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The
Audacity To Win:
The Notion of a President Barack Obama
And What That Really Means
The euphoria has yet to wear off, and probably won’t for a while. The
“shock and awe” of the looks of dazed black people walking down
the street really says more than could ever be explained. Many folks
I talked to are virtually speechless and just walk around shakin’
their heads, not so much wondering what has happened or how it happened
but overcoming the wonderment of why it didn’t happen - understanding
America as we do - why Barack didn’t lose.
What
was obviously supposed to be a day of “mass depression,” despite
mountains of hope, as another disappointment settled in on black
America, turned into a day - now a week - of frenzied prayer and
praise, as we all still pinch ourselves that this is really real.
We are now perplexed as we try to reconfigure our analysis of what
America is and what it should mean to us (Black America). We no
longer can rest on our analogies of on what America is based, what
America was, nor root our perceptions of America totally in race
reality, though race is still very real throughout this nation,
as the economy trumped race. Still, we can’t believe our eyes, nor
wrap our heads around what this really means to us, our children,
our country and the world. It’s not just auspicious - this occasion
of electing Barack Obama President of the United States. It’s audacious,
or bodacious - as we say in the hood (as in, “That’s some bodacious
sh*t, right there). No matter how you say it, it’s still unbelievable.
Photos and video of the Obamas being welcomed by the Bushes at the White
House, an otherwise almost surreal stretch of the imagination in
the transition of power, gave us an unimaginable snapshot of what
the next four years will project; a brotha’ walking around the White
House, that’s not a servant, or a staffer, or a tourist, or a diplomat,
but the President.
Our
psyches, so deeply engrained with the historical prospects of whiteness
that it almost looked odd to see Barack Obama at the White House.
The privileges to Executive power that were once exclusive to whiteness,
at least in this case, can longer be taken for granted in the way
that it has over the last 220 years or so. All because one black
man not only had the audacity to run but the audacity to win. One
week after what the world witnessed what was once thought to be
improbable, if not impossible, we now find ourselves wrestling with
a new reality in America.
If you think the whole idea is messing just with us, trust me when I
say white people are wrestling with this too. Never in the history
of America, have things gotten so bad that they would throw white
people out of power. That was never a consideration before now.
Now, we also know if President-elect Obama had finished fifth from
the bottom of his class, like Senator John McCain, or attended six
state or community colleges, like Governor Sarah Palin, Obama never
would have been a consideration for President, much less
elected President.
So goes the privileges of whiteness, and as we saw with George W. Bush,
pedigree has no limits on achievement and reaches far beyond the
deepest dearth of intelligence. Pardon
my digression, but it was relevant to the point of Barack being
intelligent and audacious enough to play past the historical privileges
of race, class and culture to do what no other person of color have
ever done: wrestle the mantle of leadership from white cultural
dominance.
Though we now see Obama as the head of the government “to be,” we are
not foolish enough to believe that he will run the country. There’s
a difference between leading the government and running the country.
With many of the historically discriminatory institutions and systems
still in place, one slip and the country will run over him. I’m
sure he’s aware of that, as it was announced that guns sale were
up in the South and Mid-west. The cautionary perception here is
that America had an election, not a “take-over.” Let’s be clear
about that. But Barack Obama has received a mandate to lead this
nation out if its modern day depression - bankrupt and dissolute
as it is.
Obama’s
election is more a signal to the return of intelligent government,
as one had to be highly intelligent to navigate this national election
and the traps that came one after the other. Obama had the benefit
of the economy collapsing in the midst of a national election, which
reinforced the concept that dumbness has its limits and we had reached
it. Many white people and Latinos jumped off the race ship to save
their family’s and their personal wealth. The color of salvation
is whatever makes the most sense and can withstand critical scrutiny.
McCain’s salvation proposal made no sense, and his pick of Palin
could not withstand critical scrutiny. In short, white people saw
bread lines again and said I’m votin’ for the brotha’. Their children,
whose prism was not shaped by race - but popular culture - helped
them make the adjustment and technology did the rest (made Obama
financially competitive). That’s what this really was.
Now we all must sit back and watch this take shape before we can understand
what it really means. Just know Barack Obama will need us all to
make the change he had the audacity to make reality, winning the
Presidency - more than a success for himself, but a success for
the nation. That’s what the notion of a Barack presidency means,
and that’s a bodacious charge.
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"That One":
President-Elect Barack Obama
And the Fulfillment of Unreasonable Expectations
The day we all thought we’d never see became a reality this week as the
nation took a major step toward racial reconciliation by entrusting
the country’s government to a black man. President-elect Barack
Obama, soon to be President Barack Obama - doesn’t that have a fantastic
ring to it - a man who John McCain once called “that one” is now
the one who has been charged with leading the nation, over
the next four years, and out of a host of global and domestic quandaries.
The
significance of this cannot be quantified. As we’ve seen over the
last few months, race is still a major barrier in America. Affirming
one is not the same as affirming all, and President-elect Barack
Obama has now risen to that “special” category to where Muhammad
Ali, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Will Smith and
Oprah Winfrey (at least until she endorsed Barack) all rose. They
weren’t viewed in the context of race, being instead viewed as post-racial
Supermen or Superwomen, “transformative figures”, transcending race
by virtue of their dominating excellence. Their skills and public
acceptance won’t allow for them to be limited to their race (by
their reluctance to speak to race) and the negative perceptions
of their race.
“That one,” President Barack Obama, proved he was special in being able
to achieve what few thought was achievable, the first fulfillment
of what will certainly be many expectations, some reasonable - many
unreasonable - of an Obama administration. Expectations
by Blacks, Whites and others, rooted in certain perceptions. The
expectations will be larger than the job of President itself.
As we witnessed in this campaign cycle, it’s not that negative perceptions
of black people/black communities don’t exist - it’s just many singular
examples of excellence rose above what we know to be the constraints
of race and racism in America. The perception is that if one is
able to do it, all should be able to. In theory, that is correct.
In practice, fear of competition and systemic and institutional
racism prevent it.
Then there are those who feel that centuries of racial abuse and subjugation
should be ignored, a perception that Blacks should “get over” slavery
and segregation, despite advantages passed down to them. Blacks
who succeed, do so - not by overcoming equal odds but - by overcoming
overwhelming odds in avoiding the traps that often prevent the fulfillment
of even reasonable expectations. And they are held to a different
standard when they do rise to the top.
That’s
why this moment is so exceptional. While understanding this great
moment in the nation’s history cannot be quantified, it most certainly
can be qualified in a very real context as to what we all now expect
from the nation’s latest “Superman.” His challenge is greater than
that of the others who simply had to transcend sport or entertainment.
Barack Obama has to transcend the negative global perceptions of
America and the very real socio-economic problems most Americans
face. That’s pretty heavy lifting. Regardless of who won, the next
President faces a host of unreasonable expectations. President Obama
certainly will.
Like most African Americans who succeed in the mainstream, President
Obama will be under extreme scrutiny. He will be watched by Whites
to make sure he’s not being “too racial” toward Blacks and other
minorities. He will be watched by African Americans to make sure
he remains true to the game in addressing issues that most adversely
impact black communities, namely poverty (which Barack rarely spoke
to in the campaign), joblessness, economic subjugation and educational
disparities.
The expectations of Blacks and Whites are divergent and in some instances,
opposing. The whole debate around wealth redistribution has deep
racial roots. President Obama can stick his toe in that water, and
maybe his foot, but certainly not his leg, meaning he can help the
middle class get out of their economic quandary but reaching too
far toward helping the poor and impoverished could be problematic.
Capital reinvestment in Wall Street will be an expectation to revive
the economy, but capital access for Main Street, or the “Average
Joe (or Jane)” to whom he and McCain so frequently referred during
the campaign, is an expectation that many are waiting to see if
an Obama administration can fulfill. Then
there are the wars that continue, and the ones yet to come, that
President Obama will expected to exit with dignity, wars for which
the current President has exit strategy - certainly the most unreasonable
expectation that President Obama will face. You get the picture.
The expectations won’t stop.
Let’s celebrate this phenomenal achievement in American history, but
let’s also stay rooted in a reality that President-elect Barack
Obama is not Superman - just a man who overcame super odds to beat
the systemic, institutional and social structures that served as
impediments to achieving what no African American had ever been
able to achieve: being elected President of the United States. Now
comes the expectation that he will be able to fulfill all of the
nation’s unreasonable expectations. We know it is unreasonable to
expect he will solve all the nation’s problems. The expectations
of this President will be like no other. But we’re glad to see this
day, that a black man has the opportunity to, at least, try to fulfill
these expectations. God is real. |
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing director
of the Urban Issues Forum
and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com. Click
here
to contact Dr. Samad. |
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Novmber 13, 2008
Issue 299 |
is
published every Thursday |
Executive Editor:
Bill Fletcher, Jr. |
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