Guardian | ...but presented to it after he had made his way through the mostly
white elites. His political ties to the black community are not organic
but symbolic. His arrival in the political class is hailed as the
progress of a community when in fact it is the advancement of an
individual.
"[Obama] is being consumed as the embodiment of color
blindness," Angela Davis, professor of history of consciousness at the
University of California, Santa Cruz, told me in late 2007.
"It's the notion that we have moved beyond racism by not taking race
into account. That's what makes him conceivable as a presidential
candidate. He's become the model of diversity in this period … a model
of diversity as the difference that makes no difference. The change that
brings no change."
That is why criticisms of him for "not doing
enough for his own people" both miss and devalue the point. The demand
to close the racial gaps bequeathed by centuries of discrimination is
not a sectional interest but a national one. Demands for equality and
racial justice should be made to any president of whatever race or
party.
Obama should do more for black people – not because he is
black but because black people are the citizens suffering most. Black
people have every right to make demands on Obama – not because they're
black but because they gave him a greater percentage of their votes than
any other group, and he owes his presidency to them. Like any
president, he should be constantly pressured to put the issue of racial
injustice front and centre and if black people aren't going to apply
that pressure then nobody else will.
But in fact precisely the
opposite has been happening. With Obama in the White House African
Americans representatives have been backpedalling. Black politicians,
too, have held their fire.
"With 14% unemployment, if we had a
white president we'd be marching around the White House," said the
chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), Emmanuel Cleaver. "The
president knows we are going to act in deference to him in a way we
wouldn't to someone white." That's pathetic and counterproductive. These
are the very people who are now showing up with empty hands and trying
to galvanise the black community to go to the polls.
Their
reticence is partly explained by the fear of a backlash. "If we go after
the president too hard, you're going after us," Maxine Waters, a
California Democrat in the House, told a largely black audience in
Detroit last year. But then that's what leadership is about. Explaining
to those audiences that there are large numbers of people lobbying for
Obama's attention, including people with huge amounts of money and
power. If the black community wants it they must demand it.
Some
have spoken out. In August after a month-long round of job fairs
organised by the CBC across the nation John Conyers, the longest serving
black American in Congress said.
"We want [Obama] to know from this day forward that we've had it. We
want him to come out on our side and advocate, and not to watch and wait
… We're suffering." Unfortunately it was followed by little in the way
of action.
In the absence of that pressure Obama has felt little
need to focus his attention on the problem, even rhetorically. In his
first two years in office he talked about race less than any Democratic
president since 1961. In all of his state of the union speeches he
mentioned poverty
just three times: last year's was the first since 1948 to not mention
poverty or the poor at all. When he did talk about it it was to preach better parenting, healthy meals and greater discipline.
At a Congressional Black Caucus meeting in September he told his former colleagues:
"Take off your bedroom slippers, put on your marching shoes. Shake it
off. Stop complaining, stop grumbling, stop crying." Compare that to the
meeting he had with bankers not long after he was elected when they
thought he was going to impose serious regulation. "I'm the only thing
standing between you and the pitchforks. I'm not out there to go after
you," he told them. "I'm protecting you."
This would not be the
first time that the black Americans have shown great loyalty to a
Democratic president who did not return the favour. Bill Clinton is
still revered even though when he ran in 1992 he made a special trip
back to Arkansas to oversee the execution
of Ricky Ray Rector – a black, lobotomised inmate so mentally
incapacitated that when given his last meal, he opted to save the
dessert for after the execution. When in power he signed off on a
welfare reform that would prove devastating to large numbers of black
families, especially women. He presided over an economic boom Obama does
not even have that.
35 comments:
"Their reticence is partly explained by the
fear of a backlash. "IF WE GO AFTER THE PRESIDENT TOO HARD, YOU'RE GOING
AFTER US," Maxine Waters, a California Democrat in the House, told a
largely black audience in Detroit last year."
Reminds me of the stupid parents that picketed against Sesame Street for adding vegetables to Cookie Monster's all-cookie menu. People will fight gold tooth and manicured nail to protect their own genocide.
Thank you for putting me on to Mr. Younge.
I'm still trying to process his critique of Cornel West but he wrote an excellent piece. Not surprised that he's a British writer.
lol, that'd be the primary public service mission of the liminal ouevre - cuh-learly Mr. Younge's vision not blurry....,
that said, what'd you do, or, whadda-you plan to do on tuesday magne?
Saturday morning is daddytivities morning in Kansas City, we drive very slowly through a whole buncha neighborhoods and stop every now and again and sample the local economic frequency and flavor. To say that that's eye-opening is a serious understatement. Lotta tongue-biting, cause I don't wanna give the story all away, I want the young mind to savor the flavors and ask the relevant kwestins. You got that kinda ethnic/economic diversity on display upsouth for lil'GCV?
...BD just sends the newslinks to the grandkiddies so they can figure, for their own IQ-160 selves, what influences to embrace and What Influences To Avoid...
..."the local economic frequency and flavor..."
Don't be bashful, CNu, give us the Straight Liminal Scoop from out there in bullet-riddled BabyDaddyLand...
(KC just made Business Insider's most-violent cities list...)
What is with this IQ-160 business? That is fewer than 1 in 10,000?
It's bulls***. He fails to recognize that those who do have IQ-160 can see it so easily -- the helmet gives him away.
You see Don, an IQ-120 appears equally as mentally handicapped to an IQ-160 as an IQ-60 l00zer seems to you (and your grandkiddies).
He's not gonna post it here DUMMY... wants the kids to "ask the relevant kwestins"... posting it here would give it away to them. We all know you wouldn't know how to pull a relevant kwestin outta your ass-end anyway.
I like Dmitry Orlov's plan. Don't participate they're all a bunch of assclowns anyway -- I live in Richard Mourdock land, natch!
lol, nothing beats the stench emanating from america's psycho-spiritual colostomy bag....,
the poster-child for agnosognosics anonymous wouldn't have any practical value if the terror of his situation ever dawned on him http://www.amazon.com/The-King-Kings-County-Novel/dp/0670034258
though the names were changed to protect the life of the author, this book is a faintly fictionalized account of how the machinery of white-flight was engineered in Kansas City. The bread crumbs I find interesting to trace, are some of the 105 abandoned school buildings which formerly comprised the 70,000 student strong Kansas City public school district through 1959, and what became of those buildings as whites dispersed out into the nascent exurbs..., killa-city is nothing more than a symptom of a multi-generational, whole-sale abandonment and ostracism.
Your 'known-unknown," led me down a pleasant little rabbit hole you've touched on before:
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/20/the-anosognosics-dilemma-1/
And taught me another new word, which might be more apt (and vile) with respect to BD.
anosodiaphoria
Though perhaps I give him too much credit, but it seems more likely as a coping strategy for an old man who is irredeemably doomed.
I understand the First Black Syndrome--the enormous psychological investment Afrikan Americans have in the success of the first Black person in a public arena. It's largely a reaction to the defamation of our character by the White Supremacy Dynamic (see Jefferson's "Notes on the State of Virginia" e.g.). Barack Obama's "first" transcends all others. But it's absolutely delusional to think your people were better off in Jan/2010 with nearly 16 percent unemployment (U3), than they were in Jan/2007 with 7.9 percent unemployment. Emotions were running on steriods while rational thought was malnourished.
Three years ago we were living in a gentrified zone. It was an art community in the middle of a historically poor black neighborhood. However the art residency which we were close to was a project of social relevance. There was also a community center that's been holding it down since the 70's. My son witnessed the hood hijinks but in the midst of it all were the art openings, the after school Capoeira classes, the Afrikan drum classes, the vegetable market co-op on weekends, the Eid Celebrations, the ancestor libations; being with dad to serve Emory Douglass/ Kathleen Cleaver/ Amiri Baraka during their Houston visits for museum/ gallery engagements.
I never really took note how he absorbed all of that. But the black art residency and the community center only a block apart have invented an atmosphere in which the youth raised there believe those are the things that are just suppose to be in a hood. That's the ghetto however the only time I've heard him describe a place as "ghetto" is when we stopped by a Walmart.
One of the comments recently was about how Republicans have been framing Obama as anti-Israeli. Been thinking a bit on that one and I've decided that it's primarily to sway old Jewish voters in Florida (to steal the election) for Rmoney. Secondarily, it fits nicely with the crazy that runs through fundamentalist xtians heads although they're already voting for Rmoney.
Mebbe Rmoney is the fulfillment of the white horse prophecy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Horse_Prophecy
MebBE!
I was listening to this cat speak on voting. He made a point that we
vote everyday when we choose who to associate with, how we choose to
spend our money and what we choose to invest our time and energy doing.
On Tuesday I will continue to encourage my son to vote as he has always
voted; loving God & feeding the poor, spending his money on fair trade products, growing his fruit/
vegetable garden, being the household recycle police, serving the women of his family and humanity and beating-up the
school bully again if need be.
...Slam-Dunk for Obama. None of the pollsters have applied the rampant Obama Fraud Factor.. All those "mis-calibrated" voting machines that convert Romney votes to Obama. Dead voters. Bribes. NAACP/Panther polling place coercion. Tampered-with mail-in ballots.......
Critical edge in swing states. You can bet Dems have worked that potential to the absolute hilt.....[ Note to CNu: file under "What it do Shawty" ]
People-centric leadership at its finest! Accept no substitutes....,
That is one of the funny things about making a big deal of this IQ business. The NORMAL range is 90 to 110 and a Moron is 75. So to a person with a 150 IQ all of the Normal people are morons from his perspective. But 75% of the population is below 111.
So how are we supposed to run the world with computers everywhere that most people cannot understand but we want most people to get college degrees. Doesn't that really mean the degrees are watered down junk to make money off low IQ people.
Personally I think IQ tests are of questionable accuracy and value and I score over 130. My problem has usually been that teachers don't seem too smart. Read Isaac Asimov. His IQ was 160.
You are a fellow Hoosier? You know, the homonym of Hoosier, in Russian, is hoo-zhe, which means "the worst".
Yes. Yes, I am. Over near Fort Wayne. I've tried to explain what hoo-zhes are like to CNu... don't think he understands -- my Facebook feed could help with that though. I didn't realize what they were like until I moved for work to New Hampshire. Eye opening.
I laugh every time CNu says that if BD didn't exist he'd have to make him up. Chrissakes they're EVERYWHERE here.
Really? You're surrounded by military vet, retired engineers who have to go to the trouble of pseudo-scientifically rationalizing the outgassings of their ids, or, are you saying that Indiana, like rural Pennsylvania, has a great deal in common with 1963 Alabama?
I'm BD, and I approve this message....
The way I've heard it put, if Ohio wears the derby and starched collar, Indiana wears the straw boater and spats. And that was in 1996.
Derp, derp, derp, derp,...
I've been seeing a lot of Bible verse self-calming scrolling in my "friend" feed today...
... @Dale scripture
This Letter to Editor (image below) appeared in a Midwest small-town newspaper prior to the 2008 election...
(image from previous comment)
BD making a relevant comment? For a second there I thought I might be experiencing a contact high from all the marijuana smoke pouring in from Colorado and Washington!
I do get the Christ-like appeal though since Jesus spoke Aramaic which is the sister tongue to Arabic (not old English or Greek or Latin) and he prayed with his face on the ground just like Muslims. Fascinating observation BD.
I'm imagining BD and his Bible study group meeting the same fate, when seeing the real Jesus, as Clayton Bigsby's supporters when he removed his hood.
Don't forget "elderly". In the cities, where they're edumacated, you got Type I "BD", out here in the boondocks, Type II. I feel diseased now, yuck.
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