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The earth's core, consisting largely of iron, helps balance our spinning planet. On the other hand, the core of too many of today's prominent political leaders consists almost entirely of unintended irony, which tends to make them go all wobbly on their political stands. This might be comical were it not so destructive for our nation.
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A BITTER TASTE OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION
I don't know how the corn crop is doing this year, but Washington is producing a bumper crop of irony for America's black farmers.
In the same week that Shirley Sherrod, a black department of agriculture official, was falsely accused of anti-white racism by a right-wing mob of political creeps and Fox TV yakkers, the U.S. Senate actually added to the government's long history of anti-black discrimination. At issue was payment of a billion-dollar legal settlement with thousands of African-American farmers who for decades were illegally denied essential crop loans from the ag department.
The settlement was agreed to way back in 1999 – yet, for more than a decade, Washington has refused to pay. This year, however, justice was finally to be delivered, for President Obama set aside $1.2 billion in his budget to make good on the government promise. But, no go, for congressional Republicans have furiously fought the payments.
Of course, the GOP solons insisted that they certainly support racial justice, but, alas, they wailed, the bloated federal deficit now compels them to cut spending. Never mind that they are the chief bloaters! In the past decade, they eagerly and recklessly added trillions of dollars to the national debt with unwarranted wars, tax cuts for the rich, bailouts for Wall Street, and subsidies for enormously-profitable corporations. Indeed, these very lawmakers continue to support $4 billion a year in needless giveaways to Big Oil – but they abruptly turn into tightwads on a single billion-dollar allocation owed to America's black farmers.
So while pundits and politicos were vilifying Sherrod for an act of discrimination that did not occur, senate Republicans cut the payments for thousands of official acts of actual discrimination. How's that for bitter irony? And Republicans wonder why they get no black support in elections.
"Despite Sherrod uproar, black farmers denied funds," The Charlotte Observer," July 24, 2010.
"The real story of racism at the USDA," http://www.southernstudies.org/2010/07/the-real-story-of-racism-at-usda.html, July 22, 2010.
"Thrown To The Wolves," The New York Times, July 24, 2010.
"The Sherrod Affair: A Rush to Judgment, an Apology," The New York Times, July 23, 2010.
"As Oil Industry Fights a Tax, It Reaps Subsidies," http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/04/business/04bptax.html, July 3, 2010.