Race card

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The race card is the use of one's race for political or legal advantage. The term is typically used in the phrase "playing the race card," as in playing a valuable card in a game of bridge or poker.

Journo-List

Employees of news organizations including Time magazine, Politico, the Huffington Post, the Baltimore Sun, the Guardian, Salon and the New Republic participated.

Spencer Ackerman, who worked for something called the Washington Independent proposed a strategy to defend Barack Obama during the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Church of Liberation Theology revelations (note the Marxist terminology):

I do not endorse a Popular Front, nor do I think you need to. It's not necessary to jump to Wright-qua-Wright's defense. What is necessary is to raise the cost on the right of going after the left. In other words, find a rightwinger's [pejorative reference] and smash it through a plate-glass window. Take a snapshot of the bleeding mess and send it out in a Christmas card to let the right know that it needs to live in a state of constant fear. ...And I think this threads the needle. If the right forces us all to either defend Wright or tear him down, no matter what we choose, we lose the game they've put upon us. Instead, take one of them--Fred Barnes, Karl Rove, who cares--and call them racists. Ask: why do they have such a deep-seated problem with a black politician who unites the country? What lurks behind those problems? This makes *them* sputter with rage, which in turn leads to overreaction and self-destruction.[1]


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