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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Opinion Lott
to be thankful for It's not often that a monumental
blunder is actually a potential blessing in disguise; and, of course, it
remains to be seen whether the opportunity will come to fruition.
Regardless, we have a "Lott"
to be thankful for.
When former Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lott put his foot in his mouth by publicly pining for the
days of racial segregation, he gave the Republican Party -- and the nation
-- a chance to make some real progress in the awkward arena of race relations.
Privately, a few walking anachronisms
have clung to a constituency of petty and insecure lowbrows who try to
make themselves look better by looking down on someone else.
To most everyone's embarrassment,
this shadow has always been there, hiding behind code words and innuendo.
Just as privately, other folks
in the GOP have been aimlessly fumbling in the dark, trying to figure
out a way to root out this disturbing bastion of racial prejudice without
setting off an intramural war of recrimination.
Thanks to Lott the problem
has been solved. Well, maybe not The Problem, but at least the problem
of how to address The Problem.
Thanks to Lott, every figure
in the GOP, bigot and equal-opportunist alike, is publicly denouncing
racism with commendable vigor.
So, the political party that
has lately captured about 8 percent of the nation's African-American vote
has a chance to address black issues in the light of day.
Now, the questions is, will
it?
The lack of black enthusiasm
for the GOP does not mean that Republicans have nothing to offer black
Americans. There is an ample supply of black voters who possess conservative
views on economics, advocate a strong military, support GOP initiatives,
believe in the importance of the individual, and want a smaller federal
government.
Do these people vote Republican?
Of course not. Why should they? The GOP has been so careful to avoid offending
the Trent Lotts of the world that it has clearly ignored black America;
and blacks are understandably suspicious of a party that appears to harbor
racists.
The ensuing political polarization
has only exacerbated the nation's racial polarization.
Thanks, however, to Sen. Lott,
that festering scab of lingering racism is finally out in the open where
it has a better chance to heal.
In fact, the GOP has already
launched initiatives with black leaders to address the very issues the
party has long been so reluctant to deal with.
The toppling of Trent Lott
is an opportunity beyond anyone's wildest dreams.
Republicans, however, will
not be able to get by with mere lip service as the Democrats have done
so successfully.
While Republicans have traditionally
pretended that the problem doesn't exist, Democrats have relied on gestures
of Political Correctness and fanning fears of Republican racism.
In the economic arena, Democrats
curry favor with white racist and liberal voters alike by advocating meager
government handouts sufficient only to ensure that the recipients will
not be tempted to succeed -- a strategy that ensures a strong contingent
of government-dependent black voters who will continue to rely on Democrats
as their erstwhile saviors.
We can only hope that progress
will be made before the issue is swept back under the rug.
Critics argue that the voting
record of the new majority leader, Sen. Bill Frist of Tennessee, is not
that different from Lott's; but that's not really the point. All indications
are that the new majority leader is light years away from the provincial
mentality of a Senator Lott.
There is, at least, the possibility
of meaningful change. Yes, we do have a "Lott" to be thankful for. |
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