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Some of this is also true about Sherrod. And while everybody knew that Wright's material was lifted from his sermons, it's only clear after reading and listening to Sherrod's entire speech that it, too, was a sermon.And here's where God steps into the narrative, as Sherrod introduces the story that turned into a controversy:But I couldn't just let his death go without doing something in answer to what happened. I made the commitment on the night of my father's death, at the age of 17, that I would not leave the South, that I would stay in the South and devote my life to working for change. And I've been true to that commitment all of these 45 years.
Sherrod also describes an event that will surely make it into the Lifetime or Hallmark movie about her life: How her mother, now a widow, faces down an honest-to-God burning cross on her lawn. Goes out with a gun while other members of her community arrive to surround the bigots. But eventually allow them to leave in peace. (A powerful tale that, however, Sherrod did not witness because she was already away at college.)I prayed about it that night and as our house filled with people I was back in one of the bedrooms praying and asking God to show me what I could do. I didn't have -- the path wasn't laid out that night. I just made the decision that I would stay and work. And -- and over the years things just happened.
And young people: I just want you to know that when you're true to what God wants you to do the path just opens up -- and things just come to you, you know. God is good -- I can tell you that.
When I made that commitment, I was making that commitment to black people -- and to black people only. But, you know, God will show you things and He'll put things in your path so that -- that you realize that the struggle is really about poor people, you know.
At many points of the speech, you can hear people in the audience saying "Amen," and "That's right" and even clapping. Breitbart may never have witnessed this kind of interaction, but it's not the same as standard applause. A black preacher will spin out a story about some sin that hits the heart of his audience and they'd nod and call out. Not because they approve of the sin, but because they get the message. And because maybe they've fallen or almost fallen in the same place and appreciate his warning.Well, working with him made me see that it's really about those who have versus those who don't, you know. And they could be black, and they could be white; they could be Hispanic. And it made me realize then that I needed to work to help poor people -- those who don't have access the way others have.
To which I say; Really? Black slavery, the three-continent slave trade, the plantation economy of the American South that depended on slaves, the secession of the Confederacy and the ensuing Civil War, Jim Crow and "colored" water fountains were all part of a centuries-long conspiracy by the monied class to keep poor whites and poor blacks from working together in peace? Like Rev. Wright, who has a habit of spinning out stories at odds with history, Sherrod may have been exceeding her core competencies here.So that's when they made black people servants for life. That's when they put laws in place forbidding them to marry each other. That's when they created the racism that we know of today. They did it to keep us divided. And they -- it started working so well, they said, "Gosh, looks like we've come up on something here that can last generations." And here we are over 400 years later, and it's still working.
And yup, the crowd applauds at that one.You know, I haven't seen such a mean-spirited people as I've seen lately over this issue of health care. Some of the racism we thought was buried. Didn't it surface? Now, we endured eight years of the Bush's and we didn't do the stuff these Republicans are doing because you have a black president.
She goes on in the same vein: Blacks should be careful with their money and their credit, should work hard to keep their farms, should take advantage of several government programs that few blacks even apply for and should work to help each other.And young folks, you know when I was growing up, you had to get home from school and go to the fields. But y'all don't have to do that no more. You should be excelling, you know.
Which to an outsider, sounds weirdly like nostalgia for the days of segregation. That's a tension I've found in many blacks old enough to have bridged those years: A sharp awareness of progress away from lynchings and Jim Crow, along with a regret for some of the good that was lost when a community that had been forced to unify was suddenly free to scatter. You'll find similar sentiments among some American Jews.It looks like the more -- the better we do, the more free we are, the more divided we become, you know. It looks like we don't care about each other any more. You know, that's why kids can just, you know -- y'all know what happened in the day. He did something wrong, everybody in the community got you, you know. Well that doesn't happen anymore. And we have to get back to that.
A more prescient ending to a speech may never have been delivered. I suspect she's feeling a little closer to the grindstone today than she did when she said those words last March.OK, I won't keep going on tonight, but just let me say there is a saying: "Life is a grindstone, but . . . whether it grinds us down or polishes us up depends on us," you know.
But will there be a Shirley Sharrod equivalent chairing your Obamacare treatment panel, Mr. Weiss?
July 27 2010 at 3:51 PM Report abuse Permalink +2 rate up rate down ReplyAh, Mr. Weiss is back to his old ways. It must be so refreshing to find a story you can really sink your teeth into and use it to push your point of view. I would like to ask you a question, were you on the journolist? Because what is true is there are no journalists anymore unless they are on the right. There is no balance in new reporting anymore. You and the mainstream media solely exist to push a far left liberal agenda. Anyone looking at the journolist entries realize quickly that the agenda is to disavow, belittle, obfuscate and use the term racist against anyone and everything that does not further their left wing agenda. I hope that long term democrats must understand that the party that existed was co-opted somewhere around the 90's by this left wing socialist agenda. The party of my grandfather and father does not exist anymore, that these main stream news correspondents and reporters are the mouthpiece of less than 10% of the American political spectrum that believe in all things not American. That America has reaped its wealth from the less advantaged countries. That we have stolen our wealth from others , while the wealthy in this country stole their wealth from the poorer. Nothing is earned and nothing is built rather it is co-opted from someone else. It is this social agenda that drives Mr. Weiss and the means to get there is to call other people racists and bigots. This tactic has just about ran its course, it is no longer as effective as it once was. This Sherrod inicident shows less about the right as it does about the left and the Obama adminsitration overeacting to the point of a Keystone Cop debacle.
July 27 2010 at 2:11 PM Report abuse Permalink -1 rate up rate down Reply"On the one hand, what she says is patently unfair. Not all Republicans who opposed the health care reform or who oppose Obama do it on racial grounds. However:
Had she said "some Republicans," the point would be unarguable. Racist attacks on Obama and on the health care bill were trivially easy to find. Some of 'em from avowed Republicans."
This is a bald-faced lie, and Weiss shows his true colors here. He's not after the truth, he's after the same hateful narrative that Sherrod is persuing. Racist attacks from Republicans have been "trivially easy" to find, huh? Funny how it's so easy to find, yet he refuses to give us even a single example of this supposed white hatred of Obama and his blackness.
Sherrod made it clear, she thinks conservatives are hate-filled racists. She thinks that Obama is being attacked because he's a black man. Somehow, no one told those praising Sherrod (including Weiss here) that race baiting and accusing others of racism without a shred of evidence is hateful in itself, and it means that Sherrod should, in the least, be attacked for being a vile partisan who hatefully lashes out at those who disagree with her by screaming "racism!" when none is to be found.
Well now! I can tell you're quite passionate about this subject. Considering the fact that Mrs. Sherrod's speech was a chronology of her transformation from allowing her racial bias to mitigate her judgement to the recognition that evil isn't inherently White, I think your characterization of her is patently unfair. Are you aware that her father was the victim of a racially motivated murder when she was 17? Do you think you'd be a little affected if it were you? Yet, the very farmer spoken of in her speech came to here defense! Does that sound like someone who harbors some kind of ill will? I think you might consider a visit to the mirror.
July 27 2010 at 4:31 PM Report abuse Permalink +1 rate up rate down ReplyGlen Beck on Fox News did a great job of defending Shirley Sherrod before anyone else. There was a lot of merit in almost all she said and what some called questionable was insignificant. To her credit, the lady seems to be somewhat an independent thinker.
July 26 2010 at 11:49 PM Report abuse Permalink +3 rate up rate down ReplyGreat article! My favorite part is "There's another saying: "If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is." So the next time you see or hear a quote by someone you disagree with that paints them in the worst possible light, do the body politic a favor and don't simply accept it before you can check its accuracy. And don't forward it." Our Nation would be much more united in so many ways if more folks would practice this! GOD BLESS AMERICA!
July 26 2010 at 11:06 PM Report abuse Permalink +1 rate up rate down ReplyLots of folks keep insisting that the race thing should be brought out into the open and discussed ad infinitum. I suppose the expectation is that some kind of advantage is sure to be had by airing whatever might be found in the deepest crevices of the human mind, black or white. It sounds like such a democratic and therapeutic idea that our immediate reaction is one of applause. If I were a black leader, I'd give this a bit more thought. For decades, whites have been politely withholding comments and emotions for fear that anything they say will be considered racist. For the past many weeks, more and more it's almost fashionable dirctly or by inuendo to let such feelings trickle out. Within a few more weeks or months--certainly by the next presidential election--I dare say these feelings will start coming out in an open torrent, and they will not be pleasant. I'm not sure it's in the best interest of the nation to goad anyone into expressing in public their darkest prejudices. This very complex racial divide was not created in a fortnight and it is not about to go away in this century. However, if the race baiters on both sides just shut up and let things cool and heal, they will. For the most part at least, with time. But, on the rugged plains of reality human nature being what it is, maybe this is too much to ask.
July 26 2010 at 9:35 PM Report abuse Permalink +1 rate up rate down ReplyCutie......Mrs. Sherrod was referring to the people who were using racial epethets towards John Lewis, Clyburn, and the police officer who confirmed the name calling.
no, that's not what she said.
I salute Ms. Sherrod for her honesty and her service. I hope she runs for office--she ought to have the requisite name recognition now, and she long ago paid her dues...and it's certainly true that Breitbart, the news folks, and the Administration all failed due diligence (except for the Journal-Constitution, of course). However, I still need some answers. Who shot the video? Who sent it, pre-edited, to Breitbart? Why didn't NAACP already know about the full speech? (They admitted being "bamboozled" too.) Perhaps I'm jaded, but it doesn't pass the smell test to me. Somewhere, out there, a dirty-trickster is still laughing.
July 26 2010 at 7:54 PM Report abuse Permalink -1 rate up rate down ReplyIt's very simple, and it's a bit scary all round. Americans of all colors are having growing pains. All of us have to grow up and accept responsibility. Black, white, red or greeen, hitherto excuses have no currency. On the good side, we're all in this together, come what may. Straight ahead!
July 26 2010 at 4:58 PM Report abuse Permalink +3 rate up rate down ReplyInteresting article. Mr. Weiss. I don't agree with everything you wrote but that's one of the things that made it interesting. Perhaps because I am the same age as Ms. Sherrod,I understand the context, as well as cadence, of the speech. Perphaps we could stip picking every nit we might find with her speech and see it in its totality. A poignant and inspiring reminder of how far we have come as a nation since the 1950's, the lives that were sacrifcied to bring us to this place, and the work we all need to do to keep making progress.
I'm white but you don't have to be black to have little patience with so-called "reverse racism." Race prejudice has always been used in this country for political ends. And this so called "reverse racism" is another variation on this theme. Keep the poor whites happy by making sure that black people at least have less. And by all means, tell poor whites to blame the black folks for their problems. In my day, we called this "horizontal hostility" after Florence Kennedy coined the phrase. "The problem isn't poverty or hatred of blacks; nope, let's focus on making sure that no black person ever says anything that we whites can possibly interpret as being anti-white." This is such a tired old tune but we seem to be singing it again. Be can and should be smarter than to fall for it.
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