Mitt Romney’s birther joke at a campaign event in Michigan on Friday injected new life into discussions on the birther movement, an issue that might be pretty funny if it weren’t still a racially-tinged and deeply-held truth for so many conservative extremists.
On Friday’s Hardball, host Ezra Klein spoke to Ta-Nehisi Coates, a Senior Editor at The Atlantic and author of “Fear of a Black President,” about Romney’s joke and President Obama’s silence on racial issues.
Klein began by adamantly stating that he doesn’t think Mitt Romney is racist or a birther, and pointed out that Romney has said he firmly believes Obama was born in America. Klein also noted that in his first two years as president, Obama has spoken less about race than any other Democratic President since 1961.
He asked Coates to comment on what he’s learned digging through the back context of birtherism and the role racialized controversies play in American politics, in light of Romney’s wisecrack.
Coates touched on some of the country’s more shameful moments in history, and said there’s a serious need for more constructive discussions of race:








