Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
From my POV, the media did not give much coverage to Biden's lie about his bussing views. I'm fine with not bringing up someone's views from 40 years ago. We all change over time....
Frankly, I don't think Harris really wounded him. A mere nick, really. His out-of-touch demeanor was just painful to watch and is what hurt him more, I feel.
But he lied and that's troubling. He should have said the truth, that he had misconceptions about integrating schools or whatever his reasoning is for a different view then and now. Instead he pretended it was about local control. He got defensive, "I'm not racist." He could have said, 'I didn't intend, I didn't recognize, I made that mistake but did all these other things right'.
Instead he got defensive and lied. The media owes it to the public not to have covered that lie up.
What's going to happen though, is someone is going to ask him about the statements he made that are on the record. Now he has past racism and lying about it when he could have just had a different view then that was wrong.
Politico: How a Young Joe Biden Turned Liberals Against Integration
Forced bussing is what the issue was about. If voluntary bussing had worked it wouldn't have needed a federal mandate.He had expressed support for integration and—more specifically—busing during his Senate campaign in 1972, but once elected, he discovered just how bitterly his white constituents opposed the method. In 1973 and 1974, Biden began voting for many of the Senate’s anti-busing bills, claiming that he favored school desegregation, but just objected to “forced busing.”
So far so good, just the usual pandering to his white constituents at the time.So Biden transformed, too. That year, Joe Biden morphed into a leading anti-busing crusader—all the while continuing to insist that he supported the goal of school desegregation, he only opposed busing as the means to achieve that end.
But he went further. (I posted this up thread but it bears repeating given the mainstream media didn't cover it.)
The Nation: When Joe Biden Collaborated With Segregationists
In the interview, which captured an early unfiltered Biden, today’s Democratic front-runner picked through a grab bag of anti-integration canards to make his case against busing—among them, the idea that a school where children of different races or multiple ethnicities sit in class together is doomed to be inferior. “The real problem with busing,” he said, “is that you take [white] people who aren’t racist, people who are good citizens, who believe in equal education and opportunity, and you stunt their children’s intellectual growth by busing them to an inferior school.” For him, it seems, the stunting of black children’s growth in the savagely unequal and deliberately segregated public schools I’ve been describing for years did not elicit the same sense of alarm.
Nor did Biden stop there. With bald disregard for centuries of American history, he said, “I do not buy the concept, popular in the ’60s, which said, ‘We have suppressed the black man for 300 years and…in order to even the score, we must now give the black man”—no reference to black women—“a head start or even hold the white man back.… I don’t buy that.”
He concluded, “I oppose busing. It’s an asinine concept, the utility of which has never been proven to me. I’ve gotten to the point where I think our only recourse to eliminate busing may be a constitutional amendment.”
Those comments are not going to stay buried just because they didn't come out in the first debate. Biden could have nipped it in the bud with an apology. Instead he made it worse.
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