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Wednesday, September 23, 2009
S. E. Cupp :: Townhall.com Columnist
Generational Racism is Old and Tired
by S. E. Cupp
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Jimmy Carter is 85 years old. Dave Letterman is 62, Nancy Pelosi is 69, Maureen Dowd is 57, and Al Sharpton is 54.

These are the people – and theirs is the generation – who are teaching America’s youth how to be racist in 2009. They are very good instructors.

Whether it’s Carter’s insistence that “an overwhelming portion” of the opposition to Obama is racist, or it’s Dowd declaring “Some people just can’t believe a black man is president,” or it’s Pelosi’s feigned crocodile tears over the “language being used,” or it’s Letterman baiting the president into a race discussion, each one of them is telling my generation and the ones that follow that race is merely a political weapon of expedience, to be used haphazardly and crudely simply to get what you want. As long as there is a convenient victim to prop up, some kind of imagined target of the hood-donning right, it doesn’t matter if the racism is real or perceived. It just matters that it’s effective.

Arguing with Idiots By Glenn Beck

And it used to be. Race was always a hot-button topic in this country, and it still is. But the sharpness of that threat has been dulled a bit. Thanks to the inarguable success of the civil rights movement, my generation, the 20- and 30-somethings, didn’t grow up encumbered by the aggressive identity politics of the 60s and 70s, or the kind of rhetoric that made white people scared to talk about race, and men scared to talk about gender.

So my generation isn’t so easily intimidated by discussions of race, because we were raised in a climate that was much less hostile toward them. And that should be a good thing, the unmitigated result of equality and justice, the mark of progress. We talk about race in blunt and unthreatening terms when race is an issue. And when it isn’t an issue, well, we don’t pretend it is.

Not so with the aging liberal cognoscenti, which, as of late, would be better labeled the “ignoscenti” for some of the baffling oddities they’ve uttered. For them, race is simply everywhere. It is hanging from the trees and falling from the sky. It’s in the air, in the water, it is both viscous and fluid, and permeates every willing orifice of every fertile sponge. The Sharptons and Dowds and Carters and Lettermans have decided that they’re not quite ready to live in the post-race America they effervesced about so dreamily and giddily during the presidential campaign. And why not? Because, as it turns out, living in a “racist America” is much more useful to them. Continued...

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About The Author
S.E. Cupp is author or "Why You're Wrong About the Right," with Brett Joshpe. S.E. Cupp is a political commentator and lives in New York City.
 
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Snore-acle
The comment that Hispanics and Mexican are the only two ethnic groups who haven't found their eceonomic route is laughable and a joke. I have met doctors and lawyers of Hispanic heritage who moved high up the social and economic ladder in my community. In most cases these people came from poor backgrounds but worked hard to succeed
I would also like to know what a real job is. I suppose honest work doesn't mean too much to this writer This type of nonsense is patently false and misleading and a insult to any thinking American whether they are conservative or liberal. This writer should crawl back under a rock and keep this baloney to himself. He says he is a NRA member. He's a good enough reason to legislate gun control.

Why won't conservatives denounce racism?
I don't understand why the conservatives pundits and politicians don't reject the overt racist comments coming from a small minority of right wingers??
When people see signs like: "Monkey see, monkey spend" mixed in a tea party rally, what is the message?
When Glenn Beck says: "Obama hates white people!" what is the message?
The Right cannot reject the racist criticism of the Right if it doesn't itself reject the racist elements. It seems to me that no one from the Right has the courage to do this. (Gingrich is perhaps the closest.)
It's time to denounce the Becks and the Limbaughs and move on to a serious debate. Yes, there are legitimate criticisms of Obama's policies but it's not about whether he was born in Kenya or whether he is a muslim terrorist. Talk about racist distractions...
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