Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Congratulations....time to celebrate.... we need to do more of this often....

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Indian numbers & Israelie money helps unseat anti-indian & anti-israel

pro-muslim republican US lawmaker ...Cynthia McKinney

TIMES NEWS NETWORK [ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 2002 10:15:41 PM ]

WASHINGTON: The headlines credit the Jewish lobby for the defeat of lawmaker

Cynthia McKinney in the Congressional primaries on Tuesday. But a neophyte

Indian-American activists group, which co-wrote the script for this unusual

Georgia election that attracted nationwide attention, is happy with just the

footnote that recorded their role.

They like to do it quietly. They are not as political or as established as the Jewish lobby.

Congresswoman McKinney outraged a lot of people with some bizarre remarks. Among

her more provocative comments was her theory that President Bush purposely

ignored warnings about 9/11 to help the US arms industry. The comment angered

not just the Jewish groups, but regular Americans as well.

The African American incumbent was not shy of expressing her opinion on the

subcontinent either – mostly ill-informed repeats made at the behest of the

Pakistani and Khalistani lobby, according to Indian-Americans.

A sample: The Indian government is responsible for terrorism against its own

people. It engineered the massacre of bus passengers in Kashmir and the blowing

up of a passenger airliner.

Community leaders said she recorded that kind of "unsubstantiated nonsense,

usually peddled by disgruntled and discredited conspiracy theorists," in the

Congressional Record.

But it was when she began talking about the imminent breakup of India because of

its “17 different separatist movements” that the Indians of Georgia lost it for

her and banded together.

One prominent activist sent out an e-mail to 3400 Indian-Americans in the area

reporting her remarks (under the subject line — "Balkanisation of India —

advocated by Rep. Cynthia McKinney") and urging them to work for her opponent,

a local judge named Denise Majette.

Led by a prominent dotcommer in the area, they were soon holding fund-raisers

for Majette, who like McKinney is also African-American. They chipped in with

$20,000, although much larger sums came in later from Middle East groups — the

Jews backing Majette and Arabs and Muslims supporting McKinney.

Indian-Americans contributed in other ways too. Several volunteers worked full

week for Majette’s campaign. She was invited as the chief guest for an

Indian-American beauty pageant. A motel owner turned his electronic billboard

next to the main highway into her campaign sign.

It was much after the Indian-American effort began that the Jewish lobby rolled

into town. But the two sides joined hands for a phono-thon and pooled other

resources for the campaign.

When the results came in on Tuesday, Majette had polled 58 per cent to

McKinney;s 42 per cent. The Indian bush telegraph – e-mail – was buzzing.

“Money is important. But volunteer and other efforts are equally important. Even

more important is that we need to be on the radar screen of the candidate we are

supporting. Ms. Denise Majjette hopefully knows that we made a difference in her

bid. Please keep in communication with her to further the relationship between

IA (Indian Americans) and her,” one prominent activist wrote.

“The good news is that we offered our support before the poll numbers and Jewish

money transpired. Thus, we got noticed,” another group leader responded.

In keeping with the low-profile effort, none of them were eager to be identified.

The Indian embassy also quietly celebrated McKinney's loss, although, sticking

to the principle of non-interference in local elections, it declined any

comment. The embassy has been accused in the past of being a little too

interested in the Congressional races.

Democrat Majette will now go up against the winner of the Republican primary for

a seat in the Congress in the main elections due in November. But for now,

Indians and Indian-Americans can breathe easy that they do not have to hear

Cynthia McKinney's conspiracy theories in Congress.Join the world’s largest

e-mail service with MSN Hotmail. Click Here

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...