Trent Lott -- "The baggage of bigotry" hiding in plain sight
Saturday, January 22, 2005 at 10:21PM
TheSpook
What in the name of 'a just God" was
Trent Lott doing up there in front of the world, as master of
ceremonies for Bush's inauguration. This is the one day that America
really needs to show its best face -- not its "blackface." Lott
was ousted from his job as Senate Majority Leader in December 2002
after he said at the since-deceased Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday
bash that if Thurmond had been elected president when he was running as
a segregationist in 1948, "we wouldn't have had all these
problems over all these years." The solution
that made sense at the time was to oust him as majority leader. even
though his sins were not deemed of the level that he should or would
resign his Senate seat. Why? Because sensible people didn't want
somebody with a background like Lott's in such a visible role as the
No. 1 Senate leader. And yet, here is Lott -- out of 295 million
Americans -- whose face is on every TV network from Fox News to
al-Jazeera, introducing Bush for the "fresh start" of his second term.
Wasn't the idea to keep him hidden in the attic, at least for a while?
Bush's best line of the day was when he said "our country must abandon
all the habits of racism, because we cannot carry the message of
freedom and the baggage of bigotry at the same time." And yet he
allowed himself to be introduced by a 5-piece Samsonite set of bigotry.
Talk about undercutting one's message. [more] (maybe that was the point; talking to his Base - dog whistle style.)
Pictured above: U.S.
President George W. Bush laughs during remarks by Senator Trent Lott
(R-Ms) after taking the oath of office on Capitol Hill in Washington,
January 20, 2005.[more]
Lott interview with the "southern Partisan" [here]
After his inauguration, Bush takes direction from Billy Graham [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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