May 18, 2009
First black President okay if debate over the humanity of some is never resolved
Here's what President Obortion said yesterday about abortion in his address yesterday to pro-abortion Notre Dame University;
I do not suggest that the debate surrounding abortion can or should go away. At some level, the views of the two camps are irreconcilable. Each side will continue to make its case to the public with passion and conviction. But surely we can do so without reducing those with differing views to caricature.
As one caricaturized as "clinging to my religion and my guns," I see enormous irony in his words. He's calling for us to stop dehumanizing each other, according to the LA Times. Brace yourself now as I whip out the race card.
One would think that President Obortion, speaking as the first BLACK President of the United States, would embody the message of Hope. Instead he spews hopelessness saying it's okay if we don't ever resolve this debate over the humanity of some. Just a few generations ago it could have been said that slavery and the racial divide in this country was an unresolvable debate and that the two camps were unreconcilable. However, unlike Obama, moral leaders like Lincoln HAD hope and fought uncompromisingly to defeat inhumane aberrant ideologies and see they are buried alongside other embarrassments and moments of shame in the cemetery of our national history.
If Obama were alive in say 1860, I'm not thinking he would have given this lets-seek-common-ground message to this nation, half of whom would have viewed him as sub-human? There is no common ground with those who see some as human and others almost human.

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