Race Relations Much Worse Thanks To  Obama And Holder 



Investor's  Business Daily: 
editorials
 
072513
 
 
Division:  A not-so-funny thing happened on the way to post-racial America. 
Under our first  black president and "Great Uniter," polling shows a 
serious worsening of race  relations.

 
 
Remember Los Angeles-based street artist Shepard Fairey's famous red, beige 
 and blue Obama "Hope" poster for the 2008 campaign? In the heady days of 
early  2009, the New Yorker magazine's art critic declared that Fairey had 
"created the  most efficacious American political illustration since 'Uncle 
Sam Wants  You.'" 
The week before that grandiose pronouncement, the then-new attorney general 
 of the U.S., Eric Holder, made his own grandiose remark: "Though this 
nation has  proudly thought of itself as an ethnic melting pot, in things 
racial 
we have  always been, and we, I believe, continue to be, in too many ways a 
nation of  cowards." 
Holder vowed back then that his Justice Department "must and will leave the 
 nation to the 'new birth of freedom'" promised by Abe Lincoln. But what 
has  happened in the 4-1/2 years of Obama and Holder since then? Race 
relations have  gone into a free fall. 
According to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, the share of 
Americans  who consider race relations "very good" or "fairly good" has 
plummeted 
from  above 70% between 2009 and 2011 to only 52% today. 
Perhaps most amazing is the poll's finding that just 38% of blacks in the  
U.S. — in spite of America's first black president being re-elected less 
than a  year ago — hold a positive view of the current state of race relations. 
At the  outset of Obama's presidency, by comparison, no doubt with Fairey's 
iconic,  feel-good image in mind, nearly 80% of whites and some 63% of 
blacks had a  favorable viewpoint on ties between the races. 
Are the ingredients for racial combustion swirling dangerously together 
this  midsummer? With the public still digesting George Zimmerman's exoneration 
on all  charges in the death of Trayvon Martin, a racially charged new 
offering from  leading Hollywood lefty Harvey Weinstein is hitting movie 
houses. 
"Fruitvale Station," with Oscar written all over it, plays fast and loose  
with the facts of the shooting of unarmed black 22-year-old Oscar Grant by a 
 white policeman in Oakland on New Year's Day 2009. 
Every chance Barack Obama and Eric Holder get, they seem to pick at the  
nation's healing racial wounds. 
Taking sides against a jury's decision, the Great Uniter declared that  
"Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago," and later called for a  
national "conversation" on race — code for "endless lectures" by the left. 
Holder, meanwhile, this week defied a recent Supreme Court ruling by  
launching an attack on heavily Republican Texas' voter-ID laws. Yet the  
undeniable Black Panther voter intimidation in Philadelphia gets shrugged off 
by  
his Department of Justice. 
There is also, of course, the tragic irony of black unemployment of close 
to  14% under the first black president,over six points above the general 
jobless  rate of 7.6%. 
The colors on that Obama poster have faded, sadly, with nonwhites the 
biggest  victims of this divisive president's extreme  policies


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