Land criticizes Obama's reference to political 'enemies'
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (ABP) -- The Southern Baptist Convention's top
spokesman for moral concerns added his voice to a chorus of conservative
bloggers and commentators criticizing President Obama for telling
Hispanic voters to "punish your enemies" by getting out to vote.
Richard Land, president of the SBC Ethics and Religious Liberty
Commission, said on his weekly radio program that he was traveling
overseas in Spain when he first heard about comments made by Obama Oct.
23 in an interview on the Spanish television network Univision.
"If Latinos sit out the election instead of saying, 'We're going to
punish our enemies, and we're going to reward our friends who stand with
us on issues that are important to us' -- if they don't see that kind
of upsurge in voting in this election -- then I think it's going to be
harder," Obama told the Spanish-language radio station. "And that's why I
think it's so important that people focus on voting on November 2nd."
Conservative pundits and politicians accused Obama of race-baiting. Broadcaster Laura Ingraham called the remark un-presidential and House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) planned to use the line in a campaign rally.
Land led off the Oct. 30 broadcast of "Richard Land Live" by describing the president's comment as "dangerous" and "beyond the pale."
"I don't know that President Obama has done anything during the course
of his presidency that is as possibly dangerous as what he did in this
speech," Land said.
"I don't think that I can remember a single time in my entire
lifetime ... when a president of the United States in talking to his
fellow Americans has called other Americans enemies and said they need
to be punished," he said. "That's raising the stakes to a new level or
bringing the discourse to new low. Wow. That's dangerous."
Land said the president's statement gives voters "a window into his mind" that is "not a pretty picture."
"I must tell you I am frankly disturbed that a president of the United
States -- in talking to his fellow Americans and in encouraging them to
get out and vote, he said you need to get out and punish your enemies,"
Land said. "It's first of all disturbing on that level. Secondly it's
disturbing on the level of this is blatant racial politics. This is the
president who was supposed to bring us a post-racial president, but this
is clearly racial politics. He is clearly trying to inflame Hispanic
passions against those of other ethnic groups."
Land praised Obama for talking about race in a campaign speech in March
2008, calling it a "very good" and "brave" speech. "But now he's talking
about asking Americans to come out and vote and punish other Americans
-- not defeat them, not beat them [but] punish their enemies. That's way
beyond the pale for an American president, and I'm stunned by it and
I'm disappointed by it and my guard is up even more on this president
than it was."
Land took a call from one listener who said she had heard of other
recent comments by Obama to the effect of it was time to send
Republicans "to the back of the bus."
Land said he had heard that comment as well. "It's offensive," he said.
"I don't think it's quite as inflammatory as calling on Americans to
punish their enemies who are fellow Americans, but can you imagine if a
white candidate or white president said Democrats need to go to the back
of the bus?"
"It's an unacceptable comment, and the president should know better,"
Land said. "As a person of color himself he should know better."
The comment Land referenced was an analogy that Obama used in recent
fund raisers to say the Republicans were the ones who had driven the car
into the ditch.
"And they're saying, 'Excuse me, we want the keys back,'" Obama said at an Oct. 25 reception in Providence, R.I. "You can't have the keys back. You don't know how to drive!"
Obama went on to say "we can't have special interests sitting shotgun"
and that "we've got to have middle-class families up in front."
"We don't mind the Republicans joining us," Obama said to laughter. "They can come for the ride, but they got to sit in back."
Conservatives including
Fox News commentator Glenn Beck said they interpreted the remark as a
veiled reference to days of the segregated South when African-Americans
using public transportation could be ordered to move to the "back of the
bus" so that the front seats would be reserved for whites.
Obama repeated the car-keys analogy at a rally Oct. 31 in Chicago, but he dropped the "back seat" line.
Land said leaders in Congress should "call him on the carpet and say,
'Mr. President, you need to apologize for talking to your fellow
Americans and telling them that other Americans are their enemies and
need to be punished and for telling some Americans they need to go to
the back of the bus."