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The Chris Matthews Show: Media Decides It Was Right To Ask Obama About Gates' Arrest To Make White America Feel Better

[media id=9171] (h/t Heather) I love navel-gazing on the part of the media, where they decide collectively that they were right to create a meme whic

Afghanistan, any one? Health care reform? The economy? Any of those ring a bell?) are left undiscussed is simply giving red meat to the right wingers eager to derail any actual progress in this country. And the responsibility for that falls on bobbleheads like these clowns, not Obama.

Transcripts below the fold

MATTHEWS: He (Obama) made himself the focus of a lot of attention about empathy and who he is, what side are you on, do you think he was thinking he was doing that at the time when he did this? Started all this?

FINEMAN: No, because the progress that he made—the Sotomayor nomination—she did convince people, by her bearing, by her knowledge, by her experience, that she was eminently qualified and in that sense, was beyond this. Both of her race, but beyond it. This is not what Barack Obama’s political advisors wanted him to be doing up there. Because it turns it into a racial conversation, per se, at a time when he’s being president of all the country. And trying to be president of all the country and this feeds into the narrative of what I call the RNC—the Rush Newt Cheney RNC—which is all about fear, accusation and division. Barack Obama as president has to be about national unity.

MATTHEWS: It’s all about identity politics again, and at the same time these people on the far, far right are talking about whether he’s a citizen or not, this comes up.

DUFFY: And when the White House Press Secretary calls it a ‘distraction’, you know it was a mistake. And his mistake was pretty simple, which was that he didn’t really have all the facts, and was not in a position to talk about it. He was right to take it up, because it is an issue that is important, and it’s one in which he is completely versed, and you can see from the rest of his statement, that he knows exactly what to say. But I also think it came at the end of that press conference, which was about a completely different subject, and I think he was a little punchy by then. He was talking about you know what would happen to him in the White House, and it was a joke and he kind of lost the seriousness of the moment and I think got off track…

MATTHEWS: Yeah, I agree with that, the moment was important. I think he was a little angry, a little fatigued. These guys get up at five in the morning and this was eight at night. Is this going to be around a while?

CONNOLLY: I think that it has that possibility. If you look at what Gov. Deval Patrick said up in Massachussetts, another African American leader close to Barack Obama, he said, “This is every black man’s nightmare.” This is a topic that perhaps needs a little bit more exploring, but in a calm, rationed sort of conversation.

DUFFY: I think it does…I think we’re going to see now an accelerated crime initiative from the Obama administration, just to get…just to signal, no, I’m not kidding, just to signal to police that he’s on their side…

MATTHEWS: That he’s on their side…

DUFFY: …That he’s not completely clueless… That’s right.

FINEMAN: He went to great lengths as a candidate, to say that he could be president of all America. He understood all the different cultures and wanted to learn about all the different cultures of America. This kind of thing sets him back with working class whites.

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