Several years ago, I was walking home to my
Manhattan apartment from Columbia
University, just having delivered a lecture on New York State’s notorious “Rockefeller
Drug Laws.” The state’s mandatory-minimum sentencing laws
had thrown tens of thousands of nonviolent drug offenders
into state prisons with violent convicts. In my lecture I
had called for more generous prisoner reentry programs, the
restoration of felons’ voting rights, increased educational
programs inside prisons, and a restoration of judges’ sentencing
authority.
A white administrator from another local university,
a woman, who I had always judged to be fairly conservative
and probably a Republican, had attended my lecture and was
walking along with me to go to the subway. She told me that
my lecture about the “prison industrial complex” had been
a real “eye opener.” The fact that two million Americans were
imprisoned, she expressed, was a “real scandal.”
Then this college administrator blurted out,
in a hurried manner, “You know, my son is also in prison …
a victim of the drug laws.”
In a split second, I had to make a hard decision:
whether to engage this white conservative administrator in
a serious conversation about America’s gulags and political
economy of mass incarceration that had collaterally ensnared
her son, or to pretend that I had not heard her last sentence,
and to continue our conversation as if she had said nothing
at all. Perhaps this is a sign of generational weakness on
my part, but the overwhelming feeling I had at that precise
moment was that, one day, the white administrator would deeply
regret revealing such an intimate secret with a black person.
I might tell the entire world about it. Instead of proceeding
on the basis of mutual trust and common ground, transcending
the boundaries of color, it would be better to ignore what
was said in haste.
All of this occurred to me in the span of one
heartbeat. I decided to say nothing. Two seconds later, I
could visually detect the signs of relief on the woman’s face.
African Americans have survived in the United States for
over four hundred years because, at least up to the most recent
generation of black people, we have made it our business to
study white Americans generally, and especially those who
exercise power. This explains why so many African Americans,
at the very core of their being, express fears that millions
of white Americans will be unable to cast ballots for Obama
for president solely due to his racial identity. Of course,
the majority of them would deny this, even to themselves.
Among the remaining Democratic presidential
candidates, former Senator John Edwards (albeit with a “suspended”
campaign) has been consistently the most progressive on most
policy issues, in my view. On issues such as health care and
poverty, Edwards has been clearly to the left of both Obama
and Hillary Clinton. But since Edwards probably cannot win
the Democratic nomination the real choice is between Clinton
and Obama.
We’ve
all heard the arguments explaining why Obama’s “not qualified”
to be president. Chief among them is that he “doesn’t have
enough experience in government.” As a historian, I think
it may be instructive to observe that three of the twentieth
century’s most influential presidents had shorter careers
in electoral politics than Obama. Theodore Roosevelt, for
instance, served as New
York’s governor for only two years, and was William McKinley’s
Vice President for barely six months. Woodrow Wilson served
as New Jersey’s governor for only two years before being elected president.
And Franklin D. Roosevelt, our only four-term president, had
served in Albany as New York’s governor for four years. None of these
leaders was ever elected to Congress.
Obama’s seven years in the Illinois State Senate,
according to the New York Times’ Nicholas Kristof, show that
“he scored significant achievements there: a law to videotape
police interrogations in capital cases; an earned income tax
credit to fight poverty; an expansion of early childhood education.”
To be perfectly honest, there are some public policy issues
where I sharply disagree with Obama, such as health care.
Obama’s approach is not to use “mandates” to force millions
of healthy twenty-somethings into the national health insurance
pool. He claims that you won’t need mandates, just lower the
price of private health insurance and young adults will buy
it on their own. Obama’s children are still small, so maybe
he can be excused for such an irrational argument. Obama’s
reluctance to embrace health mandates is about his desire
to appeal to “centrists” and moderate Republicans.
That brings us back to Barack’s unspoken problem:
white denial and voter flight. It’s instructive to remember
what happened to David Dinkins, the first (and still only)
African American elected mayor of New York City. According to Andrew Kohul, the current
president of the Pew Research
Center, the Gallup
organization’s polling research on New York City’s voters in 1989 indicated that Dinkins
would defeat his Republican opponent, Rudolph Giuliani, by
15 percent. Instead, Dinkins only narrowly won by 2 percent.
Kohul, who worked as a Gallup
pollster in that election, concluded that “poorer, less well-educated
[white] voters were less likely to answer our questions;”
so the poll didn’t have the opportunity to factor in their
views. As Kohul admits, “Here’s the problem – these whites
who do not respond to surveys tend to have more unfavorable
views of blacks than respondents who do the interviews.”
So
I return to the white college administrator whose son is in
prison on drug charges. I made a mistake. People of color
must break through the mental racial barricades that divide
America into parallel racial universes. We need
to mobilize and support the election of Barack Obama not only
because he is progressive and fully qualified to be president,
but also because only his campaign can force all Americans
to overcome the centuries-old silences about race that still
create a deep chasm across this nation’s democratic life.
In the end, we must force our fellow citizens who happen to
be white, to come to terms with their own whiteness, their
guilt and fears about America’s terrible
racial past.
If there is any hope for meaningful change
inside U.S. electoral system
in the future, it lies with progressive leaders like Barack
Obama. If we can dare to dream politically, let us dream of
the world as it should be.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board member, Manning Marable, PhD is one of America’s
most influential and widely read scholars. Since 1993, Dr.
Marable has been Professor of Public Affairs, Political Science,
History and African-American Studies at Columbia
University in New York
City. For ten years, Dr. Marable was founding director of
the Institute
for Research in African-American Studies at Columbia University, from 1993 to 2003. Dr. Marable is an author or editor
of over 20 books, including Living
Black History: How Reimagining the African-American Past Can
Remake America's Racial Future
(2006); The
Autobiography of Medgar Evers: A Hero's Life And Legacy Revealed
Through His Writings, Letters, And Speeches
(2005); Freedom:
A Photographic History of the African American Struggle
(2002); Black
Leadership: Four Great American Leaders and the Struggle for
Civil Rights
(1998); Beyond
Black and White: Transforming African-American Politics
(1995); and How
Capitalism Underdeveloped Black America: Problems in Race,
Political Economy, and Society (South End Press Classics Series)
(1983). His current project is a major biography of Malcolm
X, entitled Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention, to be published
by Viking Press in 2009. Click
here to contact Dr. Marable.