April 28, 2008
Too much for Andrew Sullivan
Even he now believes Obama has to distance himself from the good Reverend:
I knew he was an exhibitionist; many of his sermons at Trinity, read in their entirety, do fall within the tradition of some prophetic teaching; I can forgive occasional outbursts from fiery preachers; he has done much good in his own neighborhood and his interview with Bill Moyers struck me as defensible; parts of his address at the Press Club were completely uncontroversial and even contained some important truths.But what he said today extemporaneously, the way in which he said it, the unrepentant manner in which he reiterated some of his most absurd and offensive views, his attempt to equate everything he believes with the black church as a whole, and his open public embrace of Farrakhan and hostility to
the existence of IsraelZionism, make any further defense of him impossible. This was a calculated, ugly, repulsive, vile display of arrogance, egotism, and self-regard...[...]
Obama needs not just to distance himself from Wright's views; he needs to disown him at this point. Wright himself, it seems to me, has become part of what Obama is fighting against: the boomer, Vietnam era's obsession with its red-blue, white-black, pro and anti-America fixations. That is not what this election needs to be about; and Wright's massive, racially divisive and, yes, bitter provocation requires a proportionate response.
Anyone else think Rev. Wright is now openly trying to sabotage Obama's campaign? And I don't think it's just about resentment that the candidate is trying to put some distance between them; people like Wright have an awful lot invested in the idea that America is too wicked and racist to ever elect an African-American President.
Damian P.
Update: Dana Milbank has more.
Posted by damian at April 28, 2008 10:56 PM