CARTER IS POSTER BOY FOR “ACTS
BASED ON RACISM’
I don’t know how Jimmy Carter can look
himself in the mirror. He has made hypocrisy an art form.
When asked recently about the actions of
South Carolina Republican Cong. Joe Wilson, who stunned the crowd during
President Barack Obama’s address to a joint session of Congress on
health care reform a couple of weeks ago by yelling, “You lie!” at the
president’s assertion that reforms would not be made available to
illegal immigrants, Carter opined that Wilson’s remarks were “an act
based on racism.” He should know. He is poster boy for acts based on
racism. That is how he became governor of Georgia.
You’ve heard it before, but it bears
repeating: In 1970, Carter ran one of the nastiest, most racist
campaigns imaginable against former Gov. Carl Sanders, who unlike his
counterparts in neighboring states, had taken the high road on race
relations during the turbulent mid-’60s. He slandered Sanders every way
possible from calling him a (shudder) “liberal” to looking the other way
when his integrity-impaired lackeys showered Klan meetings with photos
of Sanders with his arm around a black basketball player.
Sanders had rejected an effort by the
Legislature to bring race-baiting Alabama Gov. George Wallace to
Atlanta, but Carter pledged that if elected he would invite Wallace to
address the General Assembly.
Carter also refused to attend the funeral
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1968, while his campaign staff noted
ominously that Sanders had paid tribute to King.
Carter then had the unmitigated gall in
2006 to appear at Coretta Scott King’s funeral and use his time to trash
President Bush, who was seated behind him, instead of apologizing for
the disrespect he had shown Dr. King and his followers after the civil
rights leader’s assassination. The black opportunists who gave him his
soapbox showed an equal lack of class. If they had a shred of decency,
they would have remembered those days when Carter was treating them like
second-class citizens. Sanders had too much integrity to demean blacks
just to get elected. Carter did not.
Keep your fingers crossed, but since
Barack Obama became president, you have not seen Jimmy Carter traipsing
around the world, criticizing sitting presidents and trying to make his
own foreign policy. I would be sorely disappointed if our current
president allowed this egomaniac to jeopardize our national security in
order feed his craving for the limelight. Let him write his
pontificating op-ed pieces for the New York Times. They deserve each
other.
Georgia has produced some great public
figures in my lifetime: Senators like Richard Russell, Walter George and
Sam Nunn; Representatives like Carl Vinson, Phil Landrum and Charles
Weltner. Jimmy Carter is not in that group. He is an accident of history
and would still be shelling peanuts in Plains had President Gerald Ford
not pardoned Richard Nixon and enraged a nation. In 1976, voters would
have elected Elmer Fudd president. Instead, they elected Jimmy Carter.
Same difference.
Carter’s one-term presidency (and, yes, I
was in Washington the whole time) was a dud and pretty much assures his
ranking as one of the worst presidents in our nation’s history. George
W. Bush may join him on the list, but I doubt Bush gives a rat’s behind
what we think of him. Carter desperately wants to be loved and admired.
Good luck with that. Even Ted Kennedy didn’t like him.
I have chosen to ignore most of President
Peanut’s holier-than-thou pronouncements because of my wise daddy’s
advice: “Consider the source.” But when this guy calls anybody a racist,
I can’t let that pass. That is like calling a pig ugly. Jimmy Carter
either has a highly selective memory or no shame. Or both.
ON
ANOTHER SUBJECT:
This week marks my 500th syndicated column. I wasn’t sure how long I
wanted to do this, but I discovered my observations tend to hearten my
friends and frustrate my enemies, so I keep on going. Besides, I may be
the only columnist who has been able to unite gay groups and flaggers in
a common cause: Both hyperventilate at the mention of my name. I
consider that high praise.
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