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A gift for Gwen Ifill

By Michelle Malkin  •  October 2, 2008 05:57 AM

An Ivy League prof responds to the Gwen “Age of Obama” Ifill controversy, no doubt with a tinge of regret in his voice, in an interview with the Boston Herald:

“It’s probably not the greatest thing on Earth that she is in that role and it’s probably going to really force her to be fully even-handed,” Thomas Patterson, professor of government and the press at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, told the Herald yesterday.

“Fully even-handed.”

As opposed to the usual partially (un)even-handed way the ogling Obamedia has operated the past 20 months.

Snort.

Anyway, Professor Patterson better be careful.

As I predicted Tuesday night, expressing even the slightest criticism of Ifill’s vested financial and ideological interest in the outcome of the election will get you labeled a…RACIST!

Speaking of which: You won’t believe (nah, you will believe) the number of e-mails from incensed Obama supporters who complained about this sentence in my column:

“It’s not the color of your skin, sweetie.”

The reference to Obama’s dismissive use of “sweetie” when addressing a female journalist sailed right over their heads.

Ignorant of the allusion, the complainers’ immediately proceeded to attack me for…RACISM!

This one’s for you, Gwen Ifill. Like they say, membership has its privileges:

***

On a related note, several readers send word of another Ifill who’s using the phrase “Age of Obama.” Go figure! It’s Ifill’s cousin, Sherrilyn, (”my brilliant baby cousin,” gushes Gwen). Here’s her piece, “The Relevance of Nooses and Lynching in the Age of Obama.” A sample:

The challenge for 2008 and beyond is for us to embrace the hope represented by the widespread acceptance of public figures like Barack Obama and Colin Powell, while continuing the hard work of sorting through the lingering effects and reality of white supremacy in our society.

And Ifill’s “brilliant baby cousin” weighs in on Sarah Palin (hat tip - Chris R.), whom she calls “offensive to black women:”

The actions and remarks of Palin are something that caught the eye of Sherrilyn Ifill, a University of Maryland law professor who has taught voting rights, equal protection and restorative justice.

“From the first day, Palin presented herself as shooting a bear in the morning, field dressing it, cooking up the breakfast, diapering the babies, passing legislation in the afternoon, cleaning the house, satisfying her husband, etc., etc., etc. And it’s just not true,” she wrote in an e-mail interview. “It’s hard to be an average working mom, really hard. And when women who are privileged present as though they have it all together, it’s offensive to black women.”

She said, “black women are not easily confused by false claims to feminism. When women like Palin lay claims to ‘representing’ average women, I think that black women have a visceral reaction to it.”

Ifill added that Palin “missed her opportunity when she announced Bristol’s pregnancy to explicitly talk about how painful it was to her as a mother - instead of making it as though this too was also part of her perfect life.

“Hillary has the sympathy of women because of what she went through with Bill in front of the whole country. Michelle [Obama] takes pains to be self-deprecating and to talk about her concerns and fear about her girls. She insists that she couldn’t do what she does without the help of her mother. Most importantly, both champion issues that affect the lives of real, average women - universal health care, equal pay, choice, etc. To do so is a recognition that real working women (not political wives or politicians) need olicies that will help them maintain their families. What’s the point of Palin’s brand of feminism if it doesn’t translate into real returns for average women?”

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  1. Blatant Anti-Palin Bias in the Liberal Media: A Collection (82 Cases) « BUUUUURRRRNING HOT
  2. Right Angles » Blog Archive » Stakes too high for Ifill to be ‘fully even-handed’
  3. A GIFT FOR GWEN IFILL « The Florida Patriot
  4. Obama, You Must Learn To Love Him! « Riggword Weblog
  5. Gwen Ifill’s “brilliant baby cousin” « The Right Daily
  6. Was Gwen Ifill tipping her hand? « The Right Daily
  7. PBS Defines Impartiality - Book In, Bumper Stickers Out | Bitter Knitter
  8. Preach on, SarahCuda! « The Right Daily

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Comments

Comment pages: « 1 [2]

  1. #101
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:04 am, Marshall Russ said:

    Ifill is telling us that we should wait and see if she was fair and unbiased.
    Despite the obvious financial implications for Ifill if Obambi wins, or just the political bias she has, we should wait until tomorrow. That is a courtesy that these “unbiased” journalist they have not extended to Sarah Palin. Tomorrow could be to late.

  2. #102
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:06 am, meatpieandtatters said:

    The problem with liberals today, and so-called commentators like Ifill, is that they are really mean-spirited.

    The fuming left, in words and text,
    are a most and ugly foul crew.
    Utter merely a word
    that you’re not in their herd
    and their beat you black and blue.

  3. #103
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:07 am, MtsEdge said:

    I read on Drudge that she didn’t inform the commission about her book prior to be selected.

    WOW.

    Another ethical lapse by a liberal which will have no real consequences. :roll:

  4. #104
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:08 am, Milwaukee Mike said:

    When Obama loses the election and Gwen makes no money on her book, it would be a nice gesture for Sarah Palin to offer her a guided moose hunt in Alaska.

  5. #105
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:13 am, right4life said:

    When Obama loses the election


    my friend
    mccain is doing everything he can to ensure obama wins in the name of bipartisanship…

  6. #106
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:13 am, jangar said:

    Another ethical lapse by a liberal which will have no real consequences.

    Why should it? Libs have no ethics, morals or principals that guide them. They make their own rules as they go, to fullfill their own desires.

  7. #107
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:18 am, Milwaukee Mike said:

    right4life said:

    Please pardon my optimism.

  8. #108
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:19 am, srhoades said:

    So according to Sherrilyn Ifill all black women are victims, who can only look up to bigger victims, and if someone takes the rough patches in her life and uses them to her advantage (or in the very least does not wallow in self-pity but tells herself “This too shall pass), then that person is an affront to all black women everywhere. Pardon me but that sounds rather racist.

  9. #109
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:19 am, MtsEdge said:

    Why should it? Libs have no ethics, morals or principals that guide them. They make their own rules as they go, to fullfill their own desires.

    moral relativism
    secular humanism

    resulting in chaos and decline of civilization

  10. #110
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:20 am, right4life said:

    Please pardon my optimism.

    sometimes I wonder if there is ANYTHING else mccain could do to throw the election…I mean its becoming a joke.

  11. #111
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:23 am, localmalcontent said:

    On October 2nd, 2008 at 8:41 am, lgm said:
    … The fact that both Powell and Obama are the first says something.

    Ordinarily, LGM, I leave your comments alone, feeling instead that your comments speak volumes for themselves, since you have no need of assistance putting that foot of yours into your liberal mouth.

    But that statement above is just completely ignorant of Black history.
    Powell and Obama, first?!
    Someone else mentioned Geo. Washington Carver; I’d also add Scott Joplin, the king of ragtime music, and ultimately the Godfather of American jazz.
    And I’d even add Gwen Ifill to the list which includes the Rev. King, every great Black actor, singer, and every state’s first Black politician.

    Obama, among the first? Naw.
    I’m a man of color too, though not Black, yet even I knew that wasn’t anywhere near correct.
    Please become more informed.

  12. #112
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:30 am, jangar said:

    moral relativism
    secular humanism

    resulting in chaos and decline of civilization

    Yep!

  13. #113
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:32 am, gayle said:

    Watching the stock market tank…..thanks CONGRESS…..AH’s

  14. #114
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:41 am, right4life said:

    Watching the stock market tank…..thanks CONGRESS…..AH’s

    I thought they saved us??? how can this be?

  15. #115
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:45 am, right_on said:

    “Hillary has the sympathy of women because of what she went through with Bill in front of the whole country. Michelle [Obama] takes pains to be self-deprecating and to talk about her concerns and fear about her girls. She insists that she couldn’t do what she does without the help of her mother. …the lives of real, average women - universal health care, equal pay, choice, … What’s the point of Palin’s brand of feminism if it doesn’t translate into real returns for average women?”

    I wonder why this bright, articulate, victimized, black law professor didn’t just state that she doesn’t like Palin because Palin hurts the image of the typical, average, liberal black woman of being the victim?

    Without victimhood, these poor women would actually have to act like American patriots, work for a living. They would have to stop sitting around on their fat-a$$es and actually contribute to the economy.

    Instead of having a commitment to do something positive for America, they prefer to be carbon-spewing, entitlement gobbling Obamatrons.

  16. #116
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:48 am, floam said:

    from RedState.com…….

    If you are as concerned about this as I am, you can call Paula
    Kerger, the CEO of PBS at (703) 739-8619 and Sharon Rockefeller,
    the CEO of WETA in Washington, D.C. at (703) 998-2089 and ask
    them to have Ms. Ifill recuse herself or, if they refuse, insist
    that Ms. Ifill fully disclose her conflict of interest.
    Note:
    The CEO’s number is answered by Mark Huey’s voicemail. He won’t return until next Monday…His cell # is:703-300-1158

  17. #117
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:53 am, floam said:

    Contacts for the Commission on Presidential debates:
    Paul J. Kirk, Jr
    (democrat & co-chair)
    Frank J. Fahrenkopf, Jr.
    (co-chair)
    Phone: (202) 872-1020
    fax: (203) 783-5923
    site address: http://debates.org/

  18. #118
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:55 am, uhangtight said:

    it is all about the victim. you can’t relate to me unless you know what it is like to be a victim. baloney! i am so sick and tired of that mentality, so negative and full of bitterness. this mentality has been rewarded for far to long in our society.

    looking at the positive and being positive has its benefits and it is time that this began to take precedent over the negative mantra of the left. being positive and thinking positive has its benefits for the community you live in as well as your personal life.

    i am so sick of this reverse racism being ignored by the media. this is racism and should be called out as such. it benefits no one.

  19. #119
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:56 am, SSG David Medzyk said:

    The thing about “average” is, there must be a high number……..and a low number.

    Apparantly mzzzzzzzz Ifill failed to understand that she falls into…….the low catagory.

    Some feminists can indeed live like Sarah, and some feminists live like mzzzzz Ifill. Then there’s the average :)

  20. #120
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:02 am, stevelockridge said:

    Milwaukee Mike said in post #104: When Obama loses the election and Gwen makes no money on her book, it would be a nice gesture for Sarah Palin to offer her a guided moose hunt in Alaska.

    And she should invite Dick Cheney to go along with them. Now I’m really gonna be branded as a racist. :)

  21. #121
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:08 am, MtsEdge said:

    being positive and thinking positive has its benefits for the community you live in as well as your personal life.

    so true :)

  22. #122
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:10 am, cheapseat said:

    this is machine politics pure and simple. name any city that once captured by the communist machine has reverted and gone back to neutral and voted republican. people will say l.a and new york city, but in both cases, the republican was a rino and the democrat running was a black incompetent socialist moron who had proven his inability to govern to everyone.

  23. #123
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:11 am, sambo said:

    1. Hillary has the sympathy of women because of what she went through with Bill in front of the whole country.

    She also notes that black women are offended by someone that has it all together. Ummm…excuse me, but isn’t that what the msm has been touting about MS. O? She can do it all and then some.

    Further, doesn’t Ms. Obama try to portray herself as someone who “has it all together”??? She can’t have it both ways here.

    Yes she can…and so can the libs. Isn’t Michelle Obama the one that said Hillary could NOT even keep her house in order?

  24. #124
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:14 am, sambo said:

    I think that black women have a visceral reaction to it.”

    visceral:
    characterized by or proceeding from instinct rather than intellect.
    characterized by or dealing with coarse or base emotions; earthy; crude:

    Doesn’t seem like Palin has anything to do with their reactions!

  25. #125
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:20 am, DesertLover said:

    stevelockridge

    Are you saying that Mzzzz Ifill might be mistaken for a moose? … Haven’t seen a photo of her but that may be considered an insult within the moose population … guess we’ll have to wait for the “News at 11″ to get an answer to that one … :smile:

  26. #126
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:38 am, Wayfaring Stranger said:

    Several people have questioned and/or discussed the term restorative justice; I was immediately reminded of an interview with Howard Zehr (”…director of the Conflict Transformation Program at Eastern Mennonite University and author of Changing Lenses: A New Focus for Crime and Justice) published in a 2004 issue of Christianity Today. The piece is titled A Justice that Restores. An excerpt:

    [question] How does [restorative justice] fit in with biblical teaching, which in parts clearly assumes the value of punitive justice?

    [answer] We have created, by a kind of misuse of theology, an unhealthy interplay between the legal system and theology. That has caused us to read biblical material with that framework, and we have really seen those punitive themes in the Bible. It’s not that there are no punitive themes in the Bible, but even in the Old Testament the theme that is much stronger really is the restoration theme: The idea that God never gives up on us. The core thing that [the Bible] comes back to is this concept of shalom. It’s this idea of how we ought to live together in right relationship with our Creator, each other, and with the creation. Wrongdoing violates shalom, and the response is to find a way to make shalom possible.

    Shalom is more than a greeting of peace:

    Jewish word of greeting, 1881, from Heb., lit. “peace,” prop. “completeness, soundness, welfare,” from stem of shalam “was intact, was complete, was in good health.”

    It appears that, based on some of the previous discussion here (nod to gunslingerpatriot #34), once again a sound biblical principle has been co-opted by liberals to mean something other than God intended.

  27. #127
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 11:49 am, CO2 Producer said:

    To number 30 (#81): :)

  28. #128
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 12:41 pm, tuffy said:

    Wait a minute! I have to whine about being a victim in order to be considered a real woman!?! That’s just crazy talk.

    Leftists do not own women. Knock it off, Lefties.

  29. #129
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 12:41 pm, RabbidSquirrel said:

    On October 2nd, 2008 at 10:19 am, srhoades said:

    So according to Sherrilyn Ifill all black women are victims, … Pardon me but that sounds rather racist.

    Cuz all da brothers will leave them for a white woman?

    Just listen to Kanye West’s song” Golddigger” (before I get banned…)

  30. #130
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 12:43 pm, frontierguy said:

    This is just like femenism, unless you give in to 100% of their ideology, you don’t belong. Where are the biographies of Condi Rice? If anyone deserves to be gushed over, it certainly is this remarkable woman. But, she does not sign on to Ifill’s victimology, therefore, she is just a house slave who should be ridiculed and ignored. It is official, I do not understand or get the left. Nothing they do makes any sense to me.

  31. #131
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:00 pm, MtsEdge said:

    Re the title of this blog, perhaps this is truly a “gift for Sarah Palin”. This way, despite her deference to her elders :) , she should be under no illusions this evening about which side the moderator supports.

  32. #132
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:08 pm, Ilovemycountry said:

    What’s really sad about all of these observations is that Gwen Ifill is so much smarter than all of you on this site.

  33. #133
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:11 pm, MtsEdge said:

    What’s really sad about all of these observations is that Gwen Ifill is so much smarter than all of you on this site.

    I didn’t notice anyone questioning her intelligence. Just her ethics, and her victim mentality.

  34. #134
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:42 pm, sims said:

    To Ilovemycountry
    Yes Gwen seems like a very smart woman as does her sister but sometimes smart people can be really dumb about certain issues. It is unbelieveable that women are now having to fight other women for the right to be who they want to be. Sarah Palin has the right to be herself and shouldn’t have to apologize to anyone for it and she shouldn’t lose her Real Woman badge just because she doesn’t claim the title of Victim on her resume. Someone with a high I.Q. who professes to respect fairness should be able to find room in her thinking for a different viewpoint on what being a woman means. I can’t see anything inherently racist about publicly supporting your pregnant teenage daughter or not complaining about how tough life has been. I think Gwen and her sister are looking so hard for racism in others that they can’t see it in their mirrors.

  35. #135
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:52 pm, bloodhound said:

    “…and it’s probably going to really force her to be fully even-handed,”

    Oh No! Not that! Not even-handed!

    “I’ve got a pretty long track record covering politics and news, so I’m not particularly worried that one-day blog chatter is going to destroy my reputation,” Ifill said.

    Gwen, it’s not the blogs that are going to destroy you, it’s you baby, just you!

  36. #136
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:54 pm, atheling said:

    On October 2nd, 2008 at 9:17 am,

    Dimsdale said:

    On October 2nd, 2008 at 8:41 am, lgm said:

    MM is not stupid. Playing stupid does not become her.

    There is nothing wrong with Ifill rooting for blacks to succeed. The fact that both Powell and Obama are the first says something.
    It is no different than insider trading or taking a fall in a prize fight. If Ifill was an honest journalist, she would have told the committee that she was writing the book, and that the income from that will be directly dependent on the outcome of this election, and the proposed publication date confirms this.

    Playing stupid does not become you either.

    Kapo lgm is not playing stupid. It’s real.

  37. #137
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:55 pm, atheling said:

    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:08 pm, Ilovemycountry said:

    Lame. Is that the best you can do? You come here and say the stupidest things, like some 12 year old.

    Now go finish popping those pimples.

  38. #138
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 2:12 pm, AlohaGuy said:

    “It’s hard to be an average working mom, really hard. And when women who are privileged present as though they have it all together, it’s offensive to black women.”

    Michelle [Obama] … insists that she couldn’t do what she does without the help of her mother.

    Strong woman from average means, works hard and gets it done, is “privileged”, and the woman with an Ivy-league background and top 2% income needs the help of her mother.

    Uh-huh.

  39. #139
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 2:16 pm, mistressjustice said:

    On October 2nd, 2008 at 1:11 pm, MtsEdge said:

    I agree that Ifill should step down or be replaced to avoid the appearance of impropriety. I do believe that Ms. Ifill is a pro, and wouldn’t do anything to damage her reputation as a black journalist in front of 70+ million viewers. Remember the hit Obama took after SNL lampooned how the media was harder on Hillary than Obama? White voters would lash back if Ifill sandbagged Palin, and she knows that. If anything, I think she’ll overcompensate by being harder on Biden(Obama), because he can handle it as a vet of these proceedings. Palin will crash over the basic questions, and Biden’s calm(hopefully) attempts to challenge her.

  40. #140
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 2:24 pm, MtsEdge said:

    I agree that Ifill should step down or be replaced to avoid the appearance of impropriety.

    We are of the same mind on this.

    I do believe that Ms. Ifill is a pro, and wouldn’t do anything to damage her reputation as a black journalist in front of 70+ million viewers.

    She just forgot to tell anyone about the book, and it’s meticulous timing.

    If anything, I think she’ll overcompensate by being harder on Biden(Obama), because he can handle it as a vet of these proceedings. Palin will crash over the basic questions, and Biden’s calm(hopefully) attempts to challenge her.

    Interesting.

  41. #141
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 3:42 pm, sambo said:

    mistressjustice said:
    I do believe that Ms. Ifill is a pro, and wouldn’t do anything to damage her reputation as a black journalist in front of 70+ million viewers.

    and wouldn’t do anything to damage her street credit

  42. #142
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 4:21 pm, StanW said:

    On October 2nd, 2008 at 2:16 pm, mistressjustice said:
    I do believe that Ms. Ifill is a pro, and wouldn’t do anything to damage her reputation as a black journalist in front of 70+ million viewers.

    So what is the difference between a ‘black’ journalist and any other kind of journalist? Does she only cover ‘black’ issues? Or are there special rules that do and don’t apply to her that all other journalist have to follow?

  43. #143
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 6:01 pm, whoozit said:

    Michelle [Obama] takes pains to be self depracating and to talk about her concerns and fears about her girls. She insists she couldn’t do what she does withour the help of her mother.

    I remember Palin speaking more than once about not being able to handle her family life without the help of her parents, aunties, and uncles. The writer is being disingenuous.

    Gov. Palin has not presented herself as a superwoman, but the term comes to mind naturally when a woman with so many professional responsibilities is also the mother of five.

    From the first day, Palin has presented herself as shooting a bear in the morning, field dressing it, cooking up the breakfast, diapering the babies, passing legislation in the afternoon, cleaning the house, satisfying her husband, etc., etc., etc., and it’s just not true.

    Where are the interview transcripts? Who are Sheryllin sources? Bloggers?
    **the part about her “satisfying her husband” is rude and incredible.

    If Sheryllin ‘knows’ so much about Palin, then she should have listed the sources of all these intimate details of the Gov.’s personal life.

    This is more like creative writing, journalism?….. not so much.

  44. #144
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 6:14 pm, mistressjustice said:

    So what is the difference between a ‘black’ journalist and any other kind of journalist? Does she only cover ‘black’ issues? Or are there special rules that do and don’t apply to her that all other journalist have to follow?

    Her race is very important here. If she screws Palin in this debate with bias, her credibility is shot. She’ll look like a hack or a racist. As a black moderator with an Obama book about black issues she has to walk a very fine line. If she does a great job, she’ll get a lot of respect and career opportunities. She’ll be looked at as a genuine professional. If she screws Palin, it will look like the “race thing” got in the way, and I would expect a voter backlash. Her reputation would be damaged, and she’ll likely wind up hosting some Sunday afternoon show on BET for the next 30 years, and doing a column for Essence.
    The race factor is important here, and she can’t screw this up.

  45. #145
    On October 2nd, 2008 at 7:34 pm, Speakup said:

    Restorative justice principles offer more inclusive processes and reorient the goals of justice. Restorative justice has been finding a receptive audience, as it creates common ground which accommodates the goals of many constituencies and provides a collective focus. The guiding principles of restorative justice are: [1]

    1. Crime is an offense against human relationships.
    2. Victims and the community are central to justice processes.
    3. The first priority of justice processes is to assist victims.
    4. The second priority is to restore the community, to the degree possible.
    5. The offender has personal responsibility to victims and to the community for crimes committed.
    6. Stakeholders share responsibilities for restorative justice through partnerships for action.
    7. The offender will develop improved competency and understanding as a result of the restorative justice experience.

    Restorative Justice is commonly known as a theory of criminal justice that focuses on crime as an act against another individual or community rather than the state. People harmed by wrongdoing may play a major role in the process and may receive some type of restitution from the person who caused the harm.

    Definition of Restorative Justice:

    “Restorative justice is a broad term which encompasses a growing social movement to institutionalize peaceful approaches to harm, problem-solving and violations of legal and human rights. These range from international peacemaking tribunals such as the South Africa Truth and Reconciliation Commission to innovations within the criminal justice system, schools, social services and communities. Rather than privileging the law, professionals and the state, restorative resolutions engage those who are harmed, wrongdoers and their affected communities in search of solutions that promote repair, reconciliation and the rebuilding of relationships. Restorative justice seeks to build partnerships to reestablish mutual responsibility for constructive responses to wrongdoing within our communities. Restorative approaches seek a balanced approach to the needs of the victim, wrongdoer and community through processes that preserve the safety and dignity of all”[1].

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