Poor Michelle Obama says toughest part of being first lady was enduring the racism

Poor Michelle Obama says toughest part of being first lady was enduring the racism
(Image: Screen grab of YouTube video, Hot News 24h today)

Wait, is Michelle Obama still proud of her country or not? It’s getting hard to keep track.

Speaking at the Women’s Foundation of Colorado’s 30th anniversary last week, the former First Lady opened up about what she considers the hardest part of her husband’s eight years as President.

Obama said that after “working really hard for this country,” there would still be people “who won’t see me for what I am because of my skin color.”

Will this presidential election be the most important in American history?

Via the Denver Post:

WFCO President and CEO Lauren Casteel commented that Obama broke a glass ceiling by becoming the first black first lady. She then asked which of the falling glass shards cut the deepest.

“The shards that cut me the deepest were the ones that intended to cut,” she said, referencing being called an ape and people talking about her bottom. “Knowing that after eight years of working really hard for this country, there are still people who won’t see me for what I am because of my skin color.”

She said she can’t pretend like [sic] it doesn’t hurt because that lets those who do the hurting off the hook.

There are other women in politics who have been mocked for their looks or had disparaging remarks made about them in the past. No female has endured more scorn or ridicule on the political scene than former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

It’s the perils of political life – not so much racism as it is ignorance from people who want to tear down their opponents.

Michelle Obama’s criticism of that opposition is very limited when it comes to her own side of the aisle, however.

Where were the cries of racism when Bill Clinton said Obama should have been fetching coffee for him and his colleague, Ted Kennedy?

Actually, the Clintons have a litany of examples of racially charged remarks about the Obamas:

Michelle Obama had to endure racism after eight years of an Obama presidency that was supposed to cure America of it.

The morning after Election Day, 2008, The New York Times proclaimed that Barack Obama’s victory had swept “away the last racial barrier in American politics.”

Yet, by any measure, race relations in the country grew immeasurably worse after the election of the first black president. Was it the anti-police, pro-Black Lives Matter comments perpetually emanating from the White House? Was it wading into racially charged cases like that of Trayvon Martin or Henry Louis Gates? Was it the demonization of people trying to restore the integrity of elections through voter ID laws?

It’s difficult to say, but after her husband was the man who brought down “the last racial barrier in politics,” it’s jarring to hear the former First Lady bellyache nine years later about the perceived racism she suffered.

nine years later

Rusty Weiss

Rusty Weiss

Rusty Weiss is editor of the Mental Recession, one of the top conservative blogs of 2012. His writings have appeared at the Daily Caller, American Thinker, FoxNews.com, Big Government, the Times Union, and the Troy Record.

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