Campaigns & Candidates

Racial demons still torment us

It is a faint memory now, but at the height of the civil rights revolution in the 1950s and 1960s, advocates contended for a color-blind society. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King persuasively wrote that all persons should be judged not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. Yet we are as race-conscious as we have ever been, if not more so. In fact, Americans have made great progress toward this humane vision of political community. Racial minorities are well-represented in all walks of life, in the arts, the professions and the workplace. But this change has been accompanied by a persistent demand for entitlements as distinguished from rights, which burdens white people with guilt and tarnishes the achievements of non-white people with preference.

A friend of mine who grew up in northern Florida and encountered ugly racial discrimination wrote 20 years ago that Americans were dominated by race in ways supposed to be extirpated by the success of civil rights legislation. The reason, he said, was that the idea of equality of opportunity had been hijacked by equality of condition. This unfortunate state of affairs has not passed.

Whether it is presidential politics or the most personal experiences of everyday life, race trumps everything. Americans are justly proud of the pending nomination of the first presidential candidate of African descent. It would seem to give the lie to those who write off Americans as irredeemably racist. Democratic voters and activists have freely consented to elevating Sen. Barack Obama to our highest office, and public opinion polls indicate that he has more than an even chance of being elected.

Yet Obama has already given the lie to our people’s hopefulness by emphasizing his race. Recently he voiced his concerns about the Republican campaign that will be waged against him. “We know the strategy,” he said. Republicans planned to make people afraid of him. They’d say “he’s got a funny name. And did I mention he’s black?”

Republicans have long and rightly feared that this was precisely the tack that Obama would take in his quest for national leadership. Despite all of Obama’s talk of “change” and “unity” and “bipartisanship,” he is indistinguishable from the Democratic liberals who, with the exception of the triangulating Bill Clinton, went down to defeat, from George McGovern to John Kerry. He needs race to distract the largely centrist American electorate from his unelectable political leanings.

Those who now swoon for Obama, whatever their race or ethnicity, are captivated by the thought of electing our first black president, indifferent if not oblivious, to the fact that, just as we cannot justify electing someone to office just because he or she is white, neither can we countenance voting for Obama just because he is black.

Wall Street Journal columnist Dorothy Rabinowitz has remarked on the Obama phenomenon in the course of concluding, as the headline for her column last week read, “American politics aren’t ‘post-racial’” She devoted most of her piece, however, to an incident at Purdue University that will strike most of us as bizarre. But in the current political climate, it is all too illustrative.

A student was “caught” last year reading a book entitled “Notre Dame v. the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan,” a history of the battle students waged against the Klan in the 1920s. Keith Sampson, a student employed by Purdue’s janitorial staff, was charged with reading a book during his lunch break with a title that offended black employees and students. It did not matter that the book told a story about people opposed to racism, which book Sampson had checked out of the university library.

One would think that the old admonition not to judge a book by its cover literally would be applicable to this case, but one would be wrong. Several layers of union and college officialdom took umbrage before the American Civil Liberties Union and the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education took up the student’s case and thus embarrassed all those seeking to prosecute Mr. Sampson for his “thought crime.” The resultant publicity forced University Chancellor Charles R. Bantz to issue an apologetic letter transforming the nature of the charge from one of reading a book to “harassing” other college personnel, which doubtless convinced nobody.

It’s as if we have all been forced to return to childhood, wherein distinctions between fact and fantasy have dissolved, and people are accused of whatever we believe or wish they were guilty of, so that the accusers can enjoy the satisfaction of being “little goody two shoes” above all reproach.

Unfortunately, the incident at Purdue is not isolated nor localized but has become typical and national. We, the benefactors of the civil rights revolution, should be placing its principles into practice by making decisions based on the merits of the case and the character of individuals. In countless instances across America, that is exactly what we are doing. But in our most powerful institutions we are failing miserably.

'Anyone But Coffman,' FTS tells voters

My support for Wil Armstrong in the 6th CD received a semi-amen and lengthy quotations in this week's endorsement editorial by Face the State.com, which treated abandonment of the Secretary of State's office as the decisive factor in recommending that suburban Republicans vote for "Anyone But Coffman" in the Aug. 12 primary. As I noted in my Denver Post column last Sunday, many GOP loyalists have huge problems with turning the SOS post over to a Democrat of Bill Ritter's choosing, in the event current occupant Mike Coffman wins the congressional nomination to succeed Tom Tancredo. Senate Majority Leader Ken Gordon and House Speaker Andrew Romanoff, both out of a job after this election, are often mentioned as potential appointees.

But my sources believe former Denver Clerk Rosemary Rodriguez, now serving on the HAVA Commission in DC, has the inside track if Coffman's job comes vacant. Her incompetence as Denver's chief election officer conjures scary visions of how she could screw up with similar duties on a statewide scale, let alone the easy-voting, all-comers approach she'd take on ballot integrity questions. No thanks, say Republicans across the 6th congressional district and beyond.

The Denver Post endorsement of Coffman for Congress, published today, brushes off this concern. But that merely proves again -- if anyone needed more proof -- that the Post editorial board is incapable of thinking like Republicans, even for a moment of role-playing.

Armstrong's still the one.

Dems stuck in socialist sludge

To tag so-called progressives as reactionaries seems an oxymoron, but that precisely describes the liberals' outmoded, illogical sales pitch. David Harsanyi cogently revealed one of the flaws in the libs' antiquated social welfare doctrine in his 7/22 Denver Post column, "What could Obama learn on vacation." Harsanyi compared rational economics to the Democrats' too-often-repeated socialist sludge. After trying for decades to make social welfare work, European nations are wisely abandoning that counter-productive utopian path. The libs' misbegotten social welfare has been tested and, as always, found false.

Yet in America, progressives like Obama, Pelosi, Clinton and Reid echo those same archaic, unsubstantiated false promises. Do they think we are all fools?

In the past people believed many foolish notions that the sun revolved around the earth and that one's innocence or guilt could be determined by drowning which reason and data eventually eclipsed. Conversely, the shopworn socialist notions persist, despite many failed experiments, defying logic and objectivity. Give it a rest! We are indeed ready for a change, a much-needed return to rational economic principles.

Why Wil Armstrong?

Republicans have an important choice to make in the 6th CD primary for a successor to Tom Tancredo. Wil Armstrong gets my vote. I believe Wil is the strongest candidate in a strong field. The reasons were spelled out in my Denver Post column over the weekend. Read it here.

I think the observations about how to improve Congress will be of interest to you, no matter where happen you live, here in Colorado or across the country.

If you have a vote to cast in that race, or if you know someone who does, please join me in supporting this able, accomplished, and honorable young conservative. Wil Armstrong is exactly the kind of new talent we need in Washington DC.

How to improve Congress

(Denver Post, July 20) Welcome to the shrink’s office, Mr. and Ms. Voter. It says here you got fed up with the Republican Congress after years of overspending and scandals and laxity in foreign affairs, so at the last election you fired them. But surprise; the other guys have done no better. Gas prices are outrageous, the economy is anemic, troop levels in Iraq are up not down, and the defeat that Reid and Pelosi predicted over there is turning into victory. The Democratic Congress you hired so hopefully in 2006 has a 9% approval rating as the 2008 election approaches. How’s that working for you? In this funhouse of unintended consequences, Coloradans will try again to make the right choice for our seven members in the US House. Before you conclude a coin flip might do as well as an informed vote, consider there’s a good chance we’ll like the next Congress better than the last few, if we really shuffle the lineup.

I’ll illustrate with my own congressional district, the safely Republican 6th CD in Denver’s south suburbs, represented since 1998 by Tom Tancredo but now wide open as he retires. I’ll corroborate with the safely Democratic, Boulder-based 2nd CD which Mark Udall is vacating to seek a US Senate seat.

But the logic applies everywhere. The only way to improve Congress is to shake up its stale roster with fresh talent, young blood, a new kind of players unburdened with old habits. If you keep doing what you did, you’ll keep getting what you got. (Rockies and Nuggets management, call your office.)

The GOP primary race to succeed Tancredo in the 6th is a four-way scramble among Secretary of State Mike Coffman, State Sens. Ted Harvey and Steve Ward, and businessman Wil Armstrong. All have solid resumes, and their conservative credentials differ little. But if I was looking for an impact player, someone who could become on the Hill what John Lynch is for the Broncos, I’d give Armstrong the edge.

The mediocrity that is Congress-as-usual, no matter which party is in charge, doesn’t result mostly from scoundrels with ill intent. It results from decent men and women with a shallow outlook and mistaken goals. Too many in the House, R and D alike, are career politicians for whom advancement has become an end in itself. Voters need to change that personnel profile, or we’ll never change how the place works.

With ballots for the Aug. 12 primary already in the mail, Wil Armstrong’s three rivals all make the same me-too pitch: “I’ve legislated,” they say. “I’ve governed.” They have, and ably so. But his rejoinder, which trumps them in my book, is that “I’ve created jobs, met payrolls, and innovated in the marketplace.” Local Republicans said in a recent poll they’d rather send an entrepreneur to Congress than a career politico by 85% to 6%.

The clincher for me is hanging onto the Secretary of State’s office, which Iraq veteran Mike Coffman won narrowly over arch-liberal Ken Gordon just 20 months ago. Conservatives cringe at the thought of Gordon or former Denver Clerk Rosemary Rodriguez being named the state’s chief election officer. We hope Coffman stays put.

As for the successor to Udall in CD-2, I root for Internet tycoon Jared Polis to win that Dem primary over former Senate President Joan Fitz-Gerald and environmentalist Will Shafroth. Same reasoning: the most accomplished individual with the least political baggage is likeliest to help bring change in a Congress that’s literally dying for it.

But whoever you like and wherever you live, don’t sit out this summer’s primary. Please get involved, donate, volunteer, study the candidates and the issues, make your vote count. It matters so much to Colorado, and to America.