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Greg Mitchell

Greg Mitchell

Posted: October 5, 2010 11:31 AM

If you know much about Kathleen Parker, there was an awkward moment on last night's widely-panned debut of CNN's ParkerSpitzer. It came when screenwriter Aaron Sorkin, pressed for his views about Sarah Palin, frankly replied that Palin is an "idiot" and "mean" and then went on to also rip the current Republican party. Sorkin, however, took pains to explain that his hit new film The Social Network is not "political" at all and that he was probably driving movie viewers away with every word.

He didn't stop there, however, feeling he had to defend his views when asked by Parker why he considers Palin "mean." Sorkin replied that she considered people like him -- creative types who live in L.A. and New York -- not really American. Then he explained that his father fought in World War II, grandparents came to the country as immigrants and so on.

Why the awkward moment? Parker herself pushed the not-"full-blooded"-American envelope in 2008 when Barack Obama was running for president.

True, Parker is not a Tea Party or Coulter wingnut and earned some measure of hate on the right and respect on the left in the autumn of 2008 for labeling Sarah Palin not ready for prime time. This no doubt helped her get a Pultizer Prize for commentary last year. For the record, last night she said she "likes" Palin today.

Here's what I wrote in 2008 about her views on Obama. Perhaps she has grown in the two years since, though one has to wonder, given her "Elena Kagan Is Miles from Mainstream America" column last May. Well, maybe she'll have Brietbart on again to explain it all for us.

--

Kathleen Parker's mid-May column followed hard on the heels of a Peggy Noonan piece in the Wall Street Journal. Noonan had opined: "Hillary Clinton is not Barack Obama's problem. America is Mr. Obama's problem." Noonan wondered if Obama had ever gotten "misty-eyed" over the Wright Brothers, D-Day, George Washington or Henry Ford. "[W]hat about Obama and America?" she asked rhetorically. "Who would have taught him to love it, and what did he learn was lovable, and what does he think about it all?" She concluded: "[N]o one is questioning his patriotism, they're questioning its content, its fullness."

Parker, on the other hand, borrowed the words of another to set forth her central premise. She opened her mid-May column by quoting 24-year-old Josh Fry of West Virginia who said he backed John McCain over Barack Obama in that state's primary: "His feelings aren't racist, he explained. He would just be more comfortable with 'someone who is a full-blooded American as president.'" Of course, West Virginia went strongly against Obama in both the primary and later in the general.

But Parker assured us that her own views had nothing to do with race:

Full-bloodedness is an old coin that's gaining currency in the new American realm. Meaning: Politics may no longer be so much about race and gender as about heritage, core values, and made-in-America. Just as we once and still have a cultural divide in this country, we now have a patriot divide. Who 'gets' America? And who doesn't?... It's about blood equity, heritage and commitment to hard-won American values. And roots.


Some run deeper than others and therein lies the truth of Josh Fry's political sense. In a country that is rapidly changing demographically -- and where new neighbors may have arrived last year, not last century -- there is a very real sense that once-upon-a-time America is getting lost in the dash to diversity. We love to boast that we are a nation of immigrants -- and we are. But there's a different sense of America among those who trace their bloodlines back through generations of sacrifice.

Parker, of course, ignored the fact that Obama, in fact, is half-white, is related (god help us) to Dick Cheney, and can trace his family back as far as McCain in America -- to George Washington, even. And speaking of "generations of sacrifice": Obama's grandfather fought in World War II.

Those fine small-town Americans may not know any of that -- and Parker sure didn't remind them. "What they know," she related, "is that their forefathers fought and died for an America that has worked pretty well for more than 200 years. What they sense is that their heritage is being swept under the carpet while multiculturalism becomes the new national narrative. And they fear what else might get lost in the remodeling of America."

Even Hillary Clinton has "figured it out," Parker wrote. Her "own DNA is cobbled with many of the same values that rural and small-town Americans cling to. She understands viscerally what Obama has to study. That God, for instance, isn't something that comes and goes out of fashion."

After noting other true American values such as easy gun ownership, Parker concluded, "Full-blooded Americans get this. Those who hope to lead the nation better get it soon."

Greg Mitchell writes the popular Media Fix column for The Nation. A new "classic" edition of his book The Campaign of the Century will be published this month.

 
 
 

Follow Greg Mitchell on Twitter: www.twitter.com/GregMitch

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
M Jeffrey
12:25 PM on 10/10/2010
The term full blooded is so much BS.
Peabodies
We are the Many. They are the Few.
11:33 AM on 10/10/2010
Kathleen Parker must have been a "Valley girl" in her youth. I'd love to watch Elliott Spitzer (who was courageous enough, in his previous career, to go after powerful pharmaceutical companies peddling dangerous drugs ), but having her on the show is, for me, a no-go.
Ifeomamn
When MSM report Facts, USA thrives.
10:40 AM on 10/10/2010
Incredibly so sad. It's one of the reasons CNN and the media are having problems attracting more viewers. CNN was originally a laughing stock, until they proved themselves and became legitimate for all to view. But lately, especially since Fox took them over in ratings back in 2002, they have not been the same.

They hired a Cuban American strategist who did the ad for Jesse Helms, an ad wrongly depicting a Black hand taking jobs away from Whites. Mr. Hunt who was beating Helms in the poll, ended up defeated.
This year, they have Eric Erickson, a certifiable right winger. Now Parker and Spitzer. Then to top it all, the a British Guy, who for the last decade is know for tabloid not news to replace Larry King.

These people think smart news, factual and honest news are a thing of the past. They are wrong. Tabloid and having Dominick, a comic take half hour yesterday away from the news is part of CNN being washed away and out of their minds.

PBS news hour CNN gets 3M viewers daily. Try what they do. It works.

Parker smiles and having been raised in the South, she behaves accordingly. Of Course, to her senator Obama was not blooded enough for her. In her circle of friends, African Americans are seen for entertainment not thought of as a president nor an intelligent person.

If you doubt what 'am saying listen to how TBGOPers describe this president. It's personal, demeaning and coded.
liry
Runnin' on empty
09:19 AM on 10/10/2010
It seems that if there is in fact a "full-blooded" American, it would have to refer to the Native Americans; everyone else is descended from immigrants.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jobrien1950
fired up
09:05 AM on 10/10/2010
My father's family has been here since the revolutionary war; my mom's side, well, I'm third generation. Do I qualify as a full-blooded american? Miss parker? hello? Oh, I forgot to tell you that I'm caucasian. Do I qualify now?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Willow712
democratic socialst
06:54 AM on 10/10/2010
My Mom's side of the family is traced back to a gentleman in the Revolutionary war. He was a real American. lol.

IOW, One must be religious, grown up watching fireworks on the Fourth of July, and be lily white to be a Real American. No multicultural Heinz 57 for HER. America is a multicultural society with all colors, ethnic groups and religions. She needs to get over it.

I don't think she is talking about color as much as she is talking about class. Because the GOP is mainly lily white with money, and the Dems are a mixture of all kinds of people. This country used to be rich, middle class and poor. Now it is closer to rich and poor. So her real Americans must be the rich.
03:32 AM on 10/10/2010
She is pretty aweful. Spitzer's a talented guy. What she brings to the show I can't really tell. Plus, she has this annoying debutante accent.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
CarolinaYankee
01:27 PM on 10/10/2010
So sorry, she is another South Carolinian, another we cannot not be proud of. Lives in Camden, SC married to an attorney. That accounts for her annoying pageant accent.
09:23 AM on 10/07/2010
Unbelievable.
I thought we didn't have "classes" of citizenship in this country. That all American citizens were equal, whether they were naturalized yesterday, or could trace their family back to the Mayflower.
This kind of vitriol is sickening.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
racetoinfinity
restore Glass-Steagall now!
07:58 PM on 10/06/2010
Mses. Parker and Noonan may not realize it, but the phrase "a 'full-blooded' American" is a more primitive level of being than even Biblical literalism-mythic membership level. It's ties based on blood-kinship, a stunted level of understanding our common humanity that civilization transcended thousands of years ago. Each person has those levels inside them. They are being reactionary to the extreme, couched in ladies' magazine style gentility.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
1murillo
Can't be neutral on a moving train - Zinn
03:38 AM on 10/10/2010
In the US, 1% of "Black" blood - as if blood percentages can be measured - makes you Black; but 1% of "White" blood, doesn't make you White.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
curledup
10:57 AM on 10/10/2010
And that is just... messed up.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:04 PM on 10/10/2010
Keep in mind Obama, who is 50% black and 50% white chose to list his race as "african-american" instead of the more acurate "mixed-race" on the census. It's called identity foreclosure- racial identity politics are a two-sided coin, like most things in life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
reviewingthesituation
Southern liberal feminist
03:47 PM on 10/06/2010
And this is where a subtle and subconsciously calculated racism comes into the picture. Parker didn't overlook the fact that Obama's grandfather fought in WWII with an intent to deceive anybody. She overlooked the fact because she subconsciously overlooks the white side of Obama's family She does this because the black side of him, as a national figure, is so stunning, so unfathomable, to South Carolinian Parker that it's difficult for her to see anything else. His blackness trumps the entire maternal half of his DNA!

She'll never lynch anybody or encourage another to do so. She'll never mutter the "N-word" under her breath (well-bred Southern ladies don't do that) and she'll strongly revile Jim Crow laws. But her inability to see the forest for the black trees gives her views a real -- and dangerous -- bias.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leadsled
Love-child of the ghosts of FDR and Napoleon
03:04 PM on 10/06/2010
Since when was being an american about blood purity? Am I less american because my father is an immigrant, my mom's WWII vet dad's parents were immigrants, or that my mom's mom's family immigrated here in the 1850s? Is anyone who cannot trace their lineage on all sides to the Mayflower or a DAR member not an american?

Being an american should be about a shared sense of ideals. At minimum its about a shared citizenship. To say one american citizen is more "full blooded american" than another is just pure out and out racism. Is it even remotely possible that anyone would have said, "you know, he isnt a full blooded american" if we were talking about John Edwards or some other white guy?
09:25 AM on 10/07/2010
+1.
I'm sure there have been plenty of white politicians in the last couple decades whose families were relatively recent immigrants. A lot of folks came over here from Europe in the early 20th century. Are they less "American" than the ones who can trace their family back to the Revolution? Or are all things equal if you're white?
02:58 PM on 10/06/2010
McCain is a "full-blooded American" and Obama is not? Obama was born in Hawaii (a state) while McCain was born in Panama (a foreign country). It's hard to hide your racism with views like that.

Where are the birthers when you need them?
jhNY
Mercy.
02:26 PM on 10/06/2010
The real shame behind the Parker-Spitzer show to me anyway, is that Spitzer could be off doing actual legal work on Wall Street cons and fixers, as he is somewhat of an expert, rather than attempting to recast himself as an infotainer, of which sort we have a surfeit at least, presently.

As for Parker's 'full-blooded' biz from the election, it was low point for her and those of us who read it. She has done better stuff ocassionally, and should go back to it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leadsled
Love-child of the ghosts of FDR and Napoleon
03:06 PM on 10/06/2010
Spitzer should be running for reelection right now. That is the shame of this show's existence that we live in a country where something as pathetically unimportant as someone's bedroom foibles can force out an effective and good governor. Particularly one elected by some of the largest margins in history.
02:08 PM on 10/06/2010
I think the show's ratings put both her and Spitzer in perspective. It's just countdown to cancellation now. Some are betting three more shows, some are betting four.
01:04 PM on 10/06/2010
Just more of the veiled racism that vehemently denies itself. You don't want to see yourself as a racist. But you are. Stop dancing around it. Be it or quit being it.