Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina has announced the formation of an exploratory committee for his candidacy for president.
You may have noticed that Scott is Black. We may ask, in this woke age of ours, the extent to which this matters in his candidacy.
I think it does matter, which requires some explanation given that I am adamantly opposed to identity politics in all its shapes and forms.
Should Scott run and win, he will not be America’s first Black president. When America’s first Black president, Barack Obama, did run and win, it was widely viewed as a turning point in American history.
Many thought that, at last, the era of racial politics had come to an end. Now, the thinking went, that Americans showed that a Black man could run for and win the presidency, we would move on from our national obsession with race and move on to dealing with issues confronting the nation as they impact every citizen, regardless of race.
But it didn’t happen.
The American people twice chose Obama as their president, and today, perhaps more than ever, racial awareness and politics permeate our day-to-day realities.
They permeate practically all political institutions, corporate boardrooms, athletics, universities, K-12 schools and our day-to-day marketplace.
And it’s why Scott’s candidacy is so important and why his race matters.
Early in Obama’s first term he traveled to Europe for a NATO meeting, and in the press conference after, he was asked by a reporter from the Financial Times if he believes in “American exceptionalism.”
For Obama to say “yes” would have been for him to state in this international forum that there is something unique and special about his country that sets it apart from and above others.
By standards of political correctness, a “yes” answer would have been most incorrect. Obama’s finely tuned political skills immediately kicked in and he answered in a most politically correct way.
“I believe in American exceptionalism,” he said, “just as the Brits believe in British exceptionalism, and the Greeks in Greek exceptionalism.”
America’s first Black president is a very politically correct man. And it’s why his presidency changed nothing regarding racial realities in America.
Tim Scott is not a politically correct man, and it is why his potential presidency can change everything.
He does believe America is exceptional, and he is not afraid to say it. His recent book, “America, A Redemption Story: Choosing Hope, Creating Unity,” recounts what he has learned growing up poor, becoming a successful businessman and making his way to the U.S. Senate — and now, maybe, the presidency.
His personal success story is not about government programs, but about “perseverance and grit,” only possible with faith and freedom.
Scott is pro-freedom, pro-private property, pro-personal responsibility and initiative and pro-life.
We must understand that the collapse of these core issues and principles, so vital to a genuinely free society, is threatening our nation both domestically and internationally.
As David McCormick and James Cunningham show in their new book, “Superpower in Peril: A Battle Plan to Renew America,” our collapsing culture is endangering national security, as the Army falls short of recruitment goals with more and more young Americans unwilling or unable to serve.
Tim Scott is Black man in America who knows that this is an exceptional country and that the exceptionalism is rooted in faith and freedom.
Scott understands that out future starts in the hearts and minds of every American citizen of every background and that our future does not start in Washington.
This vital message was lost in the presidency of our first Black president, and great damage was done.
So, Scott’s race matters not for woke reasons but for anti-woke reasons.
This is a candidacy that can make all the difference where Barack Obama failed.
Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and host of the weekly television show “Cure America with Star Parker.” To find out more about Star Parker and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
I believe in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect that the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek exceptionalism.
Barack Obama
From Brainy Quotes.
THIS FROM A DEMOCRAT BLACK PRESIDENT who didn’t believe that America was execptional, proves that America is indeed, ”execptional in the world.
“Judge not by the color of one’s skin, but by the contents of their character”
We the U.S.A. were an exceptional country. Until we got stupid and we lost our love and respect for the Lord God Almighty.
When we elect Godless, dishonest, immoral, hateful self-righteous, self-serving political representatives like Tinkerbell Barack PinocchiObama, the corrupt, demented, puppet Joe Biden, the hateful Nancy Pelosi, racist Maxine Waters, Liars Adam Schiff & Chuck Schumer, Camel toe Kamala Harris, Bimbo Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Muslim Ilhan Omar, fake squaw Elizabeth Warren and racist Ayanna Pressley who intentionally pit one group against another to divide the country and cultivate hate and distrust, you got to ask yourself; what are the motives of these type people? To lead the country into prosperity OR to gain control, stay in power any way possible and to dominate the citizens? No matter the costs to the people, the government or the nation.
Unfortunately i fear too many Americans were burned OFF, of voting for a black man, BECAUSE of what Obama did.
i really like tim he is very popular in my state of s.c. he makes limp lindsey grahm look bad!
but i do not think he is ready for the presidency yet