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Condescending or Clueless?
Clinton and Sanders on Race
"Bottom line – neither Bernie Sanders nor
Hilary Clinton is going to get it right on race,
and we should not expect it. Heck, President
Barack Obama didn’t get it right, and he could
have. Now we are stuck between a know-it-all
who is condescending on race, and a
myopic Vermonter who is clueless."
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Senator
Bernie Sanders doesn’t get race! He gets economics, he gets Wall
Street, he gets trade, and he gets distribution. He just doesn’t
get race. Perhaps one of his lowest moments in this campaign
happened about a month ago (February 13) in Minneapolis. A woman
asked him to directly address “black people and reparations”. He
replied by pulling some lines from his stump speech, talking about
wealth inequality, child poverty and investing in poor countries.
From the audience, someone hollered, “say black”, and Saunders, in a
fit of pique, declared that he’d said “black” fifty times,
“Alright,” he said, “that makes it fifty-one”. How churlish!
His crass response to an honest concern made it clear that Sanders
thinks that race matters are less important than economic issues.
He’d hit a home run if he ever decided to acknowledge the ways the two
are intertwined. Our capitalist economic system was buttressed by
the use of people as property and it still is. Profits in
the prison industrial complex are determined by the number of people
our paramilitary police forces can incarcerate for crimes major or
petty. Some of the companies that incarcerate use African
American male population to project their capacity and profits years
into the future. Race is a social construction designed to
maximize the potential for capitalistic exploitation of a subset of the
population. Even as all working people are exploited (and Bernie
gets that), African American workers and the unemployed are all the
more exploited. The reality of black joblessness facilitates the
exploitation of working class whites that fear that African Americans
(or immigrants) will “take” their jobs.
Senator Sanders gets joblessness, homelessness and hopelessness, but he
is nearly clueless when it comes to race. He belongs to the
rising tide school, the same one both President Obama and Secretary
Clinton belong to. If economic conditions improve, they think,
then black folks will be better off, too. Better off, I say, but
still behind, and with a huge income and wealth gap. And if the
economic system changes, as democratic socialist Sanders would
advocate, African Americans would be better off. Would that deal
with the gap? You can’t deal with economics without dealing with
race if you hope to address the concerns of African American
people. Senator Sanders testy show of impatience when a woman
asked him to speak to race in Minneapolis labeled him as clueless.
While Sanders is clueless, Secretary Hilary Rodham Clinton comes off as
smugly condescending. She knows race matters, she knows black
folks, and we are her friends. Beginning with her association
with Children’s Defense Fund President Marian Wright Edelman, and
moving through her more than three decades in public life, she has been
an advocate for children, for civil rights and for women’s
rights. But then there is that prison thing. She regrets,
she says, her 1994 support of the Omnibus Crime Bill that fast tracked
so many African Americans to long-term incarceration. She backs
away from incendiary language when she described people as
“predators”. But she presents with a tone of entitlement.
She expects the black vote, and she counted on that vote to get her
through Michigan. It didn’t happen.
Secretary Clinton enjoys the support of most African Americans over 50;
the young’uns aren’t bound by tradition. They don’t owe Hilary,
and they want her to work for their vote. Working and
condescending isn’t the same thing. Those who are under 30 or 40
don’t want to hear what you did “back in the day”. They want to
know what you are doing now. They don’t want pandering or
“Hispandering” (a great term lobbed at Clinton by Univision anchor and
debate moderator Maria Elena Salinas). They want a candidate they
can trust.
African Americans need to wake up and smell the coffee, though.
We should not expect any candidate to feel our pain or to “get”
race. Afropandering (after much resistance, you decide that maybe
the #Black Lives Matter activists have a point) can be expected from
both “friends of long standing” (Hilary’s term) and friends of scant
acquaintance. Vermont black folks don’t have much to say about
Senator Sanders, positive or negative. That ought to say
something.
More than twenty years ago, author Kenneth O’Reilly wrote Nixon’s
Piano: Presidents and Racial Politics from Washington to Clinton. Too
often, according to O’Reilly, presidents sacrificed civil rights for
white votes. Thus, President John F. Kennedy, revered for his
civil rights stance (because of a telephone call to Coretta Scott King
when Dr. King was incarcerated) may really have been a “civil rights
minimalist”. President Lyndon Johnson’s championship of civil
rights was swallowed by the huge cost of the Vietnam War. The
cover of the book shows then-Vice President Spiro Agnew sitting at a
piano at the annual Gridiron Club event, cracking racial jokes at
Nixon’s behest. And President Clinton, the man Nobel Prize
winning author Toni Morrison described as “the first black president”
was only “black” because he played to the stereotypes – playing the
saxophone on the Arsenio Hall show, talking about his undies in public
(boxers or briefs – none of your business). While he had great
“black” affinity, he threw black folks under the bus with welfare
deform and the crime bill.
Bottom line – neither Bernie Sanders nor Hilary Clinton is going to get
it right on race, and we should not expect it. Heck, President
Barack Obama didn’t get it right, and he could have. Now we are
stuck between a know-it-all who is condescending on race, and a myopic
Vermonter who is clueless. And then there are these gaggles of
Republicans who are positively and pathetically out of touch.
Which do we prefer?
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BC Editorial Board Member Dr. Julianne Malveaux, PhD (JulianneMalveaux.com)
is the Honorary Co-Chair of the Social Action Commission of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, Incorporated and serves on the boards of the Economic
Policy Institute as well as The Recreation Wish List Committee of
Washington, DC. A native San Franciscan, she is the President and
owner of Economic Education a 501 c-3 non-profit headquartered in
Washington, D.C. During her time as the 15th President of Bennett
College for Women, Dr. Malveaux was the architect of exciting and
innovative transformation at America’s oldest historically black
college for women. Contact Dr. Malveaux and BC. |
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is published every Thursday |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield, MBA |
Publisher:
Peter Gamble |
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