Nightline Insists Black Issues Unimportant
By David Sirota, Alternet
Sometimes racial denigration is easy to see - think white police officers in
the segregation era using hoses to stop peaceful protests. Other times it is
more subtle - like a few days ago on ABC's Nightline.
I don't usually watch the show, but I happened to be flipping through the
channels on Tuesday, when I caught the program's predictable piece on Reverend
Jeremiah Wright. Here was how correspondent David Wright (no relation to
Jeremiah) concluded his piece:
DAVID WRIGHT: Many black leaders had no comment on today's developments.
Obama could yet pay a price in the black community.
REVEREND AL SHARPTON: Some are going to agree. I think some are going to
disagree vehemently.
DAVID WRIGHT: But the real question now is what do white voters
think, especially the white voters of Indiana. They weigh in on Tuesday, and
Obama's hoping there's enough time to convince them that he and his
controversial pastor have gone their separate ways for good. (emphasis added)
So according to Nightline, there are questions about the painful and deep
fissures the Obama-Wright issue is causing in the black community, but those
aren't "real." No, "the real question is what do white voters
think" - and, according to ABC, they - and only they - "weigh in on
Tuesday" (apparently, Indiana's
black population doesn't get to weigh in...did someone suspend the Voting
Rights Act in Indiana?).