Perhaps the best thing the netroots community can do for our candidate, whether it's Hilary Clinton or Obama is to arm ourselves against the inevitable right-wing propagandists. These guys plant little seeds of doubt, which, if allowed to sit for more than a few moments, will create within the gullible a negative feeling about our candidate.
For example: Al Gore said he invented the Internet. We all know that one, of course, and know the ones about John Kerry, as well.
So, arm yourselves....here it comes.
I'm on the mailing lists of friends who get and pass along the massive chain propaganda e-mails (know thine enemy, eh?). I debunk them as they come through, to hundreds of recipients, and always with the added, "There, he's lying to you. So why do you keep believing these guys who keep lying to you?"
Today I got a doozy:
Say What, Barrack?
By Paul R. Hollrah
Tuning in to C-Span recently, I found myself listening to a speech by Senator Barrack Hussein Obama, Jr. He was standing in the pulpit of a black church in Selma , Alabama , and as I studied the body language of the dozen or so black ministers standing behind the senator, I couldn't help but be reminded of the little head-bobbing dolls that people used to place in the rear windows of their 1957 Chevrolet. If their reactions are any indication, the new "Schlickmeister" of the Democrat Party is actually a pretty accomplished public speaker.
However, as he spoke, I found my B.S. Alarm going off, repeatedly. But I couldn't quite figure out why until I actually read excerpts of his speech several days later. Here's part of what he said:
"...something happened back here in Selma, Alabama. Something happened in Birmingham that sent out what Bobby Ken nedy called, "ripples of hope all around the world." Something happened when a bunch of women decided they were going to walk instead of ride the bus after a long day of doing somebody else's laundry, looking after somebody else's children.
"When (black) men who had Ph D's decided 'that's enough' and 'we're going to stand up for our dignity,' that sent a shout across oceans so that my grandfather began to imagine something different for his son. His son, who grew up herding goats in a small village in Africa could suddenly set his sights a little higher and believe that maybe a black man in this world had a chance.
"So the Kennedy's decided we're going to do an airlift. We're going to go to Africa and start bringing young Africans over to this country and give them scholarships to study so they can learn what a wonderful country America i s .
"This young man named Barack Obama got one of those tickets and came over to this country. He met this woman whose great great-great-great- grandfather had owned slaves; but she had a good idea there was some craziness going on because they looked at each other and they decided that we know that, (in) the world as it has been, it might not be possible for us to get together and have a child. There was something stirring across the country because of what happened in Selma , Alabama , because some folks are willing to march across a bridge. So they got together and Barack Obama Jr. Was born. So don't tell me I don't have a claim on Selma , Alabama . Don't tell me I'm not coming home to Selma , Alabama ."
Okay, so what's wrong with that? It all sounds good. But is it?
Obama told his audience that, because some folks had the courage to "march across a bridge" in Selma , Alabama , his mother, a white woman from Kansas , and his father, a black Muslim from Africa , took heart. It gave them the courage to get married and have a child. The problem with that characterization is that Barrack Obama, Jr., was born on August 4, 1961, while the first of three marches across that bridge in Selma didn't occur until March 7, 1965, at least five years after Obama's parents met.
Obama went on to tell his audience that the Kennedys, Jack and Bobby, decided to do an airlift. They would bring some young Africans over so that they could be educated and learn all about America . His grandfather heard that call and sent his son, Barrack Obama, Sr., to America .
The problem with that scenario is that, having been born in August 1961, the future senator was not conceived until sometime in November 1960. So if this African grandfather heard words that ''sent a shout across oceans,'' inspiring him to send his goat-herder son to Americ a, it was not a Democrat Jack Kennedy he heard, nor his brother Bobby, it was a Republican President, Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Obama's speech is reminiscent of Al Gore's claim of having invented the Internet, Hillary Clinton's claim of having been named after the first man to climb Mt. Everest, even though she was born five years and seven months before Sir Edmund climbed the mountain, and John Kerry's imaginary trip to Cambodia .
As one of my black friends, Eddie Huff, has said, "We need to a sk some very serious questions of the senator from Illinois . It's not enough to be black, it's not enough to be articulate, and it's not enough to be eloquent and a media darling. The only question will be how deaf an ear, or how blind an eye, will people turn in order to turn a frog into a prince."
Okay, ready?
The march to which Obama was referring was not one of the famous MLK Selma marches, which did indeed begin in 1965 (as the propagandist claims), but rather, the march by some women who boycotted the bus in Selma. It took place in 1955, and is no small part of the reason Selma became a hot spot for the Civil Rights' Movement.
But still there's that damning Kennedy reference! Oh, Obama, say it isn't so!
It isn't.
The "Kennedy airlift" happened in 1959, before JFK became President.
So debunk these propaganda ploys, and while you're at it, ask the gullible, "If I, with no prior knowledge of these events, could type five words into Google and get the answers in a few minutes, then why couldn't the guy who composed this hit piece do the same?"
Arm yourselves. Don't let any lie go by. Don't let them plant the seeds, whether it's Hillary Clinton or Obama.
Fight them to the bitter end. For all that you value in this country, fight them and destroy them.
Peace,
PH
UPDATE: I am not kidding, this Paul Hollrah hit-piece is now all over the internet, from FreeRepublic to the fan sites of football teams. It's being posted everywhere by the right wing parrots. It will become Obama's "I invented the internet" moment.