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Home Front: Culture Wars
Black Groups Circle the Wagons Around Obama
2008-05-10
In black America, oh, how the mighty have fallen. Bill Clinton is no longer revered as the "first black president." Tavis Smiley's rapid-fire commentaries on a popular radio show have been silenced. And the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., self-described defender of the black church, has been derided by many on the Web as an old man who needs to "step off."
If you don't love the Messiah, you are banished from the fold.
They all landed in the black community's doghouse after being viewed as endangering Sen. Barack Obama's chances of being elected president. And the community's desire to protect the first African American ever to be in this position may only grow with his win in North Carolina and his close loss in Indiana this week.
Actually, this is not good news for the Republic...
"I have parents who are still living who are very enthusiastic about Obama," said Valerie Grim, the chair of Indiana University's Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies. "They live in Mississippi. For a time, my parents couldn't vote, and when they could, their only choice was a white person.

"This means more than just saying there's a black person on the ticket. It represents the things they had been denied - they never had a real choice. It's being able to see the unbelievable, that the impossible might be possible for the first time since 1863. No, 1954. How about 1964? It represents for them a new day, a new opportunity to see that black people can contribute, on the ultimate level, to the social order."
By electing the only kind of person who can really understand your needs - he is, after all, half-African.
Given such sentiment, it has not taken much for other public figures to move from icon to pariah. When Bill Clinton called Obama's position on Iraq a "fairy tale" in New Hampshire, "I think black people felt betrayed," said Andrea Plaid, a blogger who writes under the pen name the Cruel Secretary. African Americans continued to regard Clinton highly even after he was impeached for lying under oath. "And you turn around and do this to us?" Plaid said.
Listen to yourself, Andrea. Lying, impeachment, cigars and interns, all O.K.? Questioning the potential first real black President? How dare you?
Smiley, the renowned black author and commentator, took issue with Obama for skipping his "Covenant With Black America" event in New Orleans so he could campaign in Texas and Ohio. The resulting backlash left Smiley feeling "hammered" and "barbequed" by black Americans. "There's all this talk of 'hater,' 'sellout' and 'traitor,' " Smiley said at the time. ". . . They are harassing my mama, harassing my brother."

The animus dogged him even on the radio, where his commentaries on black causes for the popular "Tom Joyner Morning Show" were renowned. In a terse statement issued last month, Smiley announced that he was leaving the show to focus on other ventures.

Smiley "did a disservice to the black community," said L.N. Rock, the blogger known as the African American Political Pundit. He noted that Smiley billed the New Orleans gathering as an event for the people. But while the people agreed with Obama's compromise of dispatching his wife, Michelle, to speak in his stead, Smiley balked. "He should have been hammered for that," Rock said.

Wright has been hailed by many in the black clergy as a brilliant liberation theologian. But after his speech and question-and-answer session at the National Press Club last month, people commented on the blog Jack and Jill Politics -- billed as a political sounding board for the "black bourgeois" -- that the minister should have known better than to pick a fight with the media at such a crucial point in the presidential campaign.
I'm sure Bill Cosby is hammered on subsequent pages...
Posted by:Bobby

#13  Agreed about races, Nimble Spemble -- when discussing scientific evidence. But sociologically, race has been a galvanizing idea in all directions.

John F. Kennedy's election run attracted the Catholic bloc. Rudy Giuliani's run obviously didn't. But Candidate Obama is the first African-American to have a real possibility of representing his party in the national election. The Reverend Jesse Jackson was never a serious candidate. I don't really have a problem with that.
Posted by: trailing wife    2008-05-10 20:59  

#12  Let me be clear that I do not believe races exist.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-05-10 19:04  

#11  hmmm, NS may be on to something. That would explain the bloc voting for Kerry by fake-Irish, French-speaking Pompous Assholes and Cowardly Traitors who married for money
Posted by: Frank G   2008-05-10 18:43  

#10  "Irish for Kennedy? I'll bet there weren't a lot for Nixon. And if Giuliani had run, I suspect he'd have gotten a disproportionate Italian vote."

I don't think that's an equivalent, NS. I'll cheerfully grant that a goodly majority of the groups you've cited would have voted for their "favorite son," so to speak, but I don't think you can cite either Irish or Italian as a race. Plus, by the time either of those two (JFK or Rudy) was in a position to run, there were plenty of people from their ethnic background who would have voted against them based on their perception that personal economic issues trumped any perceived ethnic loyalties.
Posted by: Thaimble Scourge of the Pixies4707   2008-05-10 18:22  

#9  I didn't know he was black, until the Clinton's told me so!
Posted by: smn   2008-05-10 15:51  

#8  I thought bo said he was Irish? Or didn't he say he was related to Dick Cheney? Or didn't he say he...

Perhaps after black america, or at least those who consider their opinions better than yours and decide to speak for everyone based upon a superficial aspect of human genetics, circles the wagons and discover that bo has thrown everyone under his bus, and when they get hosed just like everyone else bo has embraced at the current political expediency, they will wall in the spaces between the wagons and fill the center with concrete.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2008-05-10 12:27  

#7  So did Jesse, but none of them were ever serious contenders. And Al Smith was Irish.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-05-10 09:43  

#6  except this isn't the first time a black has run. IIRC, Barbara Jordan was
Posted by: Frank G   2008-05-10 09:41  

#5  Irish for Kennedy? I'll bet there weren't a lot for Nixon. And if Giuliani had run, I suspect he'd have gotten a disproportionate Italian vote.

The first time any one of "our boys" runs, they'll get a lot of votes just be cause they're "one of us".
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-05-10 09:35  

#4  Judging from the voting in the Dem primaries so far, an extremely strong case can be made that blacks are the most racist group in American society. If you want to argue against that point, tell me another group that has ever been known to vote as en bloc as blacks in this Dem primary cycle.

Posted by: Thaimble Scourge of the Pixies4707   2008-05-10 09:24  

#3  He's half white, so half the white people should vote for him. And half black, so all the black people should vote for him. Or something like that.
Posted by: Glenmore   2008-05-10 09:19  

#2  For a time, my parents couldn't vote, and when they could, their only choice was a white person.

It would appear, the same "choice" as the rest of us. Impressive accedemic credentials by the way.....not far from the FLDS mindset I'm afraid.
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-05-10 08:59  

#1  Black, black, black, black, black. He seems nice enough, but you cant win the election with 13% of the population.
It always comes back to black with this guy. And his voters.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-05-10 08:53  

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