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Home Front: Politix
Obama in 1987: community organizing sucks
2008-09-05
John B. Judis, TNR
Yeah, I know, it's TNR, but ... look, just read the thing, willya?
(Blodface emphasis added.)


In late October 1987, Barack Obama and Jerry Kellman took a weekend off from their jobs as community organizers in Chicago and traveled to a conference on social justice and the black church at Harvard. . . . Two-and-a-half years earlier, Kellman had hired Obama to organize residents of Chicago's South Side. Now, Obama had something to tell his friend and mentor. . . . He told Kellman that he feared community organizing would never allow him "to make major changes in poverty or discrimination." To do that, he said, "you either had to be an elected official or be influential with elected officials." In other words, Obama believed that his chosen profession was getting him nowhere, or at least not far enough. Personally, he might end up like his father; politically, he would fail to improve the lot of those he was trying to help.

And so, Obama told Kellman, he had decided to leave community organizing and go to law school. Kellman, who was already thinking of leaving organizing himself, found no reason to argue with him. "Organizing," Kellman tells me, as we sit in a Chicago restaurant down the street from the Catholic church where he now works as a lay minister, "is always a lost cause." Obama, circa late 1987, might or might not have put it quite that strongly. But he had clearly developed serious doubts about the career he was pursuing.

Yet, two decades later, to hear Obama the presidential candidate tell it, those years in Chicago as a community organizer shaped the person--and the politician--he has become. . . . In truth, however, if you examine carefully how Obama conducted himself as an organizer and how he has conducted himself as a politician, if you consider what he said about organizing to his fellow organizers, and if you look at the reasons he gave friends and colleagues for abandoning organizing, then a very different picture emerges: that of a disillusioned activist who fashioned his political identity not as an extension of community organizing but as a wholesale rejection of it. . . .
Posted by:Mike

#2  If one wanted to be charitable, one would see that scales fell from the eyes of the young grasshopper: why, did you know that in Chicago, it's better to be a politician than to be a community organizer?
Posted by: Steve White   2008-09-05 22:42  

#1  but of course: this exercise in bitter cynicism makes him perfectly positioned to be a Donk politician. It doesn't make him qualified to be President Of The United States, the position he aspires to, but needs phonebooks to sit on during the interview
Posted by: Frank G   2008-09-05 21:22  

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