Tyranny May Be Closer than We Think
The left-wing lunatics realize that their days are numbered if they don’t find a way to discredit the national movement that is poised for a landslide victory in November. They feel that the best way to accomplish that is to muzzle people by twisting their words until everything sounds racially motivated. Every word, gesture, and nuance is being parsed and magnified in a cynical attempt to scare non-blacks into a state of reticent acquiescence.
By Bob Weir at American Thinker
When Barack Obama was  elected President of the United States, I experienced ambivalence about a  national election result for the first time in my life. In every other  presidential election that ran counter to my vote, I felt that the  winner didn’t represent any advantage for the future of the country.  When Jimmy Carter beat Gerald Ford, I braced myself for the liberal  climate about to descend on us. When Clinton beat Bush 1, it meant that  the country was willing to overlook the man’s well-documented history of  immoral conduct, which inevitably led to national disgrace. For me,  neither of these victors provided anything salubrious for the country’s  future. 
Although I voted for John McCain, and I believed that he was  the better leader for our country, seeing the first African-American  become the nation’s chief executive gave me the feeling that we had  finally crossed a threshold in race relations. After all, with blacks  representing only about 12 percent of the population, a huge non-black  turnout was needed for a black candidate to be elected. Winning by a  comfortable margin seemed to make it clear that Obama’s victory could  result in less vitriol from race-baiters who had enriched their bank  accounts by fulminating about the country’s history of bigotry. Finally,  we would no longer be urged to view everything through a prism of  pigmentation. Hence, my ambivalence was an example of finding something  good about being on the losing side of a national plebiscite. 
I suppose you could say that I  saw Obama’s color as a consolation prize. His political philosophy of  bigger government, more taxes, closing of Guantánamo Bay, Miranda rights  for terrorists, etc. is an example of the type of liberal orthodoxy  that has weakened the U.S. for more than a generation. However, it felt  good to know that we had proven to the world that we are truly a melting  pot. 
Alas,  that sentiment was short-lived. When the president insinuated last year  that a black Harvard professor’s arrest by a white police officer was  racially motivated, it became clear that he wasn’t interested in leading  the country toward a colorblind society. Furthermore, Democrats have  become more creative about finding racism in everyone who opposes this  president. When the grassroots efforts of the Tea Party movement began  to gain national attention, it became a target for accusations of  racism. It’s a typical red herring intended to divert attention from the  president’s massive power-grab known as ObamaCare, which will, in  addition to destroying the best health care system on the planet, put an  unsustainable debt burden on future generations. Does any rational  person really believe that the majority of our citizens would be in  favor of that medical monstrosity if it had been proposed by a white  president? 
Nancy Pelosi, the most arrogant and polarizing Speaker in the  history of the House, dismissed the Tea Party as nothing more than  “disheartened Republicans and racists, who could not accept a bi-racial  man as president.” Similarly, the mainstream media and Democrat  activists, evidently taking their orders from the Speaker’s office,  tried to portray the health care debate as being based solely on  President Obama’s race rather than on the policies of an overreaching  government. Therefore, we are in the bizarre position of having the  first black POTUS, while being constantly scolded for being racist.  Every word, gesture, and nuance is being parsed and magnified in a  cynical attempt to scare non-blacks into a state of reticent  acquiescence.
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