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John Baer: Fumo's slavery zinger: What set Vince off?

IT SHOULD surprise no one that Vince Fumo makes news - sometimes only using his mouth.

It's not like it's the first time.

Who can forget him calling a fellow state Senate leader a "faggot"?

Or calling Tom Ridge "a buffoon"?

Or John Dougherty "evil"?

I could go on.

But this latest thing - labeling the Legislature a collection of racists who, given the chance, would legalize slavery - makes one wonder.

Knowing state lawmakers as I do, I doubt that they'd go much beyond a few modified Jim Crow laws.

So what set Fumo off?

Stress of facing that 139-count indictment and a fall corruption trial?

Off his meds?

Jealous that he's not in the thick of the national discussion on race and looking to emerge as the "Anti-Wright?"

Or just a wish to go out with guns blazing as he winds down his 30-year Senate career after saying in March that he isn't seeking re-election?

If you missed it, and it's hard to think you did, Vince this week said, "If we introduced a bill on slavery, it might pass."

This was at a Senate hearing on a gay-marriage ban, and Vince was arguing that just because a legislative body approves something doesn't make it right.

The remark came during testimony in support of the ban by Bishop Gilbert Coleman Jr., senior pastor of Philly's Freedom Christian Bible Fellowship.

Coleman, who is African-American, told Fumo he doubted a slavery bill would pass.

But Fumo, in an apparent effort to make a bad thing worse, said, "Oh, don't bet on it in this General Assembly. I know some people up here, especially on a secret ballot, it would be almost unanimous."

Wow.

Even for Vince, this seems extreme.

Some suggest he's playing to a jury pool, though it would have to be a pretty shallow pool.

Others say Vince is just being Vince.

One Senate aide quipped: "When he's good, he's good. When he's bad, he's scary bad."

Yesterday, Fumo issued a brief statement saying, in part, "I was obviously exaggerating to make a point. . . . I wanted people at the hearing to face the fact that denying human rights to any group, including homosexuals, at any point in our history, including 2008, is wrong."

Fair enough, I guess.

But lots of sensible people were, if not surprised, offended.

(Coleman was out of the office yesterday; an aide did not return calls.)

"Totally unacceptable," said fellow Philly Sen. Anthony Williams, a member of the Pennsylvania Legislative Black Caucus.

"And my view of my colleagues is they are not closet racists," he said, "They may not know everything about black culture . . . [but] I don't know the Amish and I don't hate them."

Fumo friends say that Vince was taking a passionate stand for his constituents - his Senate district probably has the largest gay and lesbian population in the state.

But Black Caucus Chairman Rep. Thaddeus Kirkland tells me: "It was very insensitive from such a senior senator. It's unfortunate folks don't stick to the issue at hand . . . to equate it [a gay marriage ban] with slavery is wrong."

Asked if he thinks the Legislature is racist, Kirkland said, "No, I don't."

Senate GOP Leader Dominic Pileggi said that if Fumo actually believes a majority of the Senate would vote to reinstate slavery, "It's hard to see how that wouldn't require an apology."

I wouldn't count on it. Unless it's one of those "if I offended anyone" things.

Besides, Vince is merely extending (though by some distance) Gov. Ed's stated view that some Pennsylvania whites won't vote for blacks.

And Gov. Ed's spokesman assures me that if the Legislature passes a slavery bill, the governor will veto it. *

Send e-mail to baerj@phillynews.com.

For recent columns, go to

http://go.philly.com/baer

Comments
08:26 AM, 05/01/2008
I wants my reparations for da slavery already! Gimme mo money mo money mo money!
Posted by NJsux6569
08:39 AM, 05/01/2008
Isn't funny how in this day and time comment's like that can still fly out of a public servant's mouth,but these are the people we put in office and we wonder why our great nation still struggles with racial issues, some things never change.
Posted by tiredmuslim
09:07 AM, 05/01/2008
I just don't understand how nothing is said about Bishop Coleman's blatant discrimination against gays. Isn't anybody angry at that?
Posted by jmurphy
09:20 AM, 05/01/2008
The man was just trying to prove a point....worst things have been done, and said.
Posted by Kaitlyn629
09:37 AM, 05/01/2008
Fume-o is a DemocRAT and with the Democrat-Media Complex, when you say something like this, all you have to do is apologize and everything's just peachy. Good thing for him he's not a Republican - the Democrat-Media Complex would be calling for his resignation.
Posted by MiddleNameHussein
11:02 AM, 05/01/2008
If Vince was a Conservative-Republican, he would have been removed from office after his first offensive remarks (concerning homosexuals). As long as you are a "D", anything goes! If you are a Republican, you are evil and mean-spirited. I wish the media and the people of Pennsylvania were consistant with their criticism.
Posted by Casey
11:22 AM, 05/01/2008
Have y'all ever been out in the Alabama portion of Pennsylavnia? I think the point was well made. 'gay marriage' is what our legislature is focused on while our state and nation fall into disrepair? That's the disgrace.
Posted by carlino
11:22 AM, 05/01/2008
In case you've been living under a rock, Fumo is stepping down in a few months. The next place he'll be serving is a Federal Penitentiary. This isn't a party issue, and you shouldn't make it one. Calling his colleagues racist was stupid, but it's not an offense that should bring the word "resignation" into the discussion.
Posted by Hutch
11:27 AM, 05/01/2008
Did we miss the point of what he was trying to say? Just because we CAN pass a law, doesn't mean it's the right thing to do. Just because he butchered the delivery doesn't mean his position that we shouldn't be passing bad laws isn't legitimate. For those who didn't read the whole article, he was trying to argue against a law that discriminates against specific minorities.
Posted by sharksnj
11:28 AM, 05/01/2008
He was just trying to make a point. I agree that just because a legislative body passes something, doesn't mean it's right. The analogy is touchy, but I think his intentions were admirable--stressing equal rights for all people.
Posted by rin
11:48 AM, 05/01/2008
Vince - I suggest you put forward a bill making gay marriage acceptable BUT ONLY IF the gays consent to becoming slaves for the heteros.
Posted by samson
11:53 AM, 05/01/2008
samson - Do you mean "sex slaves" for the heteros? Surprised "Boris Karloff" allowed your comment in here. Boris is always tossing mine away, the stinker.
Posted by American International Pictures
12:06 PM, 05/01/2008
The essence of Fumo's comments is not far off target. I don't care what the public posture is of many of our state representatives, their inclinations off the record are biggoted and racist. They are only reflecting the attitudes of their constituencies, and let's face it, these are not influenced by the Enlightment.
Posted by John621
12:15 PM, 05/01/2008
Did Fumo say which group would be enslaved? Considering his thoughts on Dougherty, it might be the irish! Anyway, why not point to the moronic position of the good reverend...who said on TV last night that gay marriage was wrong because it does not result in procreation. I guess that leaves sterile heterosexuals and post menopausal women next to lose the privilege-tax break. Anyway, what is the percentage of children from the Revs community that are born outside the bonds of marriage? Why not focus on that issue!
Posted by bobcitydoc
01:05 PM, 05/01/2008
Several comments are in order: first, Fumo's thinking is typical of the left, namely, that anything and everything goes, especially when the goal is to give legitimacy to all forms of sexual behavior; second,in response to j murphy, Bishop Coleman is defending clinical normalcy and, if anything, he should be commended for his defiance of political correctness; third, in response to carlino, the real disgrace is that, in the name of a mindless attempt to ensure "equality," our culture is deteriorating to the point that the state legislature has to protect normalcy, that is, traditional marriage. To sum up, Vince Fumo and his fellow leftist travellers notwithstanding, the era of "anything goes" sexually is over. In a time when moral clarity is needed to counter the cutural deterioration the left mistakes for freedom and equality, those legislators who are defying the left ought to be commended, publicly, loudly, and often.
Posted by George Tomezsko
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