A black activist’s article about Stacey Abrams has a surprising admission By Andrea Widburg

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2020/05/a_black_activists_article_about_stacey_abrams_has_a_surprising_admission.html

“How is every journalist employed by the Washington Post not named Jennifer Rubin not completely embarrassed by this Stacey Abrams profile. How does something like this even make it past editors who care about their reputations?”

Georgia’s Stacey Abrams, a failed gubernatorial candidate, is trying something new in American politics: With naked ambition, she’s simultaneously begging for and demanding the Vice President’s spot on the Democrat Party ticket.

The media are dutifully playing along, trying to puff her as something other than a local politician who believes her race and gender cards are a handful of aces. However, in the Washington Post’s laughably reverential paean to Abrams, there’s a peculiar slip revealing what leftists actually think of African-Americans – and it’s all the more aberrant given that the author is himself an African-American.

In some ways, Stacey Abrams is a laudable woman. One of six children, she grew up in an intact family, and excelled in school, eventually earning both a Master of Public Affairs and a law degree. Despite being a leftist activist from an early age, she held real jobs after law school, working as a tax attorney and founding two companies, one a beverage company focusing on babies and toddlers, and the other a consulting firm.

Entering politics, Abrams was elected to the Georgia General Assembly in 2006, representing parts of Atlanta and unincorporated DeKalb county, and held that seat for a decade. She eventually became the Democrat minority leader.

In 2018, Abrams ran for governor, only to lose by 50,000 votes to Brian Kemp. And that’s when she made her name at a national level, not for running and making a good showing, but for refusing to admit that she’d lost. Instead, she dug out the tropes about voter suppression and racism. Abrams insists to this day that she won. In Democrat circles, being a sore loser is a winning issue.

In other ways, Abrams is not laudable at all. First, she’s a die-hard leftist, who buys into every leftist position: abortion, gun control, no voter ID, socialized medicine, the expansion of government-run K-12 education, and the end of cash bail and the death penalty. I think all of those ideas are bad for society and especially bad for the people Abrams claims to speak for – American blacks.

Abrams also writes romance novels, which is a great thing to do (it’s the single most popular novel genre). I wish I could write them too. Unfortunately, one reviewer hints that her writing is awful, in part because her male lead is sexually aggressive in a very un-MeToo way.

And then there are Abrams money problems. As of 2018, she had $200,000 in debt and owed $54,000 to the IRS. Her explanation for this debt is both understandable and decent (student loans, immature spending, and taking care of her niece), right up until she pulls out the race card. With Abrams, it’s always about the race card.

Whether any of her abilities, values, or problems make her qualified to be the Vice President for a man who’s likely to drop out or get sidelined the day after his inauguration (assuming he wins) is something for backroom Democrats to decide. I know I would infinitely prefer not to see Abrams at America’s helm.

But this post isn’t really about Abrams. It’s about the Abrams hagiography that black activist Kevin Powell got published at the Washington Post Magazine on May 14. If you follow the news, you’ve probably seen people laughing at the article, both because of the bizarre photo implying Abrams is some kind of superhero and because of Kevin Powell’s over-the-top praise:

“How is every journalist employed by the Washington Post not named Jennifer Rubin not completely embarrassed by this Stacey Abrams profile. How does something like this even make it past editors who care about their reputations?”

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