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美国主流媒体大都排除了有趣,重要和有争议的观点
 博客浏览米歇尔·马尔金(Michelle Malkin)档案
希拉里和巴拉克:写真集
朦胧的,水色的回忆。
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Here are a few choice screenshots from the Hillary-Barack exchanges during the SC debate. It’s a caption contest bonanza. Have at it!

1hillbar009.jpg

Battle of the Death Stares.

1hillbar007.jpg

Talk to the hand.

1hillbar.jpg

没有, talk to the hand.

1chel.jpg

Can’t let mom see me in my Obama For Change t-shirt.

1chel002.jpg

该死的你。

***

Meantime, CNN readers are 反抗 against the race-gender pander at the liberal network’s website. 幸灾乐祸–catch it!

Within minutes of posting a story on CNN’s homepage called “Gender or race: Black women voters face tough choices in South Carolina,” readers reacted quickly and angrily.

art.1858.obama.hill.jpg

Readers want media to focus more on the candidates and how they feel about the issues not their gender or race.

Many took umbrage at the story’s suggestion that black women voters face “a unique, and most unexpected dilemma” about voting their race or their gender.

CNN received dozens of e-mails shortly after posting the story, which focuses largely on conversations about Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama that a CNN reporter observed at a hair salon in South Carolina whose customers are predominantly African-American.

The story states: “For these women, a unique, and most unexpected dilemma, presents itself: Should they vote their race, or should they vote their gender?” Read the story

An e-mailer named Tiffany responded sarcastically: “Duh, I’m a black woman and here I am at the voting booth. Duh, since I’m illiterate I’ll pull down the lever for someone. Hm… Well, he black so I may vote for him… oh wait she a woman I may vote for her… What Ise gon’ do? Oh lordy!”

Tiffany urged CNN to “pull this racist crap off” the Web site and to stop calling Hillary the “top female candidate.”

“Stop calling Barack the “Black” candidate,” she wrote.

Many readers were upset that the story did not delve beyond a cursory mention of the issues.

The article stated: “While race and gender play a role, most women here say they plan to vote based on the issues. They rank health care, education and the economy in order of importance.”

The salon owner, Angela Jackson, a Clinton supporter, is quoted as saying: “They don’t pay my bills. And they’re not attached to my belly. Nobody is attached to my belly but me. They don’t feed me, clothe me. I don’t care what they think. … She’s a woman, I’m a woman.”

A reader named Joan e-mailed: “Really CNN, is this how you view black women[?] Are you suggesting that white women are going to have it easier [?] How about issues? Should a black woman consider the candidates position on issues, or should we just stick to race and gender. Disgusting!”

(经作者或代表的许可从MichelleMalkin.com重新发布)