It should be pretty clear to just about everybody that Scott Brown has absolutely nothing to run on in the fight to keep his Senate seat in Massachusetts, because the only thing he and his team seem to have been able to come up with is that Elizabeth Warren once checked a box somewhere that said she had some Native American DNA in her. It’s become the central point (the only point, really) of his campaign. This was evidenced in their debate the other night, when Warren said she wanted to fight for the rights of ordinary citizens, and Snotty Scotty said, “she don’t look like no injun to me.”
Then, at a Warren campaign event the other day, senior Brown staffers attended and taunted Warren with “tomahawk chops” and “war whoop chants.” Setting aside whether or not Warren’s grandmother had some Cherokee blood (which seems completely plausible what with her being from Oklahoma and all), as you might imagine, “actual” Native Americans didn’t think the antics of Brown and his staff were terribly amusing.
The principal chief of the Cherokee Nation had asked the senator to apologize for what he called the “downright racist†gestures of Brown supporters at a campaign event Saturday in Dorchester, Mass.
[…]
“The conduct of these individuals goes far beyond what is appropriate and proper in political discourse,†the chief, Bill John Baker, said in a statement. “The use of stereotypical ‘war whoop chants’ and ‘tomahawk chops’ are offensive and downright racist. It is those types of actions that perpetuate negative stereotypes and continue to minimize and degrade all native peoples.â€
The Brown campaign responded in a statement, saying “Bill John Baker don’t look like no injun, neither.”
I am mystified as to why Scott Brown is talking about Warren’s DNA. But whatever it may have done for his election chances has probably been overshadowed by his ridiculous debate remark that she doesn’t look like a native American and the bad behavior of his war whooping staff.
Why is it that when someone is not on top in the polls s/he goes for the stupid?
Talking about the stupid, I was amused when a group hired by Republicans committed the kind of voter fraud that Acorn was accused of but this is even more amusing:
The Republican National Committee fired a voter registration firm owned by a paid consultant to the party’s presidential candidate Mitt Romney Thursday, after Florida officials traced more than 100 possibly fake registration forms back to the company.
Raw Story (http://s.tt/1oz7K)
I had no idea that yesterday was National Drink Beer Day. Fortunately, I was inadvertently celebrating anyway. :40: