Try racist against everyone else in the world
Wesley Clark was in charge of NATO during the Kosovo War and was a Presidential candidate.
>Raised a Southern Baptist who later converted to Roman Catholicism, Gen. Wesley Clark knew just what to say when he strode into a Brooklyn yeshiva in 1999, ostensibly to discuss his leadership of NATO's victory in Yugoslavia.
>"I feel a tremendous amount in common with you," the uniformed four-star general told the stunned roomful of students.
>"I am the oldest son, of the oldest son, of the oldest son — at least five generations, and they were all rabbis."
>The incident could be a signal of how Clark, who became the 10th contender in the Democratic run for the presidency on Wednesday, relates to the Jews and the issues dear to them.
>Apparently Clark, 58, revels in his Jewish roots.
>"But the problem is," Clark continued, "when you have hard intelligence that you're about to be struck, it's the responsibility of a government to take action against that intelligence and prevent the loss of lives. It's what any society would expect of its leadership. So there's a limit to how much restraint can be shown."
>Speaking to the New Democrat Network this year, Clark said that dismantling Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat's Ramallah headquarters was "a legitimate military objective from their perspective.
>"For the Israelis, this is a struggle really for the existence of Israel," Clark said in remarks quoted on a support group's Web site.
>Clark is also tough on neighboring Arab states, expecting more from them in nudging the Palestinians toward peace.
jweekly.com/article/full/20574/wesley-clark-comes-from-a-long-line-of-rabbis/