Colin Powell’s Endorsement: What It Means to a Young Black Repub

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

While former Secretary of State Colin Powell endorsed Barack Obama last week in a fairly straightforward (and diplomatic) manner, the reactions from the media and blogosphere have been not so subtle.

From Rush Limbaugh’s radio rant saying that Powell’s support was based on race, to political experts suggesting that his decision will undoubtedly sway the independent voters, it seems like the Republican’s mavericky endorsement means different things for different people.

For Charles Claudio Simpkins, a 23-year-old black Republican who supports John McCain, Powell’s support for Obama was a “very calculated move.” To the Harvard law student, it wasn’t just about the decision itself, it was about where and when he made it. Here’s what he had to say.

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Amuse Bouche: WASSUP Obama

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

With a week before the presidential election, Dookie and the “WASSUP” boys are back after spending 8 years in hibernation with a new comedy. Only this time, they aren’t just pushing a beer but have jumped on the pro-Obama bus. Their latest video critiques the current state of the economy, the Iraq war, the Hurricane Katrina disaster and gives a big shout-out to Obama.

Skinhead Plot to Assassinate Obama Stopped

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

For many Obama supporters, Monday’s arrest of two white supremacist skinheads accused of planning to assassinate Democratic Presidential Nominee Barack Obama was too close for comfort. After Senator Hillary Clinton’s comment about the possibility of assassination during the Democratic primaries and Obama’s need for protection from the Secret Service very early into his campaign, this arrest has reminded many Americans about the real and constant threat to his life.

In addition to their plot to kill Senator Obama, Daniel Cowart, 20, of Bells, Tenn., and Paul Schlesselman 18, of West Helena, Ark. were also planning to shoot or decapitate 102 black people in Tennessee, according to the Associated Press. The court documents obtained during the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) investigation revealed the two men met over the internet.

According to the latest Reuters report:

“The men stole guns from family members and also had a sawed-off shotgun. They planned to target a predominately black school, going state to state while robbing individuals and continuing to kill people,” said an ATF agent in the affidavit.

The suspects, Cowart and Schlesselman, have been criminally charged with “making threats against a presidential candidate, illegal possession of a sawed-off shotgun and conspiracy to rob a gun dealer.

Reportedly, the men charged are neo-Nazi skinheads who incorporated the numbers 88 and 14, which are symbolic among white supremacists, into the racially motivated killing plan. The number 8 is said to refer to the eight letter of the alphabet, H. And a double 8 (88) stands for “Heil Hitler” according to James Cavanaugh, an ATF special agent in charge of the case.

During the Democratic primaries, many African American voters had expressed reservations about voting for Obama because of this very concern. Whether or not this ends up as an unlikely October Surprise for Republicans in the voting booths remains to be seen.

Race in America: SWM Befriends SBM

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Devin Friedman wants white people and black people to be friends. Instead of lecturing from the soapbox, however, he leads by example and tries to make a new black friend of his own.

In an article in the November issue of GQ, the senior correspondent writes that he looked around at a cocktail party he and his wife were holding at his house and realized how white his life had become, so he placed an ad in Craigslist asking a black person to be his friend.

The 7,500 word story that ensued provoked a flurry of responses, many of them positive, though he did get a few knocks. How, for instance, could he support such blatant tokenism? He doesn’t, though he argues that it’s okay to count your black friends (“I couldn’t handle walking around knowing that I have the same number of black friends as George W. Bush,” he writes).

But Friedman would be the first to tell you the article’s not just about him trying to find a new pal with skin darker than his own. What is it, then?

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Morning News Roundup: The Convicted Edition

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

When in doubt, disclose … Alaskan senator Ted Stevens was convicted Monday by a federal jury of hiding more than $250,000 of free home renovations from an oil contractor and other expensive gifts. The Anchorage Daily News has a great account of the courtroom scene as the senator waited for the jury’s decision. By all accounts, Stevens’ strategy of asking for a speedy trial and taking the stand in his own defense backfired. The senator will fight his conviction, saying to his wife as he left the courtroom, “It’s not over yet.”

What does that other Alaskan think? Governor Sarah Palin guarded her words in a statement after Stevens’ conviction was announced. “This is a sad day for Alaska and a sad day for Senator Stevens and his family … I ask the people of Alaska to join me in respecting the workings of our judicial system and I’m confident that Senator Stevens from this point on will do the right thing for the people of Alaska,” Palin said. She didn’t call for Stevens to resign or halt his re-election campaign, but it looks like the senator’s bid for an eighth term might be toast. Most polls taken before the conviction had Stevens’ democratic challenger Mark Begich ahead.

No substitute for on-the-ground reporting … A cross-border raid into Syria on Sunday by U.S. special forces killed an Iraqi militant known for smuggling men and weapons into Iraq, an American official confirmed Monday. More details come from two Associated Press reporters who filed a story Tuesday from the town where the raid occurred. They write, “At the targeted building, the floor was bloodstained Monday, with abandoned tennis shoes scattered amid pieces of human flesh.” No security presence in the town suggests the Syrian government wants details of the attack to come out.

Get to know the candidates … or not. The Los Angeles Times‘ campaign beat writers each filed reflections Tuesday about covering John McCain and Barack Obama. Each Times story has some juicy anecdotes, and we’re likely to get a bunch more of these “tales from the trenches” stories over the next week as the presidential campaign comes to a close. Maeve Reston talks about the part she played in changing McCain’s relationship with the press when she asked him in July if it was unfair for some health insurance companies to cover Viagra but not birth control. McCain was more reticent to talk with reporters after that incident. Peter Nicholas says after covering Obama for 18 months he’s rarely seen the senator let his guard down and that Obama “can be sort of a bore.”

Baseball loves its statistics and records, so here’s another one: Monday night’s game in Philadelphia was the first World Series game to be suspended. And for good reason, too. When the Phillies and Tampa Bay Rays started playing it was raining lightly, but that turned into a downpour. By the time the game was suspended there was standing water on the base paths.