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Thursday, May 8, 2008

Election 2008 In Search of Those Hard Working White People

Posted by Eli Sanders on Thu, May 8 at 5:12 PM

Hello from Medford, Oregon, way down south near the border with California, where the view from the Holiday Inn Express is as follows:

Medford.JPG

I’m here to attend a Hillary Clinton town hall meeting this evening at the Jackson County Fairgrounds—a place where, a friend familiar with rural Oregon tells me, I am sure to find many of those “hard-working, white Americans” that Clinton is staying in the race to represent.

Check back later to see how I do and what the white people tell me, but for now I bring you the hard working white man who I sat next to on the plane from Seattle:

Kirby.JPG

That’s David Kirby, 44, the pastor at United Family Fellowship in Klamath Falls, Oregon, just a short drive from Medford. He’s not a Democrat so, unfortunately, I don’t think he falls into the class of hard working white people that Clinton is courting. However, he did have some interesting things to say about Obama.

Kirby is one of those fascinating people who both know that Obama spent 20 years at a Chicago church with a fiery Christian pastor and firmly believe that Obama is a secret Muslim.

“All the evidence points to that he is,” Kirby told me. “I don’t trust him.”

The evidence Kirby has received comes in the form of emails from “watch dog groups” that he listens to, as well as chatter among his friends. He’s heard it all—Obama not saying the pledge of allegiance, Obama’s pastor engaging in hate speech, Obama being a Muslim—and he believes it all.

Granted, he also thinks Hillary Clinton is “crooked as a snake” and he wishes Mike Huckabee had won the Republican contest, but Kirby is nevertheless quite worried about a potential Obama presidency: “Having a Muslim for a president—if he’s true to his faith he’s going to be pushing the Muslim faith.”

I asked Kirby why he thinks Obama went to church for 20 years if he’s in fact Muslim.

“I have no idea,” he replied. “A lot of people have political reasons behind everything they do.”

And why would Obama lie about his alleged Muslim faith?

“If people of your faith had attacked New York City, and that is still fresh in Americans’ minds, wouldn’t you lie about it?”

What would it take to convince him that Obama is a Christian?

“If I heard him say Jesus Christ is Lord it would cause me to listen to him.”

I told Kirby that Obama has, in fact, said he believes in Jesus. Repeatedly.

“Oh, really,” he replied. “I didn’t know that. I hadn’t heard that.”

Kirby gets most of his news from email and the Internet, he told me, and then he instructed me that even if Obama does believe in Jesus, “believing in Jesus and believing that He is Lord are two different things.”

Kirby is from Albertville, Alabama, and he said he used to be filled with prejudice but that Jesus has filled his heart with love. “I don’t even know you, man, but I love you,” he told me.

If he only knew.

After I’m finish asking him questions about the presidential race he starts asking me about my religion. He finds out I’m Jewish. He wants to know if I believe in God. The snack cart interrupts.

I figure it’s dangerous to go down this road, so I decline to mention that airplanes are actually one of the few places where God and I have words.

He asks if I believe in the Book of Revelations. I tell him no, and, gosh, I’m really tired, should probably take a nap.

After the plane lands he tells me he’s going to pray for me as he’s getting into bed tonight. He also tells me that he hopes this image—him talking to God about me in bed—is with me while I’m in bed tonight.

Comments

Editor's note: Eli Sanders hails from our sister paper, the Stranger. He's in Oregon this weekend covering the Clinton and Obama visits, and will be cross posting here on Blogtown.

The Mercury news team will also be covering Obama and Clinton's Portland-area visits, starting tomorrow morning when the two candidates have private events at a Beaverton technology firm and at Doernbecher Children's Hospital, respectively.

And: fun, isn't it, how much your average Christer resembles a middle-aged gay dude, in terms of fashion choices?

I love how he used to be prejudice but now his heart is full of love.....except for crooked-as-a-snake Hillary, and the untrustable Muslim, Barack Obama.

wow, searching youtube for "obama pledge" gives you some interesting results. one of which is him reciting the pledge. can't they put a c-span clip in a commercial?


Soooo...is Obama a Muslim or is he ain't?

Nevermind. I'll just ask my sisterwives.

wait, what? I thought that was a very butch woman...

I can't believe Hillary's blatant playing of the race card. On tonight's news she basically said white people won't vote for Obama.

An unbelievable act of desperation, in my opinion.

You can't blame the guy for being a bit confused. Black Liberation Theology is a fusion of the teachings of former Nation of Islam leader, Malcolm X, and the traditional Christian faith preached by Martin Luther King.

It sounds as if you might need to read the books of James Cone, BLT's founder, who is credited as the inspiration for Obama's church on their website. He's the James Cone who wrote that white people are "the devil" and "all Gods who love white people" must be "kill[ed]".

Radical Muslim extremist or Black Liberation Theologist--pretty much splitting hairs to me--what about you?

Obama's political record and ties to a popular and traditional black Christian church are pretty telling-- he's not a conspiracy, just a mixed-race man in America who seems to be trying to understand life from all walks.

As for me, Lexi, I prefer not to assume to know a man's faith beyond his own words and actions. Also, I don't think that learning the teachings of Martin Luther King-- an inspirational pastor, civil rights advocate, and vocal critic of the Vietnam War-- is "splitting hairs" with being a "radical Muslim extremist".

But then again, I'm not pushing a political agenda using fear and deception. And you?

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