News1 min ago
Is Carter correct?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8258011.stm
Personally I think they voted him in so they can't be that racist. I reckon it's just that the honey moon is over a bit quicker than Barry would have liked and of course the Democrats are twitching!
Personally I think they voted him in so they can't be that racist. I reckon it's just that the honey moon is over a bit quicker than Barry would have liked and of course the Democrats are twitching!
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No best answer has yet been selected by R1Geezer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well Carter is just saying that there "was a feeling amoungst many that a black man shouldn't be President"
If he'd said some rather than many I think that that would be self evidently true.
Many? some? it's a debate about words really isn't it? where does some end and many begin?
But somehow it seems to have been related in reports to the heckling of Obama which is unfortunate and possibly mischievious. I rather suspect Republicans of drawing that link in order to express their outrage and denial.
But maybe I'm just cynical
If he'd said some rather than many I think that that would be self evidently true.
Many? some? it's a debate about words really isn't it? where does some end and many begin?
But somehow it seems to have been related in reports to the heckling of Obama which is unfortunate and possibly mischievious. I rather suspect Republicans of drawing that link in order to express their outrage and denial.
But maybe I'm just cynical
There's no republican conspiracy here Jake, Jimmy Carter's just an old bloke who got it wrong.
This whole health debate is stirring up a whole load more trouble than usual because (in my opinion) America just doesn't understand provision of state services on an NHS kind of scale. It's alien to their individualist culture, and way to much like communism. Consequently you get republicans getting all worked up and bringing silly words like 'Evil' and 'Tyranny' into the debate.
Nothing to do with racism.
This whole health debate is stirring up a whole load more trouble than usual because (in my opinion) America just doesn't understand provision of state services on an NHS kind of scale. It's alien to their individualist culture, and way to much like communism. Consequently you get republicans getting all worked up and bringing silly words like 'Evil' and 'Tyranny' into the debate.
Nothing to do with racism.