When Sarah Palin signaled to the “Bubba” vote that
she was part of the “Joe six-pack” crowd - meaning she was just
an average American seeking to represent the nation on the highest
ticket in the land - during her debate with Joe Biden last week,
it became obvious that this presidential campaign would no longer
be about the issues. Despite
the fact that the American people are suffering through the worse
economy in years and want answers, as well as solutions, Palin refused
to answer Gwen Ifill’s questions.
In the days after the debate, and despite the fact that Americans have
had their fill of an average person in the White House the past
eight years (and that’s giving Bush the benefit of the doubt), both
Palin and John McCain have begun a coded language fight with which
we’re all too familiar. With McCain’s presidential chances fading
fast and as the polls become increasing more reflective of the public’s
intolerance around the Republicans ticket’s avoidance of the core
issues about which Americans care, Palin and McCain have decided
to make this presidential campaign a “culture” war over what is
American, who is American and what represents America.
Speaking in codes as only extremists do, the McCain campaign has shifted
the conversation away from the dominate issue in the daily news
cycle, the collapsing economy, to the fear and alienation of what
an Obama administration would mean to the “average” American. This
engagement in cultural identity politics, or whiteness politics,
without saying the word “white” is loaded with all the signs and
symbolism of historical xenophobia. Starting with Sarah Palin’s
favorite sign, “the wink,” coded signals are all through the McCain-Palin
message. Palin, who started out as a hockey mom, went to hunting
mom, then went to soccer mom and now is a beer-packing mom, has
proven herself to be a base pick with “average” intellect about
government and governance. By “base” pick, I mean an ultra conservative
right winger that will draw that segment of the party’s base that
wouldn’t support McCain under nearly any circumstance - segments
that know code language when they hear it.
Once the McCain campaign found out she had “bimbo” tendencies, they gave
a script and told her to stay on message. Her message? Invigorate
the base with code language like mentioning “heartland” (code for
white folks) and “terrorist” (code for un-American, or threat to
America) as many times as
she possibly could. The ideological codification is bent on suggesting
Obama is alien and his contacts are threatening. This is really
where you see the campaign’s desperation.
To
suggest any contact with “sixties” radicals in the 1980s and 1990s,
somehow makes you a terrorist, or terrorist sympathizer, is about
as dumb as suggesting that associating with segregationist back
in the day makes you one, or suggesting everybody who has redneck
friends are comfortable with racists or racists themselves.
While we know some of this is true, guess Palin never met ex-Black Panther,
Bobby Russ or former California State Senator, Tom Hayden, to know
that even domestic radicals reform. And McCain has a past too, that
he’s obviously reformed (Keating association). McCain and Palin
are unabashed about going after the redneck vote, codified as the
“average Joe,” because it is that vote that will not always tell
you how they are going to vote. But even the Bubba vote is hurting
in this election and neither McCain, nor Palin, have any answers
for them.
McCain is falling in the polls because he won’t address the economy.
He has to give voters, any voter, a reason to vote for him, not
just reasons to vote against Obama. There will be plenty of those
type voters, and we know why they are really not voting for Barack.
Their “cultural” upbringing will not allow them to do it. Now Palin
brings this dumbed-down approach to the campaign trail and while
people are coming out to hear it - the culture war is not enough
to cover up the economic abyss that McCain and his party orchestrated.
But at this point in the race, it’s all they have.
So expect them to bang that drum, that you know he’s a n________, codified
as a terrorist, an alien, not American, or simply not “one of us”
drum until election day. The
politics of whiteness and privilege and entitlement will not give
up the presidential seat without exhausting all options. It’s a
cultural war Barack Obama will have to endure to the end.
It’s a part of being in America and all that goes with it.
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. |