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View Full Version : President Obama calls African-Americans a ‘mongrel people’



Ares
29th July 2010, 01:47 PM
NEW YORK — President Obama waded into the national race debate in an unlikely setting and with an unusual choice of words: telling daytime talk show hosts that African-Americans are “sort of a mongrel people.”

The president appeared on ABC’s morning talk show “The View” Thursday, where he talked about the forced resignation of Agriculture Department official Shirley Sherrod, his experience with race and his roots.

When asked about his background, which includes a black father and white mother, Obama said of African-Americans: "We are sort of a mongrel people."

"I mean we're all kinds of mixed up," Obama said. "That's actually true of white people as well, but we just know more about it."

The president's remarks were directed at the roots of all Americans. The definition of mongrel as an adjective is defined as "of mixed breed, nature, or origin," according to dictionary.com.


Obama did not appear to be making an inflammatory remark with his statement and the audience appeared to receive it in the light-hearted manner that often accompanies interviews on morning talk shows.


The race debate was reignited after Sherrod’s firing. Obama also addressed the issue in his speech to the National Urban League 100th Anniversary Convention in Washington on Thursday morning.

But in his interview on “The View,” which was taped Wednesday but aired Thursday, the president said the Sherrod story was prompted when the media "generated a phony controversy."

"A lot of people overreacted, including people in my administration," he said.

Obama called Sherrod last week after Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack apologized for her firing.

Obama noted "there's still a reptilian side of our brain" that leads people to not trust others "if somebody sounds different or looks different."

The president stressed that what's "important is how you treat people."

Obama discussed a wide range of issues as the first sitting president to appear on a daytime talk show.

He was challenged by Elisabeth Hasselbeck, the conservative voice on the all-women panel, about his claim to have saved 2.5 million jobs with his recovery act and his inability to unite the country.

On the latter, Obama said that "right after the election there was a sense of hopefulness and unity," but "the politics of the economic recovery" and steps he took to save the auto companies created a partisan divide.

"My hope is that I've tried to set a tone in the debate that says, 'Look, we can disagree without being disagreeable,'" Obama said.

On the economy, Obama told Hasselbeck that she was "absolutely right" that enough jobs have not returned, but he brushed her back on her assertion that saving jobs is not as important as adding jobs.

"Well, it makes a difference, though, if your job was one that was saved," Obama said.

While the president conceded that "we are not bouncing back as quick as we need to," he said he does think the American economy will get its "mojo back over the next several months."

"Don't bet against American workers," Obama said. "Don't bet against American ingenuity."

Obama responded to questions from Barbara Walters and Joy Behar about his tough critics in the conservative media by saying he is more worried about the American people than himself.

"You said it's been tough for me, but the truth is it's not tough for me," Obama said. "I don't spend a lot of time worrying about me. I spend a lot of time worrying about them."

Behar, a vocal liberal, teed up the president to talk about his critics on the right, asking Obama "where's your attack dog?"

But Obama didn’t take the bait, responding "we shouldn't be campaigning all the time. There's a time to campaign, and there's a time to govern."

"I'm not perfect. My administration's not perfect," Obama said. "A lot of this criticism I listen to, and it's fair, I try to correct it."

Obama taped the interview Wednesday when he was in New York City for two Democratic National Committee fundraisers. He also spent Wednesday in New Jersey talking about the economy.

http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/111611-obama-calls-african-americans-a-mongrel-people-

Ares
29th July 2010, 01:51 PM
I wonder where the MSM cries of racism are? :oo-->

Apparition
29th July 2010, 01:53 PM
I wonder where the MSM cries of racism are? :oo-->


Lies I tell you, lies!

The evil right-wing corporate media is always out to get him! :sarc:

I am me, I am free
29th July 2010, 01:53 PM
IMO, this is why he was selected. A mongrel illegal alien unqualified for the office with no real world experience earning a living whose best talent is jacking his jaw telling others his version of how the cow ate the cabbage (his second best talent is adhering to the marching orders of his masters).

1970 silver art
29th July 2010, 01:58 PM
It would not surprise me for the MSM to make a big deal out of nothing with the president appearing on a TV talk show. The MSM will probably just take something out of context of what the President said and run with it. Either way it will not matter because there are too many major issues to deal with at the moment that will affect everybody.

TheNocturnalEgyptian
29th July 2010, 02:08 PM
Well he's very correct. If you think about it, black people always identify as being "black" or "African", and I believe the reason for this is that most black people living in America don't have any geneological information going back farther than 10 or 20 generations. The problem is that during the period of American slavery, which in the light of today shows to be a reprehensible theft of freedom, black people were brought over from the entire continent of Africa. Genetic pools that had previously been seperate for millenia were suddenly mixed. This is the reason you rarely see "Kenyan Pride" or "Congoese Pride" in America, and why "Black Pride" or "African Pride" is much more common. Simply put, many blacks have had their specific backgrounds removed from them. They don't/can't identify among nationalities anymore. They simply identify as being black.

So add 100 years to that, and you have what we have today - a melting pot as far as ethnicities go. That's probably what Obama meant. There's no way for most black people living in America today to properly identify which country in Africa their ancestors came from. The comment makes sense to me, I guess. I see no reason to sensationalize something Obama said if he is technically correct about it.

Ares
29th July 2010, 02:16 PM
The comment makes sense to me, I guess. I see no reason to sensationalize something Obama said if he is technically correct about it.

I don't either, it just strikes me as "convenient racism" had a white person made that comment even as correct as it may be. He would of been called a racist.

TheNocturnalEgyptian
29th July 2010, 03:10 PM
The comment makes sense to me, I guess. I see no reason to sensationalize something Obama said if he is technically correct about it.

I don't either, it just strikes me as "convenient racism" had a white person made that comment even as correct as it may be. He would of been called a racist.


That certainly seems true, especially when we're talking about the media.

Ponce
29th July 2010, 03:18 PM
He must be a "self hating black".......hummmmmmmmm where did I learn that from?

tater
29th July 2010, 07:58 PM
Aw, that's just the racist white half of him coming out.

SHTF2010
30th July 2010, 06:18 AM
Obama noted "there's still a reptilian side of our brain"


David Icke should be happy to hear this . . .

mamboni
30th July 2010, 06:38 AM
0bama's response vis-a-vis blacks as mongrels speaks volumes about how he views the world and people in general: in racial and ethnic terms. He is at his core a racist because one's racial and ethnic makeup forms a large part of his assessment of a person. But fair-minded people hardly consider race or ethnicity when assessing an individual. 0bama, while claiming to be post-racial, has racial demons and a score to settle with white Americans. After all, can you imagine JFK or Nixon that question in similar manner?