Political Chatter

Jeremiah Wright is crazy? Give me a break.

Posted by gopinder on March 16, 2008

So the media’s having a hey-day over “finally” supposedly breaking Obama’s image as the untainted, free-from-scandal politician by fixating on the words of his former pastor Rev. Jeremiah Wright. It is true that this man’s sermons were filled with controversial and inflammatory statements regarding US foreign policy. While this is all well and good, the fact of the matter is that the same kind of endorsement is being given to John McCain from similar crazies like Rev. Wright.

Reverend Rod Parsley, of the World Harvest Church of Columbus, campaigned with John McCain during the run up to the Ohio primaries. In his 2005 book Silent No More, the leader of this 12,000-member megachurch makes no secret about his incendiary views of Islam:

I cannot tell you how important it is that we understand the true nature of Islam, that we see it for what it really is. In fact, I will tell you this: I do not believe our country can truly fulfill its divine purpose until we understand our historical conflict with Islam. I know that this statement sounds extreme, but I do not shrink from its implications. The fact is that America was founded, in part, with the intention of seeing this false religion destroyed, and I believe September 11, 2001, was a generational call to arms that we can no longer ignore.

As if labeling one of the world’s largest religions as “false” isn’t enough to piss off billions of people, he goes on to rewrite our nation’s history and its founding in terms of this so-called battle against Islam:

It was to defeat Islam, among other dreams, that Christopher Columbus sailed to the New World in 1492…Columbus dreamed of defeating the armies of Islam with the armies of Europe made mighty by the wealth of the New World. It was this dream that, in part, began America.

A dream to destroy Islam is what started America? Does that mean that Muslims currently living in America don’t belong in this country? I don’t understand why the media is salivating over Jeremiah Wright’s comments when this xenophobic McCain supporter whose endorsement McCain hasn’t renounced is out spewing vicious attacks and blind hatred against an entire religion. And it’s not just Islamic extremists that this lunatic is singling out. He makes clear that all followers of Allah, a so-called “demon spirit,” are the enemy:

There are some, of course, who will say that the violence I cite is the exception and not the rule. I beg to differ. I will counter, respectfully, that what some call “extremists” are instead mainstream believers who are drawing from the well at the very heart of Islam.

Then there’s McCain’s televangelist, rapture-right pal John Hagee, senior pastor at Cornerstone Church in San Antonio and CEO of Global Evangelism Television. Like Rev. Parsley, John Hagee singles out one religion, namely Catholicism, and doesn’t hold back. In his recent book Jerusalem Countdown, Hagee claims that there is a “clear record of history linking Adolf Hitler and the Roman Catholic Church in a conspiracy to exterminate the Jews.” Given that he’s called the Catholic Church “the great whore” and “a false cult system,” one can only wonder how the Reverend feels about Islam. You’d be correct in saying that his views on Islam aren’t much different than those of Rev. Parsley, stating that “those who live by the Qu’ran have a scriptural mandate to kill Christians and Jews” and that “it [the Qu'ran] teaches that very clearly.”

So what’s been John McCain’s response to John Hagee’s endorsement?

All I can tell you is I’m very proud to have pastor Hagee’s support

Did we see McCain make his rounds on Hardball, Hannity and Colmes, Anderson Cooper, and the other news outlets? Not the way Obama has had to. Even as late as today, when this story should already be old news, FOX is still replaying clips of Rev. Wright’s sermons. Will we ever see flashing screens displaying Rev. Parsley or John Hagee’s bigoted comments on Hannity and Colmes? Probably not, since Sean Hannity is a devout Catholic and wouldn’t be able to comprehend how a fellow evangelical theocrat could hate on his religion so much. Instead, the media seems pretty satisfied with McCain’s half-assed attempt to distance himself from these pastors:

…that does not mean that I endorse everything that he [Hagee] stands for and believes in.

Weak.

5 Responses to “Jeremiah Wright is crazy? Give me a break.”

  1. gary said

    You totally miss the point. One, white people are afraid of Muslims and their desire to kill us. Two, white people are afraid of people who preach hatred and eventually will kill the people they hate. Jeremiah Wright and Louis Farrakhan hate white people and will eventually try to kill us. Three, John Hagee is not John McCain’s pastor of 20 years, indeed Hagee is not McCain’s pastor at all. Louis Farrakhan endorsed Barack Hussein Obama where is your outrage over that. Funny thing about us white folk in America and something that people who want to kill us do not understand, we have a very, very big survival instinct. BHO would only be human in the Presidency and the 20 years of listening to Jeremiah Wright’s hatespeak has inflitrated Obama’s brain and will come out. How can you claim you love somebody and then when the pressure is on deny them?

  2. Jo said

    Being endorsed by and sitting under in the pew for 17 years is completely different.

    I can endorse anyone I want – doesn’t mean they agree with me or my beliefs.

    But for someone to sit in the pews of a hate monger like Wright for 20 years, to claim he is your spiritual leader and mentor .. that’s different.

    Its not weak of McCain to say what he said – its the truth.

  3. To the two commenters — Parsley is McCain’s spiritual advisor. TOTALLY ok to call Islam a demon religion, advocate wholesale holy war and blame America for 9/11?

    Oh, did you not hear that last part? Parlsey said 9/11 was a generational call to arms.

  4. reformislam said

    Muslims Against Sharia call on Senators McCain and Obama to cut all ties with their racist, Islamophobic, and anti-Semitic supporters.

    McCain: http://muslimsagainstsharia.blogspot.com/2008/03/mccains-spiritual-guide-destroy-islam.html
    Obama: http://muslimsagainstsharia.blogspot.com/2008/03/racist-congregation-cheering-racist.html

  5. T. White said

    Before I begin, let me say Jeremiah Wright is not one of my favorite people and I completely disagree with his support for Louis Farrakhan who is a lunatic. But anyway, here is it. I have to say this, churches in America are the most segregated thing on earth. A white person that goes to a black church would probably think that its just random, loud, chaotic and overly political. And a black person that goes to a white church would probably think that it is bland, boring and without passion. I think without understanding this difference and then looking at a truncated version of an overall message that people are getting really pissed about nothing.

    I’m so tired of people commenting on this story that don’t understand the culture of the black church. In the black church, the preachers can talk for up to an hour or 2, so taking 30 secs of an hour or hour and half sermon isn’t really fair. You honestly have to listen to things he said before and after the so called reprehensible statements to truly understand the meaning of the whole sermon. It’s like trying to take just a chapter of one book and passing it off as the whole thing. It probably wouldn’t make sense unless you read the whole thing.

    Okay, the Hillary stuff….did he say anything that was untrue? Not at all. Yes, Hillary was born into a rich white republican household and there’s nothing wrong with that but that’s a fact and that’s what the Rev. Wright was trying to do in that series was to contrast her experience to that of someone who maybe didn’t have a two parent household or someone who knows what it’s like to be poor and not know where your next meal is coming from. Has Hillary ever experienced a white woman clutching her purse when she notices that you’re coming her way, No. Has she ever been racially profiled, No. He never said anything disrespectful about her character, he was just stating that she’s had different experience than most of the members of the congregation he was speaking too. And lastly, is it untrue that this country is run by a bunch of Rich White Men??? Nope, George Washington, Jefferson, Nixon, Reagan, Carter, Bush I, Bush II, Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and many more.

    Next, the GD America series. Okay, he was wasn’t saying GD America period, my God the man was in the US Armed Forces in Vietnam, so I’m pretty sure he has some pride in America. He was simply highlighting the fact that America has not always put its best foot forward towards not only black people but people around the world. And the delivery, which is something you can’t really get with text, highlighted those times and those are the times he was referring to when he said, GD America. So as to say to the prevailing thinking of the time(i.e. the America of those times) which obviously was wrong should be held accountable for the reprehensible treatment of non-whites. L

    astly, the 9/11 series. At no point did he say he was happy that it happened or that he didn’t sympathize with the rest of the country for the loss of life. He was simply stating that for all the fucked up things our country has done over the last 100 or so years that it’s finally coming back to bite us in the ass. Did he every say anything that was untrue i.e. bombing of innocents in Japan during WWII, invading Iraq, a sovereign country that had never attacked us and much more??? No, it may be painful to hear but America is not perfect and never will be. And there are some blacks in the country that are old enough to remember the horrors of the Jim Crow era. We’ve got to remember it hasn’t been that long ago where I would not have even been able to step foot on Rice University’s campus let alone receive a degree from there. So please keep an open mind and ask someone who understands the culture in which these things are coming from to explain the context before rushing to your on conclusions.

    I hope this spreads some light on this issue for some. I know for some this is a black and white case. But it isn’t there is a lot of gray like most things in life. Also, I agree with Barack’s handling of the situation. This is not how we move forward by rehashing the past but I understand why Rev. Wright feels the way he does. And that is the great thing about America that he can have those feelings without a fear of being arrested or killed. America is so much better than what we see today and I like Barack choose to look for the best in people not the worst. No one is perfect.

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