Last week, at numerous campaign rallies, Sen. John McCain and Gov. Sarah Palin, went after Sen. Barack Obama with a meat ax. Palin was particularly incendiary, saying that Obama was āpalling around with terrorists.ā
The Republican ticket, behind in the polls and facing an uphill battle to victory, is getting increasingly desperate.
But more desperate are their most passionate, rabid supporters. Fueled by hatred and bigotry on racist internet sites, hate filled e-mails and the talk radio bigots like Laura Ingram, Sean Hannity and Indianaās own bigot Greg Garrison, McCain/Palin supporters lashed out.
At their rallies speakers used Obamaās middle name āHusseinā as a spoken obscenity. Others screamed āterrorist,ā āArab,ā ākill him,ā āoff with his headā at the mention of Obamaās name.
Palin, whose racial sensitivity seems non-existent, didnāt temper the hate at her rallies. McCain also remained silent for several days. But after criticism from the media and from responsible Republicans, McCain, Friday, began to publicly rebuke and repudiate such attacks.
Then Congressman John Lewis, the former Freedom Rider, brutally beaten by southern racists in the early 1960ās, expressed what many African-Americans were feeling.
Lewis said he was ādeeply disturbed by the negative tone of the McCain-Palin campaign. (They) are sowing the seeds of hatred and division.ā
Lewis compared the hatred of McCain/Palin rallies with the George Wallace era. āHe (Wallace),ā said Lewis, ānever fired a gun, but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged vicious attacks against innocent Americans.ā
Lewis added, āSen. McCain and Gov. Palin are playing with fire, and if they are not careful, that fire will consume us all.ā
McCain cried foul. The Obama campaign said āLewis was right to condemn some of the hateful rhetoricā and āthe baseless and profoundly irresponsible charges from (McCainās) own running mate that (Obama) āpals around with terrorists.āā
Our community and like minded persons of every community agree with Senator Obama that āthe last thing we need is the kind of angry, divisive rhetoric that tears us apart at a time of crisis when we need to come together.ā
Meanwhile, in Indiana, Secretary of State Todd Rokita believes there was massive voter fraud in voter registration, specifically alleged faulty and phony voter registration forms turned in to Lake County by ACORN, the community activist group.
ACORNās record in voter registration isnāt faultless. In 2000 and 2004, in several states, ACORN turned in false and fraudulent voter registration forms. This is because ACORN pays people to get registrations, while every other community group, organization and political campaigns use unpaid volunteers.
Unlike other pundits and columnists, Iāve personally registered thousands of Indianapolis voters the past 22 years. When I do voter registration, quality control is key, so I let the voter fill out their own form, while being present to answer questions and concerns.
ACORN doesnāt do that. And thatās where the mischief and problems lie.
Rokita demanded criminal investigations after Black-hating internet blogs complained that thereās more registered voters in Marion County than adults.
On paper thatās true. But the bloggers and even Rokita misunderstand some basic demographic facts.
According to the 2007 Census American Community Survey (ACS), 16.2 percent of all Indiana residents move per year. In Indianapolis, 21.5 percent of all persons move yearly.
The 2007 Census ACS says 25.2 percent of Blacks statewide move yearly; 28.0 percent of Blacks in Indianapolis/Marion Couynty move yearly.
That means in the two years between major elections, roughly a third of all Hoosiers and upwards of 40 percent of Black Hoosiers move. That causes plenty of churn and change in the registration files.
In registering voters over two decades, Iāve been surprised how many canāt remember the address where they previously lived and were registered. Instead of filling out a change of address, they turn in a ānew registrantā form. I know this clogs the system, but until Secretary Rokita figures out how community groups can help voters remember where they were last registered, the rolls will be clogged.
Rokitiaās complaints that ACORNās sloppiness means fraud Election Day doesnāt match the reality of Rokitaās Voter ID brainchild.
If ACORN filled out registration forms for āMickey Mouse,ā āBart Simpson,ā āL. E. Fantā and other bogus names, those āpeopleā canāt vote unless they procude an Indiana state photo ID, driverās license or an American passport, which requires an orginal birth certificate.
Bottom line, if you subtract the inactive voters on the rolls, just in Marion County 84 percent of the adult populationās registered to vote. A stunning number. And a sign that November 4th wonāt be a good GOP day.
What Iām Hearing in the Streets
Polling updates. Last weekās WISH-TV/Channel 8 Indiana Poll has Obama and McCain tied at 46 percent in a statewide poll of 800 likely voters. Margin of error 3.5 percent and 10 percent of the pollās respondents were Black. The same poll put Gov. Mitch Daniels in a virtual tie with Democrat Jill Long Thompson 49 percent to 45 percent. Just 3 percent of voters were undecided. But the key stat is that 21 percent of Black voters are still undecided in the Governorās race.
Another sign that if Long Thompson doesnāt excite Black voters, sheāll lose big time.
At the huge Barack Obama rally last Wednesday at the Fairgrounds, Thompson impressed with her speech. But oddly, while Obama acknowledged Congressman Andre Carson and Senators Birch and Evan Bayh, Obama didnāt publicly acknowledge Thompson. Why?
It took a few weeks, but Time/CNN finally admitted the Black sampling in their latest poll which put McCain on top 51 percent to Obamaās 46 percent, margin or error 4 percent. A CNN spokeswoman said the poll was āweightedā to reflect Black adults at 8.5 percent.
That means the poll undersampled Black voters. In a detailed breakdown I received, Time/CNN indicated that there wasnāt sufficient sampling in among non-whites, 18-34 year olds, and residents of urban areas, Marion County, Northwest Indiana and East Central Indiana. All strong bases of Obama support.
The Time/CNN polling in Indiana and other states seems questionable in whether Blacks were properly sampled.
I had the opportunity speak to a paragon of civility last week with a rare interview on our WTLC-AM1310 program with Caroline Kennedy. The daughter of the 35th President John F. Kennedy and Jackie Kennedy Onassis, Carolineās endorsement of Obama last winter helped open eyes to the promise and possibilities of his candidacy.
Kennedyās appeal was simple and direct, urging our community to turn out and vote. I couldnāt agree more.
See āya next week!
Amos Brownās opinions are not necessarily those of the Indianapolis Recorder Newspaper. You can contact him at (317) 221-0915 or by e-mail at ACBROWN@AOL.COM.