Klan Watch…

Posted on Sunday 11 October 2009


In Today’s Viral World, Who Keeps a Civil Tongue?
Washington Post
By Ann Gerhart
October 11, 2009

Late last month, Charisse Carney-Nunes fired up the computer at her home in Northeast Washington to check her e-mail. Her brain already was on morning drive time: breakfast for the kids, her day’s work at a government agency. She glanced down at her screen, then froze.

"Ms. Carney-Nunes," began the e-mail from Michelle Malkin, a best-selling and often inflammatory conservative writer with a heavily trafficked Web site. "I understand that you uploaded the video of schoolchildren reciting a Barack Obama song/rap at Bernice Young elementary school in June. I have a few quick questions. Did you help write the song/rap and teach it to the children? Are you an educator/guest lecturer at the school? Did you teach about your book, ‘I am Barack Obama’ at the school? Your bio says you are a schoolmate of Obama. How well-acquainted are you with the president?"

Carney-Nunes looked at the time stamp – 6:47 a.m. – and closed the file without replying. She knew Malkin had driven criticism of President Obama’s back-to-school speech, streamed nationwide, as an attempt to indoctrinate students. Now Malkin was asking about a YouTube video of New Jersey public school children singing and enthusiastically chanting about Obama from a Black History Month presentation.

By nightfall, Carney-Nunes’s name was playing on Fox News and voice mails on her home phone and cellphone were clogged with the furious voices of strangers. The e-mails kept pouring in, by the hundreds, crammed with words spam filters try to catch: She was a "nappy-headed" traitor; she would lose her job and go to jail; she was Leni Riefenstahl, the filmmaker who glorified Hitler…
This is the opening of  a disturbing article – an extremely disturbing article. It happened to me once – a coordinated attack that filled my [snail] mailbox with hate mail and crazy publications for well over a year.  My sin was to write a letter to the paper objecting to something the NRA said. But that was long ago, before email. Read this one all the way through. The assault on Carney-Nunes was Klan-like, lead by self proclaimed pundit Michelle Malkin.
Carney-Nunes, who writes children’s books and was a year behind Obama at Harvard Law School, watched as strangers posted her personal information on the Internet. She read, "You’re a dirtbag commie propagandist trying to infect children with your failed Marxist ideology." And "your Obama chant is right out of Africa." And "get ready for a massive attack!!!" And "my friend GLENN BECK will also shove this in your face until justice is served." She made copies [which she shared with The Washington Post] and then deleted the messages, hoping the tornado would set her back down. 
The article documents this kind of nastiness throughout our history, but that’s little justification for what’s happening now. It does seem, however, that we’re getting to the point that we got to with the Klan. When innocent Americans are being attacked and assaulted like this, they have the right to be protected.
Carney-Nunes spends a lot of her free time teaching children how to bridge divides, but she has no idea how to build a dialogue with those who attacked her. "How can I talk to those people?" she said. "These are people who persist in believing that Barack Obama is a Muslim, that he isn’t a citizen of this country. You tell me: Where is the beginning of that conversation?
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    October 13, 2009 | 12:42 AM
     

    […] They kept off school grounds and were observed by about a half-dozen local police… [see Klanwatch…]  This is a pretty sad state of affairs. Kids who sang about the first black President looking […]

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