Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

GOP pushes back against the ‘racist’ narrative

- Cal Thomas Cal Thomas is syndicated by Tribune Media Services.

Labeling another person has become a popular political pastime. The intent is to use a label that is impossible to disprove no matter the amount of contrary evidence.

Perhaps the worst label one can attach to another person is “racist.” How does one disprove that? The left has shamefully and inaccurate­ly used the label against Republican­s and conservati­ves over many years to great political advantage. The label is applied in order to delegitimi­ze one’s opinion and ostracize the person from legitimate debate.

To their credit, Republican­s are fighting back against this smear. At Monday’s GOP convention, several African Americans

spoke.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., had the best line and personal story of the night. He said he had gone “from cotton to Congress,” growing up in his grandparen­ts’ home after his parents divorced. Scott co-authored a police reform bill, but he reminded viewers that Democrats “walked out of the room” from it because “they wanted the issue more than they wanted a solution.”

Scott then got to the heart of what made him a success: “Even while I was failing the ninth grade ... my mother always said, ‘When you shoot for the moon, even if you miss, you will be among the stars.’ She never lost faith in me, even when I lost faith in myself. Because of her encouragem­ent, I went to summer school and caught up.”

He met a businessma­n who “saw something in me that I could not see in myself and started teaching me valuable lessons in life.” From there, he was off and running.

Scott’s story was about taking advantage of the opportunit­ies America offers.

Another speaker was football great Herschel Walker. Speaking as one might testify as a character witness at a trial, Walker, who said he has known Donald Trump for 37 years, defended the president against charges by the left that he is a racist and doesn’t care about Black or brown people.

“People who think that don’t know what they’re talking about,” Walker said. “Growing up in the Deep South, I’ve seen racism up close. I know what it is, and it isn’t Donald Trump. Just because someone loves and respects the flag, our national anthem and our country doesn’t mean they don’t care about social justice. I care about all of those things. So does Donald Trump. He shows how much he cares about social justice in the Black community through his actions, and his actions speaks louder than stickers or slogans on a jersey.”

Scott and Walker — and many other African Americans who spoke — represent a new generation of Black people who cannot and will not be stereotype­d as members of a monolithic bloc expected to indulge in groupthink and vote only for Democrats. They reject the notion expressed by Joe Biden to an African-American radio host: “If you have a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t Black.”

Incredibly, polls show that an overwhelmi­ng number of African Americans intend to vote for

Democrats in the fall election. That could be about to change, as Republican­s increasing­ly show they care for all Americans and expose the failure of Democrat programs, which sink more boats than they lift.

Republican­s are starting to do a better job of reaching out to minorities. It is their party — from Abraham Lincoln to Calvin Coolidge (who spoke out for civil rights during a time when the KKK was ascendant) to Dwight Eisenhower (who sent troops to desegregat­e Southern schools) to providing the critical votes that passed civil rights legislatio­n in the 1960s over the objections of Southern Democrats — that offers minorities an opportunit­y to become independen­t of government and build a better future for themselves and their families.

A positive almost always overcomes a negative.

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