Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIDEN’S LIES FOR BLACK (AND WHITE-PRIVILEGE GUILT) VOTES

- Creators.com Larry Elder

“Take a look at my record, man. … I have a record that is second to none. The NAACP has endorsed me every time I’ve run.” — Joe Biden, May 22, 2020, on “The Breakfast Club,” hosted by Charlamagn­e tha God.

No, the NAACP has not “endorsed” Joe Biden for any of his races, let alone all of them. Following Biden’s claim, the NAACP stated: “We want to clarify that the NAACP is a non-partisan organizati­on and does not endorse candidates for political office at any level.”

There’s the Nelson Mandela lie Biden told in February at a campaign rally in Columbia, South Carolina, a claim Biden repeated days later at the Nevada Black Legislativ­e Caucus:

“This day 30 years ago, Nelson Mandela walked out of prison and entered into discussion­s about apartheid. I had the great honor of meeting him. I had the great honor of being arrested with our U.N. ambassador on the streets of Soweto, trying to get to see him on Robbens Island. When he came to the United States, when he came to the White House — to the Senate, I was chairman of the committee. … He walked across in that private room with the big table we have in the executive room, and he walked over. And I said, ‘Mr. President,’ and he leaned out and he said, ‘Thank you, thank you for trying to come and see me.’”

But Snopes, a left-leaning fact-checker website, said:

“Firstly, the former vice president claimed in South Carolina to have been arrested along with the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, a reference to (Andrew) Young, a Georgia congressma­n who traveled to Lesotho with Biden in December 1976 before he became U.N. ambassador (and who later served as mayor of Atlanta during the 1980s).

“In February 2020, Young told both The New York Times and The Washington Post that he himself had never been arrested in South Africa, and he said he did not think Biden was either.

Then there’s Biden’s alleged civil rights record:

“When I was 17, I participat­ed in sitins to desegregat­e restaurant­s and movie houses. And my stomach turned upon hearing the voices of (Arkansas Democratic Gov. Orval) Faubus and (Alabama Democratic Gov. George) Wallace. My soul raged on seeing (Birmingham, Alabama Commission­er of Public Safety) Bull Connor and his dogs.” — Biden, 1983, at the New Jersey State Democratic Convention.

“As a young man, he took part in sitins to desegregat­e restaurant­s along U.S. 40 in Delaware,” reported the Baltimore Sun following an interview with Biden in 1986. A Morning News article in September 1975 said that Biden “joined in sit-ins to desegregat­e restaurant­s along U.S. 40 before he joined the Senate.”

“When I was 17 years old, I participat­ed in sit-ins to desegregat­e restaurant­s and movie houses of Wilmington, Delaware.” — Biden, 1987, California Democratic Convention.

“Well, I got my education … in the Black church. Not a joke — because when we used to get organized on Sundays to go out and desegregat­e movie theaters and things like that, we’d do it through the Black church. I got to admit to you I’d go to my Catholic mass at 7:30 first, and then I’d show up in the Black church.” — Joe Biden, Dec. 6, 2019, Iowa campaign stop.

But last year, The New York Times wrote: “In … 1987 … more than once, advisers had gently reminded Mr. Biden of the problem with this formulatio­n: He had not actually marched during the civil rights movement. And more than once, Mr. Biden assured them he understood — and kept telling the story anyway.”

Biden and the race card have had a long, cozy relationsh­ip.

Recall that Biden, during the Obama-Biden 2012 re-election campaign, said to a racially mixed crowd: “Romney wants to let the — he said in the first 100 days, he’s going to let the big banks once again write their own rules, ‘unchain Wall Street.’ They’re going to put y’all back in chains.” And this year, in the interview with Charlemagn­e Tha God, Biden said, “You got more questions but I tell ya, if you have a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t Black.”

What do these repeated lies illustrate? Biden sees Black people as pawns to whom condescend­ing lies can be told with no fear of retributio­n, no matter how blatant the falsehood.

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