News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Obama To Me |
Title: | US CA: Obama To Me |
Published On: | 2008-11-17 |
Source: | New University (CA Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2008-11-18 02:30:39 |
OBAMA TO ME
Barack Obama is the President-elect of the United States of
America.
With him come many story lines and interests streaming from the
glaring lights of the television. History was made: The first black
president was elected. It meant something different to the black
community. So why is it important? Of what real significance is the
election of the first black man as the 44th president?
To the black community or more accurately, to this black author,
President-elect Obama's significance is currently outside of the realm
of politics. If support for Obama was only because of his political
views, then even this author would have little reason to lend
political support.
For all the change promised nothing truly transformational has been
stated. There has been no mention of curtailing American imperialism.
The necessity of placing over 700 bases on the property of over 60
countries has not been questioned. The repeated bombings of Somalia,
allegedly an attempt to strike terrorists though eye-witnesses say
bombs hit innocent Somali, has not been addressed. This foreign policy
inevitably alienates the Somali portion of the American black community.
The President-elect has critiqued the reason and sense of the drug
war, domestically. However, there has not been a serious discussion on
the disproportionate effect the drug war has had on black Americans.
It is taken as coincidence that the black community is at the target
end of America's major wars. When the National Center for Urban Ethnic
Affairs finds that drug use among white adolescents is as high as
among non-whites, one begins to question the validity of a drug war
that has focused on black communities. Obama did not wonder, as Jamie
Fullner of the Human Rights Watch put it, why "most drug offenders are
white, but most of the drug offenders sent to prison are black."
These facts simply reveal that race structures the syllogism of our
society's logic. So with these discrepancies between the black
American reality and Obama's rhetoric, on what premise can any member
of the black community lend political support? Race is the language of
American policy, and when racism is expressed as a major dialect,
Obama has not been fluent in the racial discourse. His policy plan,
domestic and foreign, does not deviate strongly with what has been
done in the past. But the effects of the facts before us are multiple.
In fact, racial dialogue has never been simply a black-and-white
binary. The streams and story lines represent the complexity of the
problem of the 20th and now 21st century - W.E.B. Du Bois' inescapable
"color line."
Besides what Obama refers to as the physical "devastating impact," the
drug war has also had a racial psychological toll. It is here that
Obama has failed to garner my political support. Even though blacks
dominate prison populations, even black police officers could not help
but contribute to the 50 bullets flung at Sean Bell, a New York City
African-American man who was unfairly singled out for aggressive
police action due to his race. The image of criminality and danger is
unquestionably black.
The significance of Obama's election for the black community then lies
in the image he presents to the rest of the nation and the world.
Since for many Americans, the image of a criminal is a black convicted
felon Willie Horton, the President-elect offers a chance at a
transformative false dichotomy. It is my hope that the image of Obama
as president will significantly contextualize the image of Willie
Horton in the racial psyche of American society. The dichotomy is
obviously false because the choice has never been just between Willie
Horton and Barack Obama. It has always been acquiesced within the
black community that "we are beautiful and ugly too."
I am proud of America. On Nov. 4, America picked Barack Obama, but I
feel like America picked me too.
Barack Obama is the President-elect of the United States of
America.
With him come many story lines and interests streaming from the
glaring lights of the television. History was made: The first black
president was elected. It meant something different to the black
community. So why is it important? Of what real significance is the
election of the first black man as the 44th president?
To the black community or more accurately, to this black author,
President-elect Obama's significance is currently outside of the realm
of politics. If support for Obama was only because of his political
views, then even this author would have little reason to lend
political support.
For all the change promised nothing truly transformational has been
stated. There has been no mention of curtailing American imperialism.
The necessity of placing over 700 bases on the property of over 60
countries has not been questioned. The repeated bombings of Somalia,
allegedly an attempt to strike terrorists though eye-witnesses say
bombs hit innocent Somali, has not been addressed. This foreign policy
inevitably alienates the Somali portion of the American black community.
The President-elect has critiqued the reason and sense of the drug
war, domestically. However, there has not been a serious discussion on
the disproportionate effect the drug war has had on black Americans.
It is taken as coincidence that the black community is at the target
end of America's major wars. When the National Center for Urban Ethnic
Affairs finds that drug use among white adolescents is as high as
among non-whites, one begins to question the validity of a drug war
that has focused on black communities. Obama did not wonder, as Jamie
Fullner of the Human Rights Watch put it, why "most drug offenders are
white, but most of the drug offenders sent to prison are black."
These facts simply reveal that race structures the syllogism of our
society's logic. So with these discrepancies between the black
American reality and Obama's rhetoric, on what premise can any member
of the black community lend political support? Race is the language of
American policy, and when racism is expressed as a major dialect,
Obama has not been fluent in the racial discourse. His policy plan,
domestic and foreign, does not deviate strongly with what has been
done in the past. But the effects of the facts before us are multiple.
In fact, racial dialogue has never been simply a black-and-white
binary. The streams and story lines represent the complexity of the
problem of the 20th and now 21st century - W.E.B. Du Bois' inescapable
"color line."
Besides what Obama refers to as the physical "devastating impact," the
drug war has also had a racial psychological toll. It is here that
Obama has failed to garner my political support. Even though blacks
dominate prison populations, even black police officers could not help
but contribute to the 50 bullets flung at Sean Bell, a New York City
African-American man who was unfairly singled out for aggressive
police action due to his race. The image of criminality and danger is
unquestionably black.
The significance of Obama's election for the black community then lies
in the image he presents to the rest of the nation and the world.
Since for many Americans, the image of a criminal is a black convicted
felon Willie Horton, the President-elect offers a chance at a
transformative false dichotomy. It is my hope that the image of Obama
as president will significantly contextualize the image of Willie
Horton in the racial psyche of American society. The dichotomy is
obviously false because the choice has never been just between Willie
Horton and Barack Obama. It has always been acquiesced within the
black community that "we are beautiful and ugly too."
I am proud of America. On Nov. 4, America picked Barack Obama, but I
feel like America picked me too.
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