“All is race,” wrote Benjamin Disraeli, “there is no other truth.”
By Patrick J. Buchanan
What Disraeli meant by race is what Winston Churchill meant when he spoke of “our island race” — a tribe, an ethnic group, a people unique and separate from all others.
http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=3572 therein described what happened to Europe in the 20th century as the violent and bloody partition of all the multiethnic nations and empires into homogeneous states where each “race” at last had its own country to secure its own separate and privileged existence and tribal interests.
Only then did peace come to the Old Continent.
The process may not be at an end. Serbs in Bosnia and Kosovo wish to be with their kinsmen. Scots want out of Britain. Catalan and Basque seek independence from Spain. Flemish and Walloon are suing for divorce in Belgium.This tribalism is now bedeviling America and the presidential politics of this diverse nation, and roiling its most diverse party.
The dominant minorities in the Democratic coalition are blacks, Hispanics and Jews. Though Obama began this campaign with under half of the black vote, African-Americans are now voting close to 90 percent for him. Dixiecrats called that the bloc vote. Ex-Goldwater Girl Hillary is now getting Goldwater’s share of that vote.
African-Americans are rejecting the wife of our “first black president” — for the real thing.
And though Latinos are similar in educational levels, incomes and political orientation to blacks, they seem as resistant to Barack’s candidacy as white working men.
And where race and ethnic wedge-driving was thought to be the province of the Lee Atwater School of Republican Politics, liberals have shown themselves more than adept.
“I like the fact that his name is Barack Hussein Obama, and that his father was a Muslim,” said ex-Sen. Bob Kerrey, a Hillary backer, in Iowa. “I think it is a tremendous asset for him … that he spent a little bit of time in a secular madrassa.”
The day of South Carolina, Bill Clinton volunteered, “Jesse Jackson won South Carolina in ‘84 and ‘88. … Ran a good campaign.” And what do Jesse and Barack have in common?
http://buchanan.org/blog/?p=959