Times Watch Quotes of Note: NYT Imagines Racial Stereotyping at Conservative Convention
Shocker: Times Imagines Racial Stereotyping at Conservative Convention
“How
can conservatives win the youth vote that overwhelmingly went for
Barack Obama in 2008? At the Conservative Political Action Conference,
apparently, some are betting on using racial stereotypes....[Author]
Jason Mattera...mocked what he described, with a Chris Rock voice, as
“diversity,” including, he said, college classes on 'cyber feminism'
and 'what it means to be a feminist new black man.'....Offering up a
slogan, he adopted the Chris Rock voice again: 'Get your government off
my freedom!' Can we save our generation from Obama zombies, he asked.
He answered himself by borrowing the president’s campaign slogan: 'Yes,
my brothahs and sistahs. Yes we can!'” --
From
a February 18
nytimes.com “Caucus” blog post by reporter Kate Zernike while covering
the Conservative Political Action Conference, a post headlined
“CPAC Speaker Bashes Obama, in Racial Tones.” Jason Mattera is from
Brooklyn and used his own voice, not a “Chris Rock voice,” when making
his anti-Obama gibes.
Times Touts Pro-Obama "Coffee Party," Denigrated Anti-Tax Tea Party Rallies
“Fed
up with government gridlock, but put off by the flavor of the Tea
Party, people in cities across the country are offering an alternative:
the Coffee Party....‘I’m in shock, just the level of energy here,’ said
the founder, Annabel Park, a documentary filmmaker who lives outside
Washington. ‘In the beginning, I was actively saying, “Get in touch
with us, start a chapter.” Now I can’t keep up. We have 300 requests to
start a chapter that I have not been able to respond to.’” --
Times
reporter Kate Zernike’s March 2 story on the newly-launched “Coffee
Party” movement, begun by Park, who worked for Obama’s presidential
campaign in 2008.vs.
“Although
organizers insisted they had created a nonpartisan grass-roots
movement, others argued that these parties were more of the Astroturf
variety -- an occasion largely created by the clamor of cable news and
fueled by the financial and political support of current and former
Republican leaders.” --
Reporter Liz Robbins in the paper’s first
report on the Tea Party protests, April 16, 2009, nearly two months
after the movement began.
Read more of the most biased Times quotes in the
latest edition of Times Watch Quotes of Note.