Thursday, October 06, 2011

Herman Cain: "Don't blame Wall Street"

I know, it's a novel idea isn't it. Especially in our no fault, blame everyone else first society. A culture that is always in pursuit of egalitarian fairness above and beyond common sense or reason . More importantly, Herman Cain shines a light into that dark place where the truth lives and as a result, you can count on him taking hits from the media and the liberals who always blame everyone else first for their own failures. And you can count on the left to brand Herman Cain as a racist based upon these remarks and others.

Can a black man in America be a racist? Most certainly he can, but only if he is not aligned with the ideology and partisan politics of the democrat party and their plantation management of racial politics in America. Read on.....

If you're not rich 'blame yourself' Unemployed Wall Street protesters only have themselves to blame for lacking a job, so says Herman Cain.

The Republican presidential candidate insisted that the demonstrations were being "orchestrated" to help President Obama.

"I don't have the facts to back this up, but I happen to believe that these demonstrations are planned and orchestrated to distract from the failed policies of the Obama Administration," Cain told the Wall Street Journal.

The Tea Party favorite then argued that the plight of the unemployed was their own fault.

"Don't blame Wall Street, don't blame the big banks, if you don't have a job and you're not rich, blame yourself. It is not someone's fault if they succeeded, it is someone's fault if they failed," the ex-Godfather's Pizza CEO declared.

The fiery remarks come as protest organizers plan for their biggest demonstrations yet -- at least 2,000 people are expected to gather in lower Manhattan Wednesday.


Cain's assessment is pretty simple. it's called accepting personal responsibility for yourself first and stop blaming others. As I said, a novel idea. Something the liberal left might learn from, particularly if they were to take a look back over their shoulders. Back to a time when a young American president was asking Americans to first ask what they could do for their country, before they asked what their country could do for them.

Fast forward fifty years and we have another young president who blames everything on everyone else. First he blamed his predecessor, then he blamed congress and now he blames everyday Americans for not sucking it up and not pressing on.

Meanwhile, he ignores the failures of his administration and it's failed blatantly socialist policies (which he owns), while at the same time continuing to demonize the so called evil rich and offering up taxation and more spending as the magic bullets to supposedly instantly cure all of our economic woes. Those responsible for creating and sustaining the American economy are demonized and held up for castigation for their success by this president, while his union organizing thugs march and shout right on! and demand that the government take more from the successful and give to them. Why? Because that's only fair!

There in lies the dichotomy between a black man like Herman Cain and the black man Barack Obama. Barack Obama blames America first and attacks every institution that made this nation great. Mean while, Herman Cain is calling out the truth and speaking truth to the false gods of socialist entitlements and government intrusion into our rights and freedoms: and as a result, Herman Cain has become a prime target of race baiting and those who seek to silence his message period.

Four years ago there were those who were concerned that there were elements of our society who might try to lash out at candidate and ultimately president Barack Obama. Is that concern any less a reality for Herman Cain? I believe that it is a realistic concern and more so as it concerns Herman Cain than Barack Obama.

When you are scanning the faces of protests and the screaming spewing of hatred and vitriol, you don't need to visit a Tea Party protest to find those images. On the contrary, you need to have a look right now at these 'occupy Wall Street' protests. It's always the same, be it occupy Wall Street or Code Pink or Pro choice or pro union marches, the participants at these leftists protests and marches are always manic and angered over what they see as unjust or racist or the result of the evil rich taking advantage of the poor. The liberal party line and lists of enemies never changes.

Herman Cain's message is beginning to resonate with black and white Americans and as such, the danger to him becoming the focal point of leftist anger and hate increases exponentially in my opinion. There is a point in time when Secret Service protection attaches to potential presidential candidates. I don't know when those decisions are made or what the qualifications of judgement to assign that protection is, but I certainly hope that the decision comes soon for Herman Cain. As I scan the faces and listen to the vitriol in these occupy Wall Street crowds, I fear for what might be spawned and spurred into taking some radical and manic action against the object of their hatred.

Meanwhile, Herman Cain is making a difference on the political landscape of this presidential cycle and he is doing so with reasoned arguments and simple concepts and an easy and down home articulation of his proposals to set this nation back on track to prosperity. Cain's proposals resonate at the grass roots level and that is scaring hell out of the left.

While the media is busily instigating dissension and keeping the pumps primed for the continued street theater of Romney vs. Perry, Herman Cain has steadily been rising in the court of public opinion and finding a connection with the American people. So much so now, that he has become a viable threat to the status quo. .Therefore, when Herman Cain speaks the truth, look to see the media scrutinize and attempt to find the flaws that they believe corrupt his message and make him an enemy to his own people. The media will be the one's to continually revisit the allegations of Cain's racism.

Racial politics is alive and well in America and what we are about to witness in the next few months will be a case study in why a black man like Herman Cain and black men like congressman Alan West cannot be allowed to be portrayed as either sensible or reasoned by democrats and a complicit media. .

No comments: