Ga. Senate candidate talks race at USDA; says didn’t speak to white person until high school
By APTuesday, August 10, 2010
Ga. Senate candidate talks about race at USDA
ATLANTA — A Democratic U.S. Senate candidate from Georgia says he used to be suspicious of white people because he never spoke to one his age until his all-black high school consolidated with an all-white one when he was 18.
The 57-year-old Michael Thurmond said those suspicions dissipated as he interacted with whites at his Athens, Ga., school
Before that, he said “the only white friend I had was on TV — Beaver,” from “Leave It to Beaver.”
Thurmond made the remarks in a keynote speech Tuesday at a diversity conference sponsored by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C.
The USDA last month forced employee Shirley Sherrod to resign from her Georgia position when a blogger posted a heavily edited video that made her appear racist. Later it was shown her remarks were taken out of context and officials asked her to return.
Information from: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, www.ajc.com
Tags: Atlanta, Georgia, Government Regulations, Industry Regulation, North America, Race And Ethnicity, Senate Elections, United States