End Games
How the black pawns got pushed off the board.
May 6, 2008--The Democratic Party's primary race has reached a dangerous stage for black people. It has come to this: Both the Obama and Clinton campaigns are apparently willing to sacrifice black citizenship rights in order to win the Democratic nomination for president.
On one hand, we have Sen. Clinton's supporters being charged with intentionally trying to disenfranchise black voters in North Carolina and elsewhere through voter suppression tactics taken from Karl Rove's playbook.
But Sen. Obama is playing his own brand of risky politics. As he works to maintain white support, he is forgetting his black base. Just a week ago he urged voters to "respect" a New York judge's racist verdict allowing the police killers of Sean Bell to walk. His message was not unlike Booker T. Washington's admonishment to black Atlantans a century ago to respect the law in the face of a deadly pogrom. Black rights were sacrificed in the name of electoral expediency. And Obama is resorting to the same expediency now.
Just pay attention to the words. Here is Obama on April 25, in response to the verdict in the Bell case:
Well, look, obviously there was a tragedy in New York. I said at the time that without benefit of all the facts before me, it looked like a possible case of excessive force. Now, the judge has made his ruling. And, you know, we are a nation of laws. And so we respect the verdict that came down. I think the most important thing for people who are concerned about that shooting is to figure out how do we come together and ensure that those kinds of tragedies don't happen again? And so my understanding is that Mayor Bloomberg, community leaders, they are going to be -- the police department -- they are going to be getting together to find out what changes and procedures need to take place in preventing these kind of tragic shootings. But certainly, you know, resorting to violence to express displeasure over a verdict is something that is completely unacceptable and is counterproductive.
--Sen. Barack Obama
Here is Booker T. Washington commenting on the anti-black Atlanta Massacre of 1906, a killing spree that started as a result of false accusations against black males who were supposedly attacking white women:
I spoke plainly against the crime of assaulting women and of resorting to lynching and mob law as a remedy for any evil….I would strongly urge that the best white people and the best colored people come together in council and use their united efforts to stop the current disorder. I would especially urge the colored people of Atlanta and elsewhere to exercise self-control and not make the fatal mistake of retaliation.
--Booker T. Washington
The tactics of Senators Clinton and Obama may not seem connected. But they each signal a bankruptcy within the Democratic Party that black voters need to pay attention to.
In North Carolina and other states, an organization with very strong ties to the Clinton campaign has been targeting black communities with automated anonymous calls from a man calling himself "Lamont Williams," suggesting that already registered voters are not registered and need to complete additional steps to vote legally. According to the article at Wired.com, the organization Women's Voices/Women Vote has agreed, in response to North Carolina State Attorney General Roy Cooper's demand, to stop the illegal anonymous phone calls.
North Carolina's black population, which is 22 percent of the state's population, is becoming increasingly critical and what was supposed to be an easy Obama win is becoming uncomfortably close. That Clinton supporters would stoop this low, that they would use the very same tactics that Karl Rove and his gang of thugs used in Florida to steal the 2000 presidential election from the American people, is shameful and puts them in the same category as Republicans who,in states such as Georgia, are trying to bring back Jim Crow-era methods of black disenfranchisement, such as a new version of the poll tax.
In the meantime, Sen. Obama has apparently voluntarily fallen off the tightrope that Marjorie Valbrun brilliantly describes in her article. The Senator's comments on Sean Bell's killing, even more than his comments during the current Rev. Wright debacle, show the degree to which, in a few short weeks, he has abandoned the already dubious racial "even-handedness" of his Philadelphia speech (see my previous article ), in order to reassure white voters that he believes in law and order and is not a "militant" like his former pastor.
The Senator found it necessary to denounce his former minister for making statements that, in the main, are supported by large segments of the black community. (Most blacks' criticism of Rev. Wright has to do with the real harm that Wright's comments had on Obama's campaign, not with the substance of Wright's remarks.). And yet, Obama did not find it necessary to condemn a justice system that still does not punish agents of the state who kill black men and women whose only crime is being black. (In Chicago we have had black women shot down in the same manner as Sean Bell.) I will not respect a verdict that once again demonstrates, all too clearly, the continued lack of full citizenship rights for black people in this country.
Like Booker T. Washington a century earlier, Obama chose to emphasize the need to be "calm" over expressing outrage at yet another deadly taking of black life. He, too, has taken the electorally "safe" road.
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End Games
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View All Comments »fsilber at 05/14/2008 2:33:27 PM
Comment:
What is so bad about being compared to Booker T. Washington? Most of what Washington wrote and said was true. We're frequently told that Black America is little better off than it was before the Civil Rights Amendment was passed, and in many ways worse off. Yet, those blacks who do follow Booker T. Washington's advice _are_ doing much better.
True, B.T.Washington's approach provides little in the way of direct vengeance for past wrongs, but vengeance doesn't come cheap.
earlp74 at 05/12/2008 1:11:03 PM
Comment:
Michael C. Dawson! please stop putting out this silly issue into the thoughts of society. You are trying to question Obama's loyalty to the black community, by words that he says, or doesn't say?? It only makes sense to "pick your battles". C'mon, if we have a man that has a chance to win the presidency. It makes no sense whatsoever to jeopardize it by alienating votes (sensitive mainstream "white" votes). He can help, once he's there. You sound like Rev. Wright! pick your battles playa!
Freedom_Jury at 05/12/2008 3:55:13 AM
Comment:
Sharpton is correct in this case, but not for the reasons he believes...
"Let us render the tyrant no aid; let us not hold the light by which he can trace the footsteps of our flying brother" -Frederick Douglass (from 'Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave')
How is it that there are still Jim Crow laws in all of our major cities, and that the citizens of the USA are not educated enough to oppose them, in the year 2008? A full 143 years after the fall of slavery, the laws treat black men and women horribly unequally... WHY?
Well, my brothers and sisters, I have done my research, and I have found the answer to this question.
SIMPLY: The culture of prohibition is the factor that allows the unequal enforcement of the law. Any law that violates inalienable property rights allows a minority to be singled out and targeted by law enforcement. The 4th amendment, the 2nd Amendment, the entire Bill of Rights cannot exist as the Supreme Law of the land, so long as there is prohibition of private property. The abolitionists of our time, the libertarians, are in agreement with me. Frederick Douglas would certainly have been a Libertarian Party member, if he had lived in our time: he fought for equality under the law, and justice for all.
Equality under the law is the last thing that modern liberals or conservatives want. The liberals want to control your pocket book, and the conservatives want to control your thinking and social behavior.
Douglass noted that the religious slaveowners were the most vicious, and he was right. The mask of social respectability is used to hide tyranny from the gullible and conformist. And the prohibition laws are championed loudly by the religious blacks. (Of course, the black panthers once saw the contradiction, and fought valiantly for their rights. The answer of the Chicago police was to literally murder thier leadership. One more reason to educate EVERYONE.)
Make no mistake: the preachers and politicians who want the inner cities to be unarmed want one thing: they want black men to be unable to properly wield force. What does this say, when the people being disarmed have committed no crime? It is racism, pure and simple, based on geographical demographics. (Sure, the occasional white man is sent to jail for gun ownership in the city, but this is simply a ruse used to propagate a system that is predominantly racist. I know of three times when whites in Chicago went unpunished for gun possession that would have carried a 14 year prison sentence had they been "uppity" black men.) The racism is institutionalized to the extent that those who claim to be fighting racism propagate it, in their simpleminded acceptance of the status quo.