The Sable Verity

You can disagree, but I’ll still be right

McCain “rejects” Pastor Parsley

Hours after his rejection of Pastor John Hagee’s endorsement, John McCain rejected the backing of Pastor Rod Parsley, who said that Islam was a “conspiracy of spiritual evil.”

“I believe there is no place for that kind of dialogue in America,” he told the Associated Press. “And I believe that even though he endorsed me, and I didn’t endorse him, the fact is that I repudiate such talk, and I reject his endorsement.”

The decision to cut off Parsley could have the bigger impact on the presidential race: in 2004, the Ohio pastor was a major figure in an unprecedented evangelical turnout operation that helped an anti-gay marriage ballot initiative pass overwhelmingly, and which was widely believed to have helped President Bush carry the critical swing state state – and the presidency — by a slimmer one.

The leader of the World Harvest Church in Columbus also founded the Center for Moral Clarity — an organization which has held that adultery should be treated as a crime – during the last presidential cycle.

May 24, 2008 Posted by Sable | Election, The Racial Debate | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

MCain “rejects” Crazy Ass “Pastor” Hagee Endorsement

UNION CITY, Calif. — Republican John McCain has rejected the endorsement of an influential Texas televangelist criticized for his anti-Catholic views.

John Hagee, the Texas preacher, withdrew his endorsement at the same time.

McCain issued a statement after audio surfaced in which Hagee said God sent Adolf Hitler to help Jews reach the promised land.

McCain said in a statement: “Obviously, I find these remarks and others deeply offensive and indefensible, and I repudiate them. I did not know of them before Reverend Hagee’s endorsement, and I feel I must reject his endorsement as well.”

Hagee also issued a statement saying he was tired of baseless attacks and he was removing himself from any active role in the 2008 campaign.

May 22, 2008 Posted by Sable | Election, Issues, Politics, The Racial Debate | , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Well, well, McCain lied about Hagee, big shocker

Yes, I’ll try and temper my shock at this one, aren’t you shocked? 

John McCain has been relatively successful in getting the media and everyone else to not bring up Pastor Hagee after Hagee said some pretty fucked up things about…well, everyone who wasn’t male, christian and White, though we here at Sable Verity have info on it here, here, here and here…oh and here too….wait…here, here and here, too.  Okay, that’s all.

Now it turns out that McCain was chasin’ Hagee’s skirt for over a year, as if desperate to have his endorsement to be able to to tout, lean on and brag about as they saw fit.

McCain and camp argued that his relationship with Hagee, and the endorsement by Hagee, was completely different than Obama’s Rev. Wright flap, because he didn’thave a 20 year relationship with Hagee, like Obama did Wright.

But Obama didn’t seek Wright’s endorsement.

McCain sought after Hagee’s.

That makes McCain even or worse, in my book.  He acted as if he really didn’t know who Hagee was or what he stood for when he accepted his endorcement.

He lied.

John McCain likes to think of himself as a straight shooter–a man of honor who doesn’t duck tough questions. But at least one question does get him bobbing and weaving: why doesn’t he renounce the endorsement of Pastor John Hagee, the San Antonio televangelist who has offended Roman Catholics and other groups?

On the trail, McCain tries to stay away from talking about Hagee. In New Orleans last month, he grew irritated when asked about the pastor’s views on Hurricane Katrina. “It’s nonsense, it’s nonsense, it’s nonsense,” McCain said when a reporter drew attention to Hagee’s 2006 statement to National Public Radio that New Orleans had suffered “the judgment of God” because of its “level of sin.” McCain refused to disavow Hagee’s support. “Would I consider repudiating his endorsement?” McCain said to reporters on the back of his bus. “I certainly condemn those parts of his remarks. [But] I continue to appreciate his support for the state of Israel and for many of the good things that he and his church have done.”"

McCain and his aides draw a sharp distinction between his relationship to Hagee and Barack Obama’s ties to the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. “I didn’t attend Pastor Hagee’s church for 20 years,” the candidate told reporters on his Straight Talk Express. “And there’s a great deal of difference, in my view, between someone who endorses you, and other circumstances.” McCain’s aides attribute the Hagee controversy to poor vetting. But even some Republicans (not affiliated with the campaign) privately wonder how the pastor’s extreme views slipped through without notice. McCain personally wooed Hagee for more than a year. In early 2007, the Arizona senator traveled to Hagee’s Cornerstone Church in San Antonio, where the two men had breakfast. They bonded over a shared commitment to the protection of Israel, a meeting that McCain later cited as a sign of his outreach to social conservatives.

While Hagee declined to publicly endorse McCain at that time, the pastor donated to his campaign and organized, with Jerry Falwell, a reception for the senator at a convention of influential religious broadcasters. After McCain’s campaign collapsed last summer, Hagee stuck with the senator, traveling in September to South Carolina, where he introduced McCain at the first stop of the candidate’s “No Surrender” comeback tour. In turn, the senator praised Hagee for his strong support for the war in Iraq and was a keynote speaker at the annual meeting of Christians United for Israel, a pro-Israel group that Hagee founded.

“When someone endorses me, that does not mean that I endorse everything he stands for and believes in,” McCain said last month. “I don’t have to agree with everyone that endorses my campaign.” But that may seem insensitive to those who have been offended by Hagee’s more controversial positions. The pastor has made some outrageous comments. He called the Catholic Church, among other things, “the great whore” and “a false cult system.” Hagee says his comments were taken out of context; he says he was not referring to modern Catholicism, but to what he says were the anti-Semitic views of the Catholic Church in the past. The Catholic League, which published a list of Hagee’s “slurs” against the church, has called on McCain to renounce the endorsement.

Hagee also has strong views about the Middle East. He believes the United States has a Biblical obligation to support Israel, and he has advocated a pre-emptive strike on Iran to protect the Jewish state. He opposes a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, suggesting that if Washington backs such a plan, God might punish Americans by dispatching terrorists. “If God brings this nation into judgment,” he warns in an undated video on YouTube.com, “he will very likely release the terrorists you’ve let get here through the ridiculous immigration policy you refuse to stop, and this nation is going to go through a bloodbath.”

Hagee threw his public backing behind McCain in late February, joining the senator at a press conference in San Antonio, where he promised his “vigorous, enthusiastic and personal support” of McCain’s campaign. But since then, Hagee and McCain haven’t been seen together. The pastor has tried to limit potential damage. After McCain visited New Orleans, for instance, Hagee backed off his remarks about divine retribution there, releasing a statement that “ultimately neither I nor anyone else can know the mind of God concerning Hurricane Katrina. I should not have suggested otherwise.” Hagee won’t answer questions about McCain or his campaign. “It’s better that I don’t,” he said on a recent conference call with reporters. That’s one view McCain probably does agree with.

May 11, 2008 Posted by Sable | Election, Issues, News, Politics, The Racial Debate | , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Double standard remains: Rev. Wright vs Pastor Hagee

 

by

“So I can understand, I can understand why people are upset about this. I can understand why Americans when viewing these kind of comments, are angry and upset.” -John McCain on the interminable Jeremiah Wright controversy (April 27, 200 8)
John McCain, the great empathizer, is running low on empathy. Quick to condemn the remarks of Obama’s former pastor on behalf of American umbrage, McCain is reticent about his own knee-deep quagmire of offensive associational guilt. While Obama has bitterly terminated his unpopular alliance, John McCain continues to cling indefatigably to his.
All is quiet on the radical Christian front.
McCain has made a deal with the devil–actually, three devils. Desperate to unify what is left of his ideological shamble of a Republican Party, McCain has allied with three of its most bigoted and hateful “spiritual” personalities: John Hagee, Rod Parsley, and (before his death) Jerry Falwell.
Though Americans take sincere offense at the vile statements of his powerful radical Christian allies, John McCain refuses to renounce them or disassociate himself from these hateful hucksters of hypocrisy.
Many, including Frank Rich today, have already noted that the mainstream media has effectively ignored this most unholy of political alliances. As a result, it is quite likely that many Americans have yet to hear any of these incendiary statements. The following is an 11 minute synthesis of the greatest scatological hits of McCain’s fundamentalist friends (see YouTube for myriad full-length footage):
It’s not hard to see the thematic and stylistic similarities between the rhetoric of McCain’s trinity-of-intolerance and Wright’s well-publicized harangue: both claim government orchestration of black genocide; both point to the moral culpability of Americans in causing their own tragedy on 9/11; both exemplify the outrageous theatricality characteristic of evangelical pulpit-speak; and both fulminate with conspicuous rage. Wright has been condemned for speaking kindly of the Jew-hating Farakhan; Parsley’s reference to the Rothschilds as he traces the genealogy of an international banking conspiracy wreaks of Protocol antisemitism.
But Obama established his relationship with Wright long before any of his inflammatory comments were made (and before Obama was made aware of them), while John McCain embraced Fallwell, Hagee, and Parsley with full knowledge of their bigoted reputations after they had argued their positions publically. McCain sold his maverick soul in a Faustian bargain with those very “agents of intolerance” he once impugned.
The Wright-affair will at most have raised questions for voters about Obama’s ability to negotiate a scandal. Since his final renunciation of Wright, there can be no remaining doubts over where Obama’s loyalties lie.
John McCain might privately disparage his radical Christian friends, but he has offered no indication to voters that he can untangle himself from their influence. McCain, like Bush before him, is deeply imbricated in the radical religious constituency that buttresses his party. As Arianna Huffington put it: the lunatic fringe of the party has hijacked McCain, like Bush before him.
Republican loyalists will hardly find these observations disturbing, since after all, better the devil you know than the angel you don’t.

 

May 3, 2008 Posted by Sable | Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Rev. Wright is a threat, not a hater

From the brilliant Black Sentinel:

I watched Jeremiah Wright preach and answer questions at the Press Club and I am still waiting to hear all this hate speech that people are so offended by. I mean I didn’t once hear him call the girls on the Rutger’s University Soccer team a bunch of stringy haired hoes. While being questioned by the white moderator at the Press Club did he get indignant with her straightforward questions and call her a stupid ass cracker? I guess not but he did point out that the words spoken by him after 9/11 were not his own but the words of the Iraqi Ambassador who said them the day before. Yet, read any right wing or racist Blog out there and they seem to overlook that one and continue printing he is unpatriotic. Read more »

May 2, 2008 Posted by Sable | Election, Issues, News, Politics, The Racial Debate | , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments

Black churches and Rev. Wright; opinions differ

The New York Times
updated 9:16 p.m. PT, Thurs., May. 1, 2008

LUMBERTON, N.C. - The Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., under fire for statements that have embarrassed Senator Barack Obama’s campaign, has found staunch support in the pulpits of black churches around North Carolina. The people in the pews, however, are far less accepting.

In interviews at churches in cities and towns including Charlotte, Greensboro, Lumberton and Goldsboro, ministers expressed the view that Mr. Obama and Mr. Wright had been attacked by a superficial and biased news media. Many said they were teaching Mr. Wright’s sermons in Bible study classes. They are delivering lectures on the roots of Mr. Wright’s style of ministry and preaching against what they see as attempts to make Mr. Wright a divisive figure. Read more »

May 2, 2008 Posted by Sable | Election, Issues, News, Politics, The Racial Debate | , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment