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In last week's BC
cover story, Voting
Rights: It's Time to Think the Unthinkable, this editor examined
the historic lineup of forces which made possible the enactment
of the Voting Rights Act back in 1965. Forty years ago there
was an active pro-voting rights president with majorities in Congress
and the courts. The US was competing for influence in the
rapidly decolonizing Third World with the Soviet Union, causing
some of the US elite to view the end of Jim Crow and extension
of voting rights to African Americans as a Cold War priority. And
most importantly, a broadly based Freedom Movement existed across
the country, a movement willing and eager to violate unjust laws,
to be impolite and to raise the social, economic and political
costs of continuing Jim Crow higher than America's elite were
willing to pay.
Those favorable conditions do not obtain
today. The congress, courts and the president are far to the
right of where they once stood, and the US has no superpower
rival it must try to look better than on the world stage. The
mobilized black masses have long since been sent home by their
leaders, who have assured them that all they need do is come
out and vote every now and then.
But today, the federal obligation to protect
minority voting rights is enshrined in settled law, placing
its opponents at a disadvantage. This is however, a political
climate in which coal and petrochemical interests are tapped
to write the administration's air pollution laws and allowed
to call it the Clear
Skies Initiative. The police state bill can be named the
Patriot
Act, and legislation to dismantle
and defund public education is touted as No
Child Left Behind. With demagogic lies the principal tissue
of everyday political discourse, Republican opponents of the
Voting Rights bill unconvincingly tried to pull sheepheads over
their wolfish snouts and pose as protectors of minority voting
rights in order to advance legislative poison
pill amendments to kill it.
The Voting Rights Act has worked so well
for minorities in Georgia, a couple of Republicans from that
state disingenuously proclaimed, that they introduced amendments
to extend its provisions nationwide to every jurisdiction with
substantial numbers of blacks, Asians, Native Americans and
Hispanics. They knew that with no documented history of disenfranchisement
openly and admittedly undertaken in the name of white supremacy,
such as exists for Georgia, Mississippi and other places covered
by the pre-clearance provisions of the VRA, it wouldn't be long
before the current right wing crop of judges ruled most or all
of the VRA invalid. Another killer amendment would have banned
or restricted the provision of voting materials in languages
other than English, and still another revealed the white supremacist
wolf beneath the sheep's clothing by howling for the end of
the VRA's pre-clearance provisions everywhere.
We should be grateful that all four of the
poison pill amendments failed in the House of Representatives
last week, with the support of all or nearly all Democratic
legislators and some Republicans. The three to one margin by
which the VRA passed, its vital pre-clearance provisions intact,
and the similar margins by which the killer amendments failed
should not deceive us. Many Republican and perhaps some Democratic
legislators sit completely on the fence, voting for the winning
side only once they are certain a bill will prevail without
them. Thus a three to one vote in the House of Representatives
in favor of keeping the Voting Rights Act of 1965 intact does
not mean three fourths of the Congress are our allies.
Still, if the congressman of either party
from your district voted for the VRA intact, and voted against
the poison pill amendments, we recommend that BC
readers call and congratulate him or her on their wisdom and
common sense. Black America dodged a bullet aimed at our ability
to exercise our
vote without fear or fraud early this month in the House of
Representatives, and we must do the same in the Senate and conference
committee. The Voting Rights Act in its present form is irreplaceable.
Now is the time to contact both senators from your state, of
whichever party and urge them to pass it intact and without
crippling amendments as the House did. The VRA must pass the
Senate, and a conference committee before proceeding to George
Bush in the White House for his signature.
The Descent of Barack Obama
The career of Barack Obama, junior senator
from Illinois and apparent candidate for vice president on a
2008 Hilary Clinton ticket, raises many questions about the
nature and function of and our relationship to what passes for
black leadership in this era. Is the senator a “black leader”
whether or not he pushes or advances the views of the Black
Consensus? Who has anointed, denoted and promoted black leaders
and for what reasons in the past? Who's doing it now, and why?
Can one be a “black leader” and be pro-corporate privilege,
pro-empire and pro-war, as Obama is, when the vast
majority of African Americans are unequivocally on the political
left and in fundamental opposition to American empire and war?
In her July 6 Freedom Rider column, Obama
Gets Religion BC's Margaret Kimberley took
the senator to task.
”...In his keynote
address at the Call to Renewal Conference Obama lectured
us in typical Democratic Leadership Council style. He argued
for the truthfulness of phony Republican premises, in this case,
that Democrats don’t have enough of that old time religion and
are mean to church people.”
But as Kimberley astutely observes,
”...The groveling pundits and opportunistic
politicians who claim a progressive bias against religion can
never seem to actually quote anyone who wants to send religion
packing. They hope that making a specious argument often enough
will make it true.”
The Big Lie that the major fault line in
American life, culture and politics is between the godly and
the ungodly is never a surprise when we hear it from Republican
lips in between their personal professions of faith. But when
leading Democrats preach to us from the Republican gospel about
the shortcomings of those godless progressives, it gets attention.
It should. Our Margaret Kimberley was far from the only one
to point out how unprincipled and truly dangerous the senator's
remarks were. As the popular Democratic blog myDD.com
observed:
”Obama's comments lend tri-partisan support
(Democrats, Republicans and the media) to a narrative that Democrats
are hostile toward people of faith. This tri-partisan support
will result in a "closing of the triangle" against
Democrats where it becomes conventional wisdom that Democrats
are hostile to people of faith. This has been how the DLC has
managed to reify every anti-Democratic narrative it likes within
the national discourse. So thanks Senator Obama, for reifying
this Republican-driven talking point about Democrats. Now almost
everyone will think that Democrats are hostile to people of
faith. Well done. Your
mentor, Joe Lieberman, would be proud.
Most BC readers seemed
to agree with Ms. Kimberley. According to John Farabee:
I think Obama's "centering"
himself (ala Hillary) for a future Presidential run. He
appears not to care that Democratic voters and the majority
of all Americans are anti-Iraq war. Like all too many Democratic
politicians, Obama seems hell-bent on not representing them. As
Arianna Huffington wrote recently, all Democrats have to
do is follow the voters.
Your views on Obama could not be more
accurate or relevant at this time. For me the awakening came
when at least a year ago he advocated "precision"
surgical strikes on Iran. People with such ideas belong
far away from any function of government. Obama is a person
who takes whatever stand he deems necessary but actually stands
for nothing except himself and his career; in short, a blowhard.
But there are those who imagine it is BC's
and perhaps their duty to “build up” leaders, whether or not
those figures represent the needs, wants and desires of our
people. Reader Ruth Rodriguez appears to be among that number:
I am so saddened by your commentary of
July 6, 2006, on Barrack Obama. It seems to me that the
more we need great leaders to help bring us into a healthier
place, the fewer people, who possess great moral convictions
that we find. The first time I heard Obama was at the
Democratic Convention in Boston, and I believed that we had
finally found someone who could lead us to better things.
I was so moved by his words and his own experiences that I was
actually starting to feel some hope. Then, you come along
with your analysis, and blow my bubble. What kind of a
society do we live in, that we can break or make leaders with
the power of the pen? I wish you could have sat down with
Obama and discussed your concerns before throwing him into the
wolves. How can we build our leaders?
In a similar vein, Greg Kelley sent us this
communication:
While I don't agree with everything that
Obama has to say, I thought his speech was filled with important
things: Not least of which was a liberal Democrat talking about
matters of religion from a personal and political perspective.
I don t think that he stole from the religious conservative
handbook. He was honest, open and offered a new perspective
from the point of view of an elected government official. While
it may not have reflected the views of unelected and self-appointed
thinkers, it was exemplary in its tone and perspective.
It's way easier to throw brickbats than
it is to go about the delicate and difficult task of governing
and bringing people together for a common good.
I have been a long time reader of BC
and have truly appreciated the excellent opinion offered over
the years. BC does provide a perspective
sorely missing from today's political and social discourse.
However, I take exception to your recent anti Barack Obama
screed. I was left wondering: Did you hear the same
speech that I heard? And why the anti-Obama animus?
BC and Barack Obama: Ain't
No “Animus” Here
Journalism is the only profession with its
own protective constitutional amendment. This is not to encourage
us to say nice things about the powerful. It's to enable us
to fearlessly monitor the centers of power and speak the truth.
It's not our job to “build up” so-called leaders with uncritical
praise, and it never has been. BC is a journal
of investigation and analysis, like it says on our masthead.
We don't do “animus.” “Animus” is a kind of unreasoning, instinctual
dislike and aversion. If our coverage of Barack Obama is less
than flattering, that's because it's been such a long time since
the junior senator from Illinois showed us much of anything
we can agree with.
BC first took note of Obama's
Democratic primary campaign for the US Senate shortly after
the invasion of Iraq back in June of 2003. We observed
that candidate Obama had apparently scrubbed his web site clean
of any mention of his early stand against the war and for single
payer health care. We offered Obama space in our pages for
a brief
reply and a follow-up
the next week, after running another article detailing the baneful
influence of the Democratic
Leadership Council, which had claimed candidate Obama as
one of their own. We posed him three “bright line” questions
about support for the war, for NAFTA and for single payer health
care. After a little squirming, Obama gave the answers one
would expect of a progressive and renounced any affiliation
with the DLC, and we endorsed
him.
This editor, a native Chicagoan now living
in Georgia, went home for Barack Obama's Democratic primary
election day and was present at his March 2004 Chicago victory
party. I saw dozens, perhaps hundreds of people I knew that
night and can testify with absolute certainty those activists
believed they had given their time and treasure, and mobilized
their networks to elect a fighting Democrat in the tradition
of Paul
Wellstone or Harold Washington.
They were deceived. Instead of another
Harold Washington we got an acolyte of Connecticut's Senator
Joe Lieberman.
Lieberman has the distinction of being the
first and only Democrat who, as committee chairman back when
Democrats still ran the Senate in the first two years of the
Bush Administration, might have brought the Bush administration
down by summoning Enron executives to testify under oath on
how they extorted tens of billions from California rate payers
and taxpayers by manufacturing
that state's “energy crisis” in 2001. But Enron, top contributor
to the career of Republican George W. Bush, was also a big donor
to the Democratic senator from Connecticut. So the subpoenas
were never sent, the questions under oath went unasked, and
the opportunity to unravel that nexus of corruption back to
the White House was slipped. California taxpayers, teacher
pension funds, and California ratepayers will continue to pay
for Enron's criminal shakedown for decades. And last week Enron
CEO Ken Lay died, laundering his vast stolen fortune into a
piece of “legitimate” inheritance. Thanks a lot, Joe.
Newly elected US senators choose a mentor
from among more senior ones. Revealingly, rather than following
the example of the late Senator Paul Wellstone, Obama chose
Joe Lieberman as his mentor, and is raising money right now
to defend the Connecticut senator from a challenge by antiwar
Democrat Ned Lamont. Lieberman has made a name for himself
criticizing Democrats from the right on such issues as affirmative
action and whether Dems ought to disagree
publicly with the president. He is widely known as “Holy
Joe” for his willingness to burst into hymns and prayers
and profess his religious devotion in front of audiences at
the slightest provocation. If the sincerest flattery is
imitation, Senator Obama must have his mentor blushing furiously
and often.
Bait & Switch
It's time to face the unpleasant truth.
The candidate that progressives in Illinois and elsewhere supported
was not the senator they got. Barack Obama has played the game
of bait and switch with the progressive activists and voters
who launched his political career.
As candidate and constitutional law professor,
he campaigned against the Patriot Act. But as senator, Obama
could
not find a reason to vote against its reauthorization.
As a candidate he posed as champion for ordinary working families.
But as senator, he voted for so-called “tort reform,” designed
to protect corporations from paying for their misdeeds by making
it nearly impossible for employees, ratepayers, consumers and
ordinary citizens to file class action suits against them in
state courts.
Candidate Obama told us how important the
advice and consent function of the Senate was, but only remembered
the consent part once elected. Senator Obama voted to confirm
Condi Rice and one of Bush's Supreme Court appointments. Obama
blew the chance to expose Rice, and Supreme Court Chief Justice
Roberts for their parts in formulating policies that included
war crimes, torture and lies that facilitated an illegal war,
the use of military and intelligence agencies to spy on dissidents
and civilians in general or the unconstitutional expansion of
presidential power. He let these two and the despicable Joseph
Alito get by with nothing in the way of memorable questions,
let alone a filibuster.
Obama's speech even went so far as to endorse
“voluntary” prayer in public schools, laud the Bush administrations
shift in emphasis to faith
based programs in preference to all others, and favorably
mention of one of the president's
favorite black preachers. The senator is much too smart
and well informed not to know that it's difficult for many of
these "voluntary" school prayer deals to stay wholly
voluntary, or not to know that in many areas, the faith-based
programs which often require you to profess your faith in Jesus
are the only ones available to people emerging from prison precisely
because the feds have starved secular programs for funds and
lavished them upon favored churches as a form of Republican
patronage.
What Obama did in his speech was to legitimize the patronage
operations by lauding rather than exposing them. He may also
have intended to signal some of the pastors who are recipients
of millions of dollars in faith-based Republican patronage apiece
that he wouldn't mess with their stuff.
BC's Margaret Kimberley,
who is very much the committed Christian, pointed out the obvious
contradiction between the senator's effusive profession of religious
faith and his endorsement
of the continuing slaughter in Iraq. Regrettably, the senator's
version of Christian love is no better than most pastors in
American churches. You can walk into any church on Sunday and
never fail to hear the American troops lifted up in prayer,
as they should be. But how many pastors, how many congregations
remember to pray for the people of Iraq, for their dead and
wounded who may outnumber the American dead by as much as a
hundred to one? Maybe Barack meant to lift up the hundreds
of thousands of Iraqi dead in his speech too, but forgot.
But to suggest, as the senator did in a
later interview, that anything in Obama's speech was offhand
or mistaken, or that the
senator had no idea how his remarks would be taken is really
dead wrong. Barack is a smart and serious guy with an office
full of bright people working for him. He is running an undeclared
campaign for vice president in 2008. His people did a spitload
of advance and after-event work on that keynote address, and
you can bet every word and phrase was carefully considered.
If Obama is to get credit for his words, he also has to be responsible
for them.
The truth is that no matter what candidate
Obama said or says, he does not work for the people who elected
him. He works for someone else. Maybe keeping his new friends,
like Warren
Buffet and Bill Gates comfortable is the new priority.
There have always been two Democratic parties. There is the
electoral party, in which they expect us to come and take part
in every two or four years for a day or two. And there is the
permanent party of lobbyists and big ticket contributors, military
contractors and the like. Maybe Barack Obama is a Democratic
party leader after all. But which Democratic party?
We read all our email eventually, and answer
some of it in this space each week. Send us your comments at
[email protected].
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