It is fitting that Lanny J. Davis - former
special counsel to President Bill Clinton and supporter of
presidential candidate, Senator Hillary Clinton, chose the
right-wing editorial page of the Wall Street Journal
once again to attack Dr. Jeremiah Wright, Sen. Barack Obama’s
pastor and mentor.
And it reflects the actions of a desperate
campaign eager to use the time-honored race card, but this
time few are listening.
In an April 9, 2008 editorial titled, Obama’s
Minister Problem, Davis erroneously argued that Obama
still has questions to answer regarding his ties to the “extremist”
pastor, and that this is a problem that will not go away.
Enlisting the help of the Journal’s
editorial page, Davis has found a willing and eager participant
in the racial scapegoating of an African American man with
a long record of service to his country and to his community.
For the far-right Wall Street Journal, along with the
New York Post, its sister publication, and Fox News
- all a part of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation empire
- trashing Black people is their bread and butter.
This
is particularly true of the “fair and balanced” Fox News,
with their daily racist tirades against people of color, on
the air and on their website.
In a recent post to the Fox News website, where comments
are moderated, one person declared: “You blacks would be naked
and eating bugs if it weren’t for white people. Name ONE successful
society started by blacks. Any sign of civilization in Africa
was started by Europeans. Any city in America
with predominately black leaders is a cesspool. Look at New
Orleans, Philadelphia, D.C., Detroit…”
Another person commented: “No wonder most whites
have the opinion that blacks are worthless, lazy sloths who
know only how to make more babies and steal everything not
nailed down. Barak (sic) Lenin Obama, the big eared Muslim,
is only fostering this “wo is me” attitude with his obvious
prejudices. I, for one, like my white race over that of any
other, so does that make me a racist? I don’t thing so. The
black man will not break free from his self-imposed shackles
until he picks himself up, dusts himself off and begins to
provide for himself just like every other race has done who
came to this country. Before the blacks can do this, however,
they have to rid themselves of the likes of Jesse Jackson,
Al Sharpton, Farakan (sic), and the good reverend Wright.”
So, it is no surprise that the right-wing media
would take the opportunity to race bait. And in the 24-hour
news cycle of cable television, stories such as the Wright
“controversy” are promoted for their entertainment value and
the advertising revenue they can generate.
And in presidential politics, the Republican
Party’s Southern Strategy - winning elections by appealing
to White nationalism and White racial anxieties - has helped
many a politician up the political ladder. In his 1988 presidential
bid against Michael Dukakis, George Bush Sr. used the infamous
Willie Horton ad. Horton, a convicted murderer, was the embodiment
of the menacing Black man. After being released from prison
on a furlough, while Dukakis was governor of Massachusetts, Horton raped a White woman.
In the 2000 presidential primaries, Bush Jr.’s
campaign spread rumors that his then-rival, Senator John McCain,
fathered a Black baby out of wedlock. Oddly, in his second
quest for the presidency eight years later, McCain embraces
Bush, an unpopular president who has waged an equally unpopular
war in Iraq.
To the cynical race-card dealer, operating
under the old political paradigm, Barack Obama should have
provided the perfect target. After all, he is a Black man
with Black affiliations running for the nation’s highest office,
and blackness scares some Whites. The Clinton
campaign, knowing their candidate could not take the nomination
from an ascendant Obama except through graft, placed their
hopes in conjuring an image of his wild-eyed, hate-spewing,
anti-American, anti-White, and anti-Semitic B lack preacher.
But this time, it didn’t work. And the frustration
is reflected in Davis’
embarrassing and unfortunate Wall Street Journal tirade.
To
be sure, vast reservoirs of racism still exist in the United States. There are some voters in this country
who do not like Black people, and will not vote for a person
of color, nor anyone who is not a White man, for that matter.
But given that those votes never were for the taking, let
us focus on the real issue at hand. Obama’s campaign is bringing
millions of new people into the process, a multiracial and
intergenerational coalition of democrats, republicans, independents,
and young people. For these voters, the racial buttons simply
are not working. And for young people in particular, who did
not grow up in a segregated America,
they do not share the bigoted hang-ups of their parents. A
generation of Whites who grew up listening to and embracing
Public Enemy is not fazed by this notion of righteous Black
anger a la Jeremiah Wright. In fact, many who have lived under
the injustices of the Bush regime, the worst administration
in American history, must share Dr. Wright’s sense of indignation.
Perhaps, forty years after The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.’s assassination, Black rage, justified and historically
contextual, is not so foreign and shocking a concept to mainstream
America. And since when did anger, filled with constructive
criticism and a patriotic demand that one’s country do better,
amount to hatred? It is far easier to paint the truth-teller
as a loathsome crackpot - and compel African American leaders
to repudiate their own in the process - than to deal with
the sobering realities they articulate.
Wright said “We bombed Hiroshima, we bombed Nagasaki, and we nuked far
more than the thousands in New York and the Pentagon, and we never batted an eye. We have supported
state terrorism against the Palestinians and black South Africans,
and now we are indignant because the stuff we have done overseas
is now brought right back to our own front yards. America's chickens are coming
home to roost.”
In his rant, Davis claims that “If my rabbi ever uttered such hateful words from
the pulpit about America
and declared all Palestinians to be terrorists, I have no
doubt I would have withdrawn immediately from his congregation.”
Interestingly, Wright’s words on American foreign
policy were inspired by Ambassador
Edward Peck, retired career diplomat who was chief of
the U.S.
mission to Iraq
under President Carter. Peck’s words, in turn, were inspired
by Malcolm X’s 1963 “Chickens Coming Home to Roost” speech,
which placed the assassination of President Kennedy within
the context of America’s role as a purveyor of violence. Malcolm,
of course, was vilified in life and labeled a hatemonger,
yet was commemorated with a U.S.
postage stamp in death.
Rev. Wright
said “The government…wants us to sing God Bless America. No, no, no. God damn America; that's in the bible,
for killing innocent people. God damn America for treating our citizens as less than
human.” Lest we become guilty of historical amnesia, Dr. King,
when he was assassinated, was working on a Sunday sermon entitled
“Why America May Go To Hell.” In the sermon, King wrote
that “If America does not use her vast resources of wealth
to end poverty, to make it possible for all of God's children
to have the basic necessities of life, she too will go to
Hell.”
In his April 30, 1967 sermon at Ebenezer
Baptist Church titled, “Why I Am Opposed to
the War in Vietnam,”
King declared: “And don't let anybody make you think that
God chose America as his divine, messianic
force to be a sort of policeman of the whole world. God has
a way of standing before the nations with judgment, and it
seems that I can hear God saying to America,
‘You're too arrogant! And if you don't change your ways, I
will rise up and break the backbone of your power, and I'll
place it in the hands of a nation that doesn't even know my
name. Be still and know that I'm God.’”
The Dr.
King who called for a revolution of values against the triple
threats of racism, materialism and militarism, was a far cry
from the watered-down image of the innocuous dreamer which
today’s mass media have created. In his 1967 book, Where
Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?,
King wrote, “A nation that continues year after year to spend
more money on military defense than on programs of social
uplift is approaching spiritual death.” Perhaps if Dr. King
were alive today, Lanny Davis would ask us to repudiate him,
and disassociate ourselves from his hateful, divisive speech.
Some people say that all is fair in politics.
Unfortunately, the race card has been an accepted part of
politics for years, primarily because that’s the way people
liked it. The politics of division worked because of the willingness
of bitter and frustrated working-class Whites to act against
their own self interests, placing racial solidarity with White
elites above economic solidarity with struggling Americans
of all backgrounds. The emergence of the Rev. Wright issue
as a non-issue - and the public rejection of Clinton’s attempts to render Wright the boogeyman, shows that all is
not lost, and perhaps issues really do matter.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial
Board member David A. Love, JD is a lawyer and journalist
based in Philadelphia, and a contributor
to the Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service,
In
These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media
Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons
(St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International UK
spokesperson, organized the first national police brutality
conference as a staff member with the Center for Constitutional
Rights, and served as a law clerk to two Black federal judges.
His blog is davidalove.com. Click
here to contact Mr. Love.