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"You and I have a rendezvous with destiny. We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or we will sentence them to take the first step into a thousand years of darkness. If we fail, at least let our children and our children's children say of us we justified our brief moment here. We did all that could be done."
Ronald Reagan




Showing posts with label Obama 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obama 2012. Show all posts

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Star Parker - Republican Challenge With Blacks and Hispanics

National Journal’s Ron Brownstein provided an eye opening reminder in a column last week about the impact of changing ethnic demographics on America’s political landscape.

The flashing red light of Brownstein’s message is pointed to the Republican Party.

America is changing inexorably into a country that is less and less white and the Republican Party remains today a party whose base is overwhelmingly white.

Brownstein estimates that Barack Obama could be re-elected this year with as little as 39 percent of the white vote. He notes that in 2008, when Obama won with just 43% of the white vote, it was the first time ever that a presidential candidate was victorious with double digit losses of white voters.

To offer additional perspective on the same point, consider that in 2008, 74 percent of the American electorate was white. When Ronald Reagan was elected president in 1980, 88 percent of the electorate was white.

Projections show that this trend will continue, with the white percentage of the electorate continuing to shrink.

With black and Hispanic voters seemingly ensconced with the Democrats – Barack Obama won 95 percent of the black vote and 67 percent of the Hispanic vote in 2008 – is there anything Republicans can do to turn around what seems to be an inevitable train wreck for their Party?

Many Republican strategists have given up hope regarding prospects with black voters and conclude that if there are possible inroads it’s with Hispanics.

But even if this is accurate, it’s long run thinking. Blacks still significantly outstrip Hispanics in number of voters turning out at the polls.

According to New York Times exit polls in the 2008 presidential election, blacks represented 13 percent of the electorate and Hispanics 9 percent. In the 2010 mid-term elections, according to the Pew Hispanic Center, 10.9 million black voters turned out compared to 6.6 million Hispanics.

A new report from the Pew Hispanic Center adds to the sobering news for Republicans.

According to this survey, 30 percent of Hispanics self identify as liberal compared to 21 percent of the general population.

When asked to express preference for “bigger government providing more services” versus “smaller government providing fewer services,” 75 percent of Hispanics prefer bigger government compared to 41 percent of the general population.

To add another layer to this daunting portrait, huge, well financed organizations – to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars – already exist to keep pumping out arguments for big government to blacks and Hispanics. The National Urban League, NAACP, National Council of La Raza.

There are no operations that even approach this to deliver a conservative message to these communities.

So do pure demographics point to our being beyond the point of no return regarding America’s transformation into a big government, social welfare nation?

Nothing is inevitable. But for Republicans and/or conservatives to ignore this challenge and not actively engage is to invite disaster.

What can be done?

I believe this is one more powerful reason why Republicans cannot let the social agenda fall by the wayside and pretend we can talk about dismantling big government and reinventing our entitlement programs while the American family collapses.

When Reagan became president, 18 percent of our babies were born out of wedlock compared to 41 percent today.

Seventy two percent of black babies and 53 percent of Hispanic babies are now born out of wedlock.

Yet both blacks and Hispanics attend church more frequently than the national average.

Efforts must be expended to reach black and Hispanic clergy and community leaders to raise awareness how big government and moral relativism six days a week overwhelms the message heard from the pulpit on Sunday.

Single parent homes are a ticket to poverty. This is a message that can save our country.


Star Parker

Star Parker is founder and president of CURE, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education, a 501c3 think tank which explores and promotes market based public policy to fight poverty, as well as author of the newly revised Uncle Sam's Plantation: How Big Government Enslaves America's Poor and What We Can do About It.


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Friday, February 24, 2012

Jeannie DeAngelis - Obama Talks about Standing Up While Sitting Down

Originally posted at American Thinker
Obama 2012 has a new campaign ad and it's pulling out all the stops. President Obama, First Lady Michelle and their two adorable daughters Sasha and Malia are pictured in what is being touted as the first family's holiday portrait.

In the photo, on the left Malia and Michelle are sitting with their perfectly-coifed heads tilting toward each other, smiling brightly. On the right side of the photo little Sasha is perched upon Dad's knee, head tilted in toward his, hands clasped together in obvious father/daughter affection.

The backdrop is a lovely shade of traditional Barack Obama blue. Covering the first family at chest height is a grey-tone banner soliciting support in an election year.

On the first line, although Joe isn't pictured
in the photo, is an Obama logo positioned between the embossed names: "Obama Biden."

On the next line is written, "Help the Obamas stand up for working Americans."

Then comes "Join our campaign," followed by "Paid for by Obama for America."

Besides having the previously off-limits Malia and Sasha in the photo, a few things about the ad are striking.

First of all, it appears an attempt is being made to soften up America's opinion of Obama. In order to help the nation forget the dismal disaster of Barack Obama's presidency thus far, the photo focuses on Daddy Barack: devoted, warm family man and loving father.

If winning is the goal, a more effective slogan would have been: "Who in America wants to be responsible for causing this poor family to endure having an unemployed Dad after January 2013?"

It's also a bit awkward to think that Mr. and Mrs. Obama would include their daughters in an effort to encourage America to help the Obamas (which Obamas do they mean?) "Stand up for working Americans."

This is a family, by and large, that doesn't work in any traditional sense. So having a perpetually vacationing family 'stand' for perpetually unemployed -- or endlessly working -- families just doesn't jibe. Moreover, in the picture on his ad about 'standing,' ironically, the President is sitting, which is the crux of the problem with Obama to begin with: he's always doing the opposite of what he says he's going to do.

The plea to the nation -- many of whom are already 'standing' in unemployment lines -- is to help the Obamas stand. Shouldn't it be the other way around? And what's up with that, anyway? America used to be about people standing on their own.

That right there -- sitting down while talking about standing up, sending a message that in America we must depend on others for help to do the simplest things -- sums up the destructive nature of the last four years.

And so the Obama campaign creates an ad that's lovely to look at, with a logo and a catchy motto featuring the smiling Obama family, but what Obama 2012 fails to realize is that the ad also sends a message that they probably never intended.

If voters make the mistake a second time to "Help the Obamas stand up for working Americans," they can rest assured that the Obamas will remain sitting for four more years, and there will be even fewer "working Americans" for them to not stand up for.

Therefore, let's hope the Obamas keep right on sitting, but do it somewhere besides the White House; maybe then all Americans can finally move forward by standing up for themselves


Jeannie DeAngelis


Jeannie DeAngelis writes almost exclusively for American Thinker and has been published on the conservative website Pajamas Media, as well as hosting a blog. See Jeannie's Blog

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