Since Harry was one of the senators trying to get Obama to run I'm sure the question came up "Is America ready?" just like it did here and in polls
Somehow Harry saying Obama doesn't have a Negro dialect sounds a lot more natural for him than if he said 'he doesn't talk black' and perhaps less rude than 'he sounds white'.
That was an accusation against Obama in the 2000 US House primary he lost (to an ex black panther in a very black district.
Before Obama Was a Favorite SonIn an unusual primary contest, issues of class, education, racial authenticity and "street smarts" were fused with tensions between the generation of Bobby Rush and Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr., and younger blacks like Obama, a highly ambitious young state senator who had never known life before the civil rights era. The First District of Illinois had elected the first 20th-century black US congressman, Oscar DePriest, in 1929, has been represented by African Americans ever since, and was the nation's most overwhelmingly black congressional district in the 2000 census. Obama's political base was in the elite, interracial Hyde Park neighborhood
(snip)
The race soon became seen as a contest between the Black Panther and the professor. Rush's other primary opponent, Donne Trotter, from a well-connected South Side family, called Obama "the white man in blackface in our community." (Trotter polled a distant third on election day.) For the second time in four years Obama was challenging a black incumbent with decades of experience and wide respect in South Side politics. Shortly before the primary, black progressive journalist Salim Muwakkil noted in the Chicago Tribune that Obama was "perhaps the least favorite son," observing that "his Harvard education and crisp elocution mark him as insufficiently 'black.'"
So is it better to be complimented and supported in old fashioned language or insulted and opposed in more modern language as a way to insult and oppose you...
and for the very same trait.
As an aside that really was one thing he fought back on. Not the way he talked exactly but his Ivy League education was used against him a lot (and blamed for his fancy way of talking). He thought that was a horrible message for young minorities to hear as thoug getting a good education made you less real. It isn't in this article but while researching candidates I found some articles from the time.
Bill Clinton campaigned against him in that primary race too!
Anyway just saying if the way he speaks is going to be brought up as influencing his candidacy I like it better when it is seen as a positive.
I actually have said to quit talking so black before now that I think of it. A couple of decades ago I was in a bar/restaurant and a couple of pro-football players came in. They ended up sitting with me later and I was asking them a lot of inside football questions. At some point they were debating some point and talking very fast and with a 'negro dialect' and I could barely follow. I said something like hey you're talking black so fast that this slow white woman is feeling left out.
They started laughing and one offered to translate