Breitbart's Obama Video To Air Tonight

There's more coming. They're releasing it piecemeal.

So, if there was video of Sarah Palin at the University of Idaho saying, "open your hearts and minds to the words of " .... (fill in the blank with whatever right wing extremist you prefer) and then hugging them, you don't think that would be newsworthy?

Prof. Olgetree thought it was damning enough to hide it during the election.
 
One man's radical is another man's advocate for justice. I hope Bretbart's minons keep this up until November.

From Derek Bell's obit:

Bell died Wednesday night of carcinoid cancer at a Manhattan hospital, his wife, Janet Dewart Bell, said Friday. He'd been diagnosed with the disease a decade ago, she said, but was still teaching at New York University Law School as recently as last week.

The dean at NYU, Richard Revesz, said, "For more than 20 years, the law school community has been profoundly shaped by Derrick's unwavering passion for civil rights and community justice, and his leadership as a scholar, teacher, and activist."

Bell was long dissatisfied with the progress of race relations in America despite his own success. He helped establish a field known as critical race theory by urging that U.S. laws be examined for racism embedded within them. His 1973 casebook, "Race, Racism and American Law," is still in use in law schools in updated editions.

Bell attained several lofty positions in his field, but more than once left them in protest.

After graduating from the University of Pittsburgh law school in 1957 - The New York Times reported that he was the only black student - he was hired at the Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division. But he resigned when he was told his membership in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was a conflict of interest.

He later worked at the NAACP's legal defense fund, in Pittsburgh and Mississippi. He supervised more than 300 school desegregation cases in Mississippi.

In 1969, Bell was recruited by Harvard Law and two years later became its first tenured African-American professor. He left in 1980 to become dean at the University of Oregon Law School, but he left Oregon five years later to protest the school's decision not to hire an Asian-American woman.

Bell returned to Harvard, but in 1990 he took a leave of absence to protest the absence of black women on the law school faculty.

"I cannot continue to urge students to take risks for what they believe if I do not practice my own precepts," he said. He never returned to the school.

Harvard Law dean Martha Minow said Bell "inspired and challenged generations of colleagues and students with imagination, passion, and courage."

In 1998, Harvard hired its first female African-American law school professor, Lani Guinier. She told the Times that Bell "set the agenda in many ways for scholarship on race in the academy, not just the legal academy."

Bell wrote two autobiographies and a series of allegorical stories about race. One of them, "The Space Traders," was made into a movie for television.

"He's always been all about the students," Bell's wife said. "He taught by example, by inspiration, by encouragement."

Bell is survived by his wife and three sons, Derrick, Douglass and Carter, from his first marriage to the late Jewel Hairston Bell.

Janet Bell said a memorial service will be held Nov. 3 at Riverside Church. NYU Law School has scheduled a tribute for Feb. 28.
The Link
 
Well I guess you and your hero, Obama, are on the same page as far as Bell goes.

Other people are not so kind, refering to him as "the Jeremiah Wright of Academics". Didn't he suscribe to some nutball thing called Critical Race Theory? And as far as his writings go, he wrote one book where white people (abetted by Jews) were selling black people to aliens!!! Do you also admire Ward Churchill?
 
You believe everything Breitbart's lemmings told you last night on Hannity?
Here is his obit. Compare it with that of Derek Bell and tell me which one left the more inspiring legacy and record of accomplishment:

Conservative media publisher and activist Andrew Breitbart, who was behind investigations that led to the resignations of former Rep. Anthony Weiner and former U.S. Agriculture Department official Shirley Sherrod, has died in Los Angeles. He was 43.

Breitbart's website, bigjournalism.com, announced Thursday he died of natural causes in Los Angeles in the early morning hours. His death was confirmed by Breitbart.com editor-in-chief Joel Pollak, who said he was at the hospital, and by the Los Angeles County coroner's office.

Breitbart was walking near his house in the Brentwood neighborhood shortly after midnight Thursday when he collapsed, his father-in-law Orson Bean said.

Someone saw him fall and called paramedics, who tried to revive him. They rushed him to the emergency room at UCLA Medical Center, Bean said.

Breitbart had suffered heart problems a year earlier, but Bean said he could not pinpoint what happened.

"I don't know what to say. It's devastating," Bean told The Associated Press.

He is survived by his wife Susannah Bean Breitbart, 41, and four children.

Breitbart was an outspoken critic of the mainstream media but was lionized by his fans for his efforts at exposing government corruption and media bias.

Breitbart was at the center of two video controversies in recent years - one that led to the firing of an Agriculture Department employee over an edited video of what appeared to be a racist remark, and another that embarrassed the community group ACORN when workers were shown counseling actors posing as a prostitute and pimp.

Breitbart is known for disseminating an edited video that showed an Agriculture Department employee making what appeared to be racist remarks.

Sherrod, who is black, was fired from her job as Georgia state rural development director in July 2010 after the video surfaced. She is seen telling a local NAACP group that she was initially reluctant to help a white farmer save his farm more than two decades ago, long before she worked for USDA.

Missing from the clip was the rest of the speech, which was meant as a lesson in racial healing. Sherrod told the crowd she eventually realized her mistake and helped the farmer save his farm. She has since filed a lawsuit against Breitbart.

Breitbart's websites also featured a 2009 hidden-camera sting video that brought embarrassment to the community group ACORN. The videos show ACORN staffers offering advice on taxes and other issues to actors posing as a prostitute and pimp.

PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

Associated Press writers Jack Gillum in Washington and Jeff Wilson in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
The Link
 
come on Mich, it's clear this guy doesn't believe in racial equality. He blames whites for everything and thinks that no white will ever do anything for a black unless the act is in some way self serving. Do you honestly believe that is the world we live in? He didn't say that a small minority feel this way he make s very wide sweeping comments about how whites are evil and oppressive. Even you can connect those dots.
 
Glen Rice says she kept screaming " Drill baby Drill!".

Actually, he will neither confirm or deny, but damn, talk about way our of line. I'm not sure that she has ever claimed that she was a virgin when she married Todd, so whose business is it?
 

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