John Lewis, Invoking George Wallace, Says McCain and Palin 'Playing With Fire' »

Posted By Neophile 8 months, 3 weeks ago in Political News

"What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in American history," Lewis said in a statement issued today for Politico's Arena forum. "Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse."

"George Wallace never threw a bomb," Lewis noted. "He never fired a gun, but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged vicious attacks against innocent Americans who were simply trying to exercise their constitutional rights. Because of this atmosphere of hate, four little girls were killed on Sunday morning when a church was bombed in Birmingham, Alabama."

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Comments So Far: 46 (view all)
  • 89%
    Progressive8 months, 3 weeks ago

    Great minds think alike:

    http://www.propeller.com/story/2008/10/11/civil-ri...

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  • 90%
    cowboygrandpa8 months, 3 weeks ago

    Well, McCain doesn't like what John Lewis said.
    Does McCain ever stop to think that maybe Obama doesn't like the innuendos and outright lies being told about him. By the right wing nut cases on the Republican crusade to discredit Obama as being a Christian American.

    How many times have we heard that Obama is a Muslim ????? Which is brought out by those announce him as Barrack Hussein Obama.

    Come on !!!!! John you knew this and played into it until it being shown as counter productive lies. To place doubt and fear into the minds of the spineless and weak minded who jump at the mere mention of Muslims.

    It is all about fear and controlling the scared populace with thought that Obama would not keep this country safe form Muslim attacks.

    Well It back fired Johnny Boy, just like bringing in Sarah Palin.

    You want to have Obama say it isn't so !!!! Well say it isn't so to all those in your party who continue to bash Obama as a non Christian, with the inferrance of him being a Muslim.

    I'll tell you what, I think Obama is more in line with Christian teachings than Sarah Palin or John McCain.

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  • 89%
    Spadecaller8 months, 3 weeks ago

    McCain is reaping what he sowed.

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    • 92%
      Eagle_Eye8 months, 3 weeks ago

      They are playing with fire all right. Palin with all her acussations agains Obama palling around with terrorists, et.all. has really set the mentally ill on fire!!!

      Did anyone see the old woman with the wonderfully coifed hair tell McCain she was afraid of Obama because he was a terrorist and McCain had to tell her Obama was a nice man and he wouldn't be afraid to have him as president? Well "My Friends" that is the mentality of who they are pandering and to and who many of these idiotic right wing posters are here on Propeller........scary isn't it. (wink, wink)

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    • 40%
      Harbeas8 months, 3 weeks ago

      I totally ignore all the bs that each candidate is saying about the other. The only thing I am interested in is the issues. Don't waste my time with this crap.

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    • 75%
      jordan118 months, 3 weeks ago

      "Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse.">>>>

      Can't agree. Those seeds were sown in 2000, when the new discourse of ugly was introduced by CONS. They're perpetuating the division it caused, of course. But they didn't start it. And I'll probably never again have respect for a person who backs the republican party. Too much of that ugly has been accepted by conservatives, who showed their acceptance by their vote in 2004.

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    • 92%
      Searchbeam8 months, 3 weeks ago

      When Susan Eisenhower wrote a scathing article about the current state of the Republican Party, and why she was leaving the party, it was like watching the funeral procession of the Republican Party.

      This party, driven into the filthy ditch of hatred and lies by the likes of Lee Atwater and Karl Rove, is now only a ghost of itself. There is nothing noble, purposeful and decent left there. It is all a collection of crooks and snake oil salesmen, with no redeeming value whatsoever.

      If Sarah Palin is the face of the new Republican party, all the decent, caring people still clutching to the party loyalty better roll up their tent and start the long march into the darkness of insignificance!

      Peace and Blessings!

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    • 50%
      AOL-my-crater8 months, 3 weeks ago

      Aha, could someone says why 'american' means 'white', not caucasian exactly, jewish I mean? I'm trust in American dream that is common for Christians and for Muslims as well. What we have discussed about?

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      • 79%
        ProudBlueTexan8 months, 3 weeks ago

        "He added: "I call on Senator Obama to immediately and personally repudiate these outrageous and divisive comments that are so clearly designed to shut down debate 24 days before the election. Our country must return to the important debate about the path forward for America.”

        Reminds me of another truism:

        "When Fascism comes to America it will be called anti-Fascism." - Attributed to Huey Long, governor of Louisiana

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      • 79%
        miklkit8 months, 3 weeks ago

        In their desperation to win at all costs the republicons pandered to the hate crowd. Now McSame is afraid of the beast they have created. It's too little, too late. He has to ride the tiger.

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        • 81%
          ETproductions8 months, 3 weeks ago

          It is terribly sad to see a man who was once so honorable stoop to such lows as to claim that Obama "Pals around with terrorists". That's an outright lie and he knows it. To claim that Obama voted for tax increases 94 times. He knows those were all procedural votes on funding. By the same measure, McCain has "voted for tax increases" more than 400 times. Another outright lie. And the lies and inuendo just go on and on.

          By this smear campaign McCain has proved he has no further place in American politics. The partisan divide in America has reached a dangerous point.

          After the drubbing it's going to take in this election cycle, the Republican party needs to step back and reinvent itself. The don't tax just spend plan of Reganomics has been thoroughly discredited with the national debt now pushing toward $11 trillion.

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        • 82%
          Eagle_Eye8 months, 3 weeks ago

          "My Friends", we have 100 days left of the Bush administration, we have 3 weeks left until election, I see a light at the end of the tunnel.

          (wink)

          I have said a prayer of 6 years now asking God to reveal Satan in our government and corporate world, and it has been answered. I neglected to add to my prayer with out hurting all the people. I will now have to pray for God to help all of Middle American and lower Americans who have watched savings go up in smoke the past few months.

          Please God help us in our time of need, we did wrong by blindly trusting those who have betrayed us. Help us through this time of need.

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          • 90%
            mmrhe8 months, 3 weeks ago

            I will give McCain some credit. He seems genuinely disturbed by the level of hostility out there.
            On the other hand, it's poetic justice for the man who sold his soul to get the nomination.
            He must deeply regret doing what he did in the name of the ignorant cellar dwellers spewing their ignorant hate!

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            • 14%
              k9kssr8 months, 3 weeks ago

              Sarah Palin wasn't the first to bring up the Ayers connection, she was just expounding on what Hillary Clinton said.

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            • 75%
              hyperbola8 months, 3 weeks ago

              I would say that the present bitterness comes from a generalized failure of our democracy to adapt to the modern world. Many people are afraid and, with our poor education system, become easy prey for religious and political hucksters. We have BIG issues to sort out.

              Anti-democratic nature of US capitalism is being exposed

              Bretton Woods was the system of global financial management set up at the end of the second World War to ensure the interests of capital did not smother wider social concerns in post-war democracies. It was hated by the US neoliberals - the very people who created the banking crisis.

              ...The immediate origins of the current meltdown lie in the collapse of the housing bubble supervised by Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, which sustained the struggling economy through the Bush years by debt-based consumer spending along with borrowing from abroad. But the roots are deeper. In part they lie in the triumph of financial liberalisation in the past 30 years - that is, freeing the markets as much as possible from government regulation.

              ...A study by international economists Winfried Ruigrok and Rob van Tulder 15 years ago found that at least 20 companies in the Fortune 100 would not have survived if they had not been saved by their respective governments, and that many of the rest gained substantially by demanding that governments "socialise their losses," as in today's taxpayer-financed bailout. Such government intervention "has been the rule rather than the exception over the past two centuries", they conclude.

              ... The financial market "underprices risk" and is "systematically inefficient", as economists John Eatwell and Lance Taylor wrote a decade ago, warning of the extreme dangers of financial liberalisation and reviewing the substantial costs already incurred - and proposing solutions, which have been ignored. One factor is failure to calculate the costs to those who do not participate in transactions. These "externalities" can be huge. Ignoring systemic risk leads to more risk-taking than would take place in an efficient economy, even by the narrowest measures.

              In a functioning democratic society, a political campaign would address such fundamental issues, looking into root causes and cures, and proposing the means by which people suffering the consequences can take effective control.

              http://www.propeller.com/story/2008/10/12/anti-dem...

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              • 75%
                lewby54-598 months, 3 weeks ago

                It is pitiful how Palin attacks Obama's past associations.
                This comes from the Rhett Butler Palin family,who while a members of the Alaska Indepenedence party, adocated for the secession of Alaska. This isn't 1860 South Carolina. This is 2008. This election is about Judgement. If we want poor judgement, just keep Bush in office. Poor judgement in the Keating 5, Poor judgement in that watergate burglar G Gordon Liddy. Obviously McCain is of the ilk of government within the government. The very thing JFK warned about! McCain applauds Liddy. Calls this ex-con friend, after crapping on the constitution. Just like the Nazi's in ww2, I vas just following orders! Liddy, an ardent Hitler admirer calls McCain friend and likewise.Poor judgement in destroying 3 naval aircraft. Poor Judgment in choosing to primp out Hockey-mom Sarah Palin, because she's an attractive distraction that puts a pretty face on old poisonous ideas.
                Poor judgement because he appears to be subconciously, looking for and rousing the right, wingnut, to commit some unspeakable act against Obama. He is disgustingly shamefull in his blatent grab for power. It should be no surprise this friendship with Liddy. If Palin was smart she would distance herself from this maniacal dinosaur, for her own political future.
                McCain and Bush are so close in policy, they are one and the same. Hence, McCain/Bush. Which incidentally is a perfect anagram for Mabus. Ask Nostradamus.
                http://www.squidoo.com/McCain_and_Gordon_Liddy

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                • 40%
                  mdarmstrong8 months, 3 weeks ago

                  I remember when I saw members of the carpenters union in Massachusetts punch women who were holding Bush signs in the face, give them bloody noses and rip up their signs. It was pretty violent and not a word in the liberal Boston Globe. So, I don't expect to hear anything positive about McCain's rallies from the MSM and their left wing allies. They don't like to be questioned. When they are, be it by McCain, Christians, Libertarians or any other person or group they don't like, they just demonize them, call them stupid or angry. This is nothing new.

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                • 20%
                  Georgia508 months, 3 weeks ago

                  As with many Americans who grew up during the 60s, I view John Lewis as an authentic American hero. Unfortunately, as a politician, Mr. Lewis has not said or done anything to deserve my respect and has done much to register disrespect.

                  Sad, but to be expected from a man who today comes across as the very kind of Democrat he protested at Pettis Bridge. And yes, it was against racist Democrats Lewis protested.

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                  • 100%
                    NancyCronk8 months, 3 weeks ago

                    Racism as Disease

                    I can't help but think the enormous amounts of racism that is bubbling up through the McCain/Palin campaign is similar to the pus in a very bad skin wound. If a wound is badly infected but closed, it becomes inflamed and painful below the surface.

                    This Presidential campaign has opened the wound for the world to see, and the ugly infection is now visible. We need to act quickly to fight it from becoming worse. We need to restore health.

                    What do you do to a wound that is badly infected? First, you DON"T make it worse. You immediately get to work cleaning it, cleaning it, and cleaning it some more (read: educate, educate, educate some more). You do not bandage it (cover it up) before dealing with it. You do not ignore it, or hope someone else will tackle it for you. You do not allow dirt or germs (rumors and lies) to get into it to further contaminate it. You expose it, watch it, keep it clean, watch it, and allow the air (exposure) to dry it and heal it completely. Later, a scar will serve as a reminder of what was battled, and what was learned.

                    My friends (to reclaim a phrase), it is good the wound is open. It has been there all along, getting worse every day. We must show our strength and fight hard to expose it, clean it, drain it, treat it, and heal it. We must educate, educate, educate every possible waking moment we have. Fight the smears with truth and reason. Stand together and assert ourselves as those who can heal the disease, and those who will NOT allow it to get worse. Lead by example. Take charge, and do not allow anyone to define us before we define ourselves. We need to enlist intelligent, reasonable friends to stand with us and do the same, so that we can heal this infection. We are fighting for our lives, and for our children.

                    We also need to promote good health (lead by example!) so that we will not have to fight it again.

                    I believe we are living history in the making. Just as Martin Luther King Jr., and Ghandi before him, refused to allow anyone to push them into violence, Barack Obama is refusing to allow the McCain/Palin ugliness to draw him into a spiral of accusations of racism and more racism. He is too smart to get sucked into a racial war. We need to respond as he has - with facts, reason, persistence, dilligence and sanity. We need to respond by sharing our standards of decency, ethics, and vision. We must not stoop to the attacks, but to rise above them and show others how to do the same.

                    We must do it NOW. We must assert ourselves swiftly and thoughtfully.

                    YES WE CAN.

                    Thank-you, Nancy Cronk

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