The issue that
makes America
- the beautiful to some and Amerikkka - the hated in the eyes
of many others, has finally come to the forefront. Race is America
and America is (and always has been about) Race. While race
(and gender) has tried to be subordinated to the politics of
hope and change - even to the extent of this Presidential campaign
was (is) being called, “the age of post-racial politics,” the
issue surfaced last week in the same way race has always combusted
in the public discourse - crudely and coarsely. Former Vice
Presidential Candidate, Geraldine Ferraro, crudely suggested
that if Barack Obama was a white man or a woman, he wouldn’t
be where is - that the only reason that he is where he is was
because he is black. The most outrageous part of the statement
was that he is winning because America is “caught up” in the
phenomenon of his blackness. You know she’s crazy as hell, right?
When has America ever gotten caught up in anybody that
was black?
Well, they have
- if they were entertaining whites. But caught in somebody’s
blackness? That’s a stretch…a big stretch. We understand the
codification here. It’s a natural progression of America’s interjection
of race coinciding with the evolution of Obama’s success. Here’s
how race plays in America. First, blacks are dismissed as not
being equal or worthy. Treatment is cordial. Once blacks prove
equal and/or worthy, their credentials are questioned. Once
blacks demonstrate their credentials, they become competitors
- then race becomes an issue as entitlement is invoked. That’s
where we are in this Presidential campaign. Barack was first
dismissed as not being able to win. Then he was framed as a
nice guy without experience. Then he was framed as eloquent
but all talk. Now he’s winning and framed as the black guy who
we don’t know and need to before turning over the family jewels
(this Euro-centric nation) to him. The change discourse is off
the front page. Now we’re back to hope, on two different levels
- black people hoping racism doesn’t rear its ugly head, and
white people hoping they can trust him. Race is about to trump
hope and change, as we get down to the reality that Obama has
a chance to win. Framing Barack as “too black” to trust is the
underlying theme here.
Blackness has
been “the joker,” the ultimate fear card played in that race
deck called America. America never embraces Blacks for who they
are. If anything, you had to be anti-black (Clarence Thomas,
Ward Connerly) or race neutral (Bill Cosby, O.J. Simpson, Michael
Jackson, Oprah Winfrey) in your politics to be embraced by white
America. The moment you became implicated in criminality (Simpson,
Jackson) or race conscious in your politics (Cosby, Winfrey),
the media treated you like any other Black, with high bias and
negativity. Obama has avoided the issue of race like the plaque
because it’s a “no-win” situation for him. If he doesn’t acknowledge
it, or doesn’t speak to the issues of race - he’s not black
enough. If he acknowledges race and speaks to issues of race
(it’s been more than a year since his “Quite Riot” urban revitalization
speech), he’s too black. And lately, he can’t even have friends
or associations that are “too black” (more on this in a minute).
Ferraro was unabashedly crude in her post comment analysis and
unapologetic, even going as far as to say that the media was
only bringing her statement to light because she was white (smirk)
and they (and the Obama campaign) should apologize to her. That’s
how race plays in America. There is nothing “post racial” about
the race discourse last week - it’s more of the same.
The
coarseness of race and racism in America is such that when it
is discussed, it’s going to sound exactly as it is. Whether
in delicate language or “fire and brimstone” oratory, the reality
of racism, historical and contemporary, is going to be a coarse
conversation. And there’s never an appropriate time to bring
up race in America. If you asked America to set a time to talk
about race, that response (like inquiries on the abolition of
slavery and the end of segregation) would be, not now - wait
a little longer. Waiting means months, years, decades and centuries.
Race discourse, whether it was Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois,
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, Louis Farrakhan or Jeremiah
Wright had to bust into the public discussion like an atomic
bomb, blowing a hole in the side of America’s racial pretense
of equality and fairness, largely because there is a viciousness
to the American race politic that has rarely subsided. It is
a vicious politic that is always just beneath the surface, that
can rise at any time, by any person (not just whites). Most
of the disparities in this egalitarian society, whether income
or wealth, work or education, health or leisure, are race related.
That’s a fact that has been the case for 200 years and even
in this so-called era of “racial reconciliation” in America, most of these disparities have been maintained
and in some instances, increased. Black America, having been
mostly on the receiving end of American racism, knows it like
no other. To suggest that others know to the same degree is
to be more than naïve. It’s like saying the bearer of the whip
knows the same pain as the catcher of the lash. The inflictor
and the inflicted never have the same vantage point. So when
a Jeremiah Wright says that Hillary Clinton doesn’t really know
what’s its like to be black in America - “Hillary ain’t never
be called, ‘A Ni**a’,” as coarse as it sounds, that is the reality
of race in America. It’s a truth America knows.
The
problem is that America never wants to face up to this particular
truth. What Jeremiah Wright and most true spiritual leaders
know and understand is that there’s America’s truth, and there’s
God’s truth. Most real “Men of God” (and there are not as many
as profess to be - black or white) care little about covering
up America’s racial history. That was the major rift between
King and white theologians that caused him to write his “Letter
from a Birmingham Jail.” Another problem here is that America
is so busy dismissing black America, that it doesn’t really
know black America. Because if they knew black America,
they’d know who Jeremiah Wright is, a master theologian who
has a national following and is considered one of the premier
teachers of other preachers. He is not some “fringe cleric”
or “rouge religious leader”, just a few of the names the white
pundits are calling him. He knows the Bible (and Qur’an), understands
prophesy and he knows history in the context of America’s
relationship with oppressed people. America may not like what
he says, particularly when he says it as coarse as, “Not God
bless but God damn America,” but few can refute it or call him
a liar. Those who see Barack as the Democratic Nominee want
to hang his spiritual leader’s words around his neck, as if
it’s the first time they’ve heard “America’s chickens are coming home to roost” professed
in the aftermath of a national tragedy. Malcolm X said it 45
years ago. America now celebrates Malcolm without celebrating
his teacher, the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad, who rejected
Malcolm’s comments on the assassination of JFK in a period of
national mourning and a moment of racial reconciliation. Some
in America
now want to celebrate Barack Obama without celebrating his teacher
- the very one who gave him the theme of his campaign - the
Audacity of Hope. Obama had the audacity to challenge the political
status quo because he had a teacher that doesn’t think like
a Negro - but in a true African centered consciousness that
all things are possible when you operate from a spiritual base.
God’s truth doesn’t pick situations to be true and truth tellers
don’t pick situations to pander.
Change is the
most radical of endeavors. Once people realized that change
is at their front door, they now want to put out the “race call,”
as if they don’t know already. It’s an appeal to that small
percentage, enough to change the outcome of an election, to
think twice before they do it. With that, race is poised to
trump change, in hopes that things don’t change - but remain
the same.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad is a national
columnist, managing director of the Urban Issues Forum
and author of the new book, Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website
is AnthonySamad.com.
Click
here to contact Dr. Samad.