Rev. Jesse Jackson has endorsed Sen. Barack Obama’s
Democratic presidential campaign. I must say, I am a little ambivalent
about this endorsement. We are a people who have clung to hope. Hope
is what sustained us through enslavement and exploitation. Both
men speak highly of hope. One, while pursuing the Democratic
candidacy for president, inspired others to hope for a better
future, a better America. The other is pursuing the seat of the
presidency. “This campaign has been about giving hope since Day
One,” said Obama in an AP report. Referring to Rev. Jackson,
Sen. Obama said he was “proud to have the support of his friend.” “It
is because people like Jesse ran that I have this opportunity
to run for president today.”
It has been one blow after another for those of
us trying to survive this nation’s death-drive toward Empire. Cruelty
and torture of the “terrorists” resonates with Black Americans’
experience of indifference. The Bush administration does not care
about Black Americans and the day-to-day experience of Black Americans
is that the rest of the country does not as well.
Sen. Obama must make take a stand with AIPAC. He
must declare that the U.S. needs to “preserve our total commitment
to our unique defense relationship with Israel.” In fact, this
was the title of Sen. Obama’s speech to the AIPAC Policy Forum,
on March 2, 2007, in Chicago. “As the U.S. redeploys from
Iraq, we can recapture lost influence in the Middle East,” said
Sen. Obama. “We can refocus our efforts to critical, yet
neglected priorities, such as combating international terrorism
and winning the war in Afghanistan. And we can, then, more
effectively deal with one of the greatest threats to the United
States, Israel and world peace: Iran.”
Then a few days later, on March 5, celebrating
the 42 Annual anniversary of “Bloody Sunday” in Selma, Alabama
at Brown A.M.E. church, Sen. Obama said his candidacy was directly
linked to the legacies of the civil rights movement. “I am
the product of your legend", he told Blacks in the audience. He
especially thanked Rev. Jackson. Sounds like both the civil rights
movement and Rev. Jackson are a thing of the past. In Selma,
Sen. Obama referred to himself as a member of the “Joshua generation".
And now, if we can get past the clean words, winks,
and hand shakes, let's consider what this means for the majority
of Black Americans who have been betrayed, time after time, by
the Democratic and Republican politicians alike. Where is
the hope offered by this “Joshua generation” candidate? What does
it mean to be a member of the “Joshua generation” anyway? I can
only speculate.
According to the Biblical legend, Joshua became
the successor of Moses. While some members of his generation
doubted God would allow them to enter the promised land, Joshua
held on to his faith, and proclaimed that there will be those
of his Joshua generation who will die in the wilderness. In
the face of indifference and racist oppression, are we to assume
that some in Sen. Obama’s generation and others younger will die
in the wilderness of indifference and racist oppression?
Despite the fact that Black Americans have never
supported U.S. aggression, in other words, war, Obama’s rhetoric
has become increasingly hawkish. As a result, it is hard
to distinguish him from Sen. Hillary Clinton or the Republican
Party in general. After all, the average Black American cannot
vote because of conviction records, and most are unable to contribute
the big money AIPAC is able to funnel into Sen. Obama’s campaign. Is
this yet another practice of deserting the Black community, similar
to the Republican Party’s election strategies to disenfranchise
Black people by steal our votes throughout this country? Does
Sen. Obama feel he does not need the Black vote?
A Habeas Corpus maneuver for a people no longer
entitled to defense.
Jackson claims that Sen. Obama's agenda includes
the war on poverty and voter protection, according to the AP report. According
to Peter Dreier’s report entitled “The New War on Poverty",
however, the numbers of poor Americans has not declined: it has
risen since 2001, from 33 million to 37 million people who now
live below or at the poverty line. Thirty three percent of Black
children live in poverty while 10 percent of white children live
in poverty. “Inequality", Dreier writes, “has almost
never been worse.”
For a nation claiming to want peace and democracy
— equality — we need to look at the inequalities surround this
war on terror. Along with Iraqi women and children, Black
soldiers are dying in Iraq. Soldiers, white and Black, are
suffering from bureaucratic red tape at Walter Reed Hospital. They
are suffering in their homes from depression after serving in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Halliburton and Blackwater have profited
from the invasion these last four years. In the meantime,
over 1 billion dollars for reconstruction allocated by the Coalition
Provisional Authority went missing in Iraq. In 2005, the
same two companies fled over the floating dead of New Orleans
and Mississippi with guns pointed at the standing victims and
since then, they have secured contracts there worth billions for
reconstruction, again. In Iraq and in New Orleans, at least
the Ninth Ward where most of the poor and Black lived pre-Katrina,
the landscape is still devastated. Iraqis living in Baghdad
with little water, food, or lights have watched as the largest
U.S. Embassy compound in the world arose from the ground of their
city. They are watching the rise of 592 million dollars,
according to USA Today, while the reconstruction of “health clinics,
water-treatment facilities and electrical plants” for Iraqis have
been “scaled back” to pay for rising costs of security outside
the Green Zone.
How ironic! Our politicians are bickering over
the date to pull out of a situation that has worsened for the
Iraqi people and U.S. military every day. I see Black Americans
in the background watching the rise of condos and homes in the
white and middle-class communities, and they wonder when the U.S.
will pull into to the Ninth Ward. There is the Right to Return
Act for Katrina victims displaced around the country. 1.6 million
Iraqis have had to leave their country with another 1.5 who are
displaced within Iraq. See how all of this points to the
U.S. government on the down road to world domination for the corporations?
Halliburton and Blackwater are doing well, and
in the lingo of the war economy, they seem to be members of the
“Joshua” generation, doing the “Lord’s work". We have come
a long way down from “Bloody Sunday". Bush, stalling as long
as possible to divert attention away from the building of air
bases and embassies in the Middle East and Africa, has Democrats
like Sen. Obama agreeing to defend all or part of the war economy
agenda, even while speaking of being a product of the civil rights
movement legacy.
The eight fired US Attorneys have something in
common with Black Americans too. Beside the fact that both
were fired explicitly at the discretion of the employer, there
is the implicit explanation: they adhere to the “wrong” politics.
While No Child Left Behind has led some of our
children to the prison industrial complex or the military industrial
complex, there are Blacks who have been executed while innocent. Then
there is the case of Gary Tyler, wasting, yes, wasting away in
a Louisiana prison for the last 32 years for a crime he did not
commit, while there is a moment of collective sympathy for Scooter
Libby, Former Chief of Staff for Vice President Cheney. It
is okay to be indifferent, however, to a breach of justice in
the case of an innocent Black man. Recently, in Texas, a
14-year-old high Black high school freshman, Shaquanda Cotton,
received seven years in prison for shoving a hall monitor. In
another case in Texas, Chicago Tribune senior writer, Howard Witt,
reports that a 19-year-old white man was convicted last July of
“criminally negligent homicide for killing a 54-year-old Black
woman and her three-year-old grandson with is truck". But
guess what? He was sentenced to probation in Paris, Texas and
ordered to “send an annual Christmas card to the victims’ family".
It is not enough to slight the Black victims; add cruel mockery
to the mix. It is okay, these days, to inflict suffering
on Black Americans. We are focused on defending a generalized
image of “all Americans".
The core of the historically progressive movement
in the U.S., Blacks, watch as white Americans hail Sen. Obama
as the Black who will allow white America to forget how it deserted
the civil rights movement after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s
death, as if racism, too, died. Let us hear no more of it!
No one is to remember this most egregious offense of deserting
the progressive movement and certainly not up and coming Black
politicians of the “Joshua” generation.
No more of the Jackson of old these days. No
more reminding white America and middle-class Black America about
the poor, while pursuing the presidency. The message in these
days of the “Joshua generation” will talk about America and defense
against “terrorists". Employing the lingo of white supremacy,
references to “minorities” — Blacks and Latinos, Hmong, Native
Americans, and Asians — is a Shakespearian aside: “Americans —
and minorities too". One day they will wake up and “discover”
a world map and see that the “minority” is the majority of the
world. The “minorities” will truly be the numerical majority
in this country by 2060, according to projections by the U.S.
Census Bureau. It should not be assumed that this soon-to-be majority
will drift off to the wilderness to die peacefully without some
form of resistance.
So when will Sen. Barack Obama of the Joshua generation
stand in defense of those in despair, the least among us, as well
as those who represent the “all of America”? Who will defend our
right to a world without war?
Dr. Jean Daniels writes a column for The City
Capital Hues in Madison Wisconsin and is a Lecturer at Madison
Area Technical College, MATC. Click
here to contact Dr. Daniels.
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