NAACP backlash over tea party racism charge
First, Michelle Malkin released her syndicated column today entitled “The National Association for the Advancement of Coddled People” that blasts the desperate, Tea Party-bashing NAACP. I highly suggest you read it. The Washington Post seems to think that the race baiters at the NAACP are still relevant. I guess they are so relevant that they need to try and drum up attention for themselves by designating the tea party as “racists.” Now they are facing some backlash over their actions. Surely this will be deemed racist as well.
Even former Alaska governor Sarah Palin sent out a Twitter message about the group Tuesday, helping to make the NAACP convention a hot topic on conservative Web sites. She condemned the organization’s passage of a resolution denouncing what it called “racist elements” within the “tea party” movement.
The statement, which won overwhelming support among the group’s voting members, sparked a round of denials from grass-roots conservatives and lots of media coverage.
NAACP President Benjamin Jealous also released a letter to BP chief executive Tony Hayward, asking to meet with company officials to discuss his “outrage” that minority contractors are apparently being left out in the cleanup of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
The organization also hopes to open up a debate on charter schools, and has invited Education Secretary Arne Duncan, Harlem Children’s Zone founder Geoffrey Canada and others to discuss the issue.
The mix of controversial positions comes amid promises from Jealous and the new NAACP chairman, Roslyn Brock, to inject energy into the organization, which spent the past two years answering questions about whether it remains necessary after the election of the nation’s first African American president.
“My hope is that our members leave fired up and focused and ready to organize,” Jealous said as the group debated the tea party resolution.
The statement, which was submitted by the NAACP’s Kansas City, Mo., branch, did much to get a hot debate going. It says members of the movement have “displayed signs and posters intended to degrade people of color generally and President Barack Obama specifically” and says “the racist elements” within the tea party are “a threat to progress.”
Authors of the statement cite as examples the reports by some black members of Congress that they were spat upon and subjected to racial epithets before they voted on the health-care overhaul. No charges were filed, and some tea party supporters have denied the claims, saying there is no evidence that they occurred.
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