican 
Party, at its root, cannot kick today's racists out of bed. 

Barbour has reportedly invited Bush to come back for another rally on Nov. 1, 
three days before the election. If Barbour remains pigheaded about the photo 
and what it represents, it puts Bush in the position of continuing the 
cowardice he displayed in the 2000 campaign, where he spoke at Bob Jones University 
in South Carolina without any reference to its ban on interracial dating, its 
threats to kick gay alumni off campus, and its anti-Catholic history. 

At his September speech, Bush acknowledged several luminaries in the 
audience, including Mississippi's Senator Trent Lott, who was forced to step down as 
majority leader after glorifying former senator Strom Thurmond's segregationist 
past. Bush said of Lott, "We both love our country." 

Lott long ago made it clear that in his mind, "our country" was a white-run 
country. Barbour has defiantly picked up Lott's mantle. In the September 
fund-raiser, Bush said that Barbour is "a fellow that when he picks up the phone, 
the president might just go ahead and answer it." If Bush answers the phone to 
come to Mississippi, he has to first condemn Barbour's tacit support of the 
CCC's use of his photo. Otherwise he has hung up on millions of Americans. Once 
again, the compassionate conservative coddles hate. 

Derrick Z. Jackson's e-mail address is [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
© Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company. 
©Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company 




Tom Beck

www.prydonians.org
www.mercerjewishsingles.org

"I always knew I'd see the first man on the Moon. I never dreamed I'd see the 
last." - Dr Jerry Pournelle
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