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Aquarian
Weekly 9/23/09
REALITY CHECK
THE
RACE ILLUSION
Jimmy
Carter's Insult As Excuse-Making
I
think an overwhelming portion of the intensely demonstrated animosity
toward President Barack Obama is based on the fact that he is
a black man.
- Jimmy Carter
Jimmy
Carter, America's political equivalent of Liz Taylor, who emerges
every so often to stammer out the most insane gibberish known
to freethinking man, used the NBC Nightly News this week to offer
his derision of Southern whites and summarily branded the opposing
voices to this president, an African-American, and his policies
as racist. The former president's descent into dementia was evident
a few years ago while promoting a book on the Palestinian/Israeli
conflict, unfortunately entitled Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid,
when an otherwise brilliant thinker haphazardly framed an almost
amazingly infantile argument that would please many half-wits
comparing the current Healthcare debate to Nazi Germany. And so
it was then that Carter clearly established a preternatural need
to turn vague comparisons into unflinching accusation, as if it
were as simple as comparing a headache to decapitation.
Thus,
his latest half-baked comments to a visibly flabbergasted Brian
Williams, who was caught somewhere between the glee of a man with
a scoop on his hands and an empathetic character wishing somehow
the old fool would trail off into the sunset, has a familiar ring
to it: Disrespect for the office of president, his policies and
his authority, is nothing less than veiled racial discrimination.
Bad
move. Not constructive. Distracting.
The
thing is, although it was as cheap and weak as the defenders of
the last president calling everyone unpatriotic, I get Carter's
point. He is a proud Southerner, born and bred in a time when
Jim Crow laws ruled and a random lynching was part of the Sunday
morning church activities. He's nauseated by and sensitive to
these issues, like say, Bill Cosby, who also felt the need to
weigh in on the subject; a proud black man, who was wrongly denied
his rights in a time of segregation and systemic violence against
his people. I get it. We all get it.
However,
nobody needs Jimmy Carter and Bill Cosby comparing those with
opposing views to a sickeningly large number of card-carrying
racist dummies in the South and by proxy their representatives
like Joe Wilson from South Carolina, who has spent his entire
time down there defending the flying of the Confederate Flag above
the state capitol as some kind of noble Southern legacy, instead
of what it actually represents; the total and utter defeat of
America's greatest crime against humanity.
This
is all common knowledge, but how it reflects on the current debate
about Healthcare or any other discussion of our current president's
policies, or how he is "treated" in the face of them, is patently
unfair and frankly further muddies an already sludge-filled river
of nonsense emanating from all sides.
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This
president, this time, and this place are all the beginnings
of a healing period on this subject that has rarely been
as pivitol in the national politic.
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Not
to mention that broaching racism now flies in the face of the
most momentous and game-changing elections in our great country's
tarnished history. A mere nine months after a substantial majority
of Americans of all race, creed and color were dancing in the
streets, shouting soliloquies from rooftops and filling the columns
of major international newspapers with well-deserved celebration,
and after a remarkable number of whites, suburban, urban or otherwise
(48%, in fact) voted for the first African-American to lead a
major ticket for president of the United States, its suddenly
all about race now?
Ill-timed.
Ill-conceived. Insulting.
Especially
in defense of the very man who while running for the nation's
highest office never initiated the playing of the race card to
curry favor or defend his right to lead. Only after ridiculous
charges of terrorist sympathies and cloudy origins and a strange
middle name was he forced to identify the elephant in the room;
and even then he balked at the chance to challenge why his opponent,
John McCain spent years trying to deny and eventually voted against
making Martin Luther King Day a national holiday.
This
president knew the score better than any of us when he decided
to take on this challenge two years ago, something his Democratic
opponent, a woman, didn't get until it was too late. Not being
the white, Anglo-Saxon cookie-cutter would be an easy target,
but at the same time cannot be touched for fear of being labeled,
and to be labeled in this country is the nastiest of things. It
keeps us from offering opinions that we really mean and then retract
post-backlash.
What
is most disturbing about posing even the most extremist dissent
as racism is it lends itself to the promotion of Victimhood, another
American staple. Oh, poor Mr. Obama. He has no chance against
the rowdy, gun toting, Bible freaks! What? He's the fucking
president. He was chosen as such during the most widely reported
and highly attended election on record. He has the Constitution
at his back and the army at his disposal.
Secondly,
and most importantly, this entire mess completely ignores the
main tactic used against presidents by their opponents; a scheme
as old as the powdered wigs capping the skulls of the founders
of this grand experiment. It is Politics 101, and it has been
used against every chief executive since I've been sucking air
-- Kennedy was a Roman Catholic beholden to the Pope, Reagan was
a doddering old fart capable of incinerating us all, Bush senior
was a wimp and his baby boy a dim bulb, Clinton was a slick hippy
and our beloved Jimmy Carter a dumb hick.
The
stereotype the opposition has laid on Barack Obama is less about
his color than he being this media-created myth, a neophyte who
is incapable of leadership and thus a tool of the Democratic machine.
Who knows anything about this guy? The unknown newbie, ushered
into an office he barely deserves to steal bald eagles and piss
on the Constitution.
Blah,
blah, blah.
No
one in recent memory had flown into the White House on the wings
of such reverent falderal as Barack Obama, and because of this
the opposition must mock, deride, and take the guy down a peg
or two. It is the very core of what we do here in this space;
peck away at the two-dimensional facade and see what remains.
Whining about it only emboldens the charade. This is why the president
immediately derided Carter's comments as not constructive and
hardly representative of his stance.
Race?
It
will always play a big part of what's going down; but to reduce
it to a political tactic equal to the boorish attacks it faintly
hopes to defuse is amateurish at best and at its worst plain ugly.
This president, this time, and this place are all the beginnings
of a healing period on this subject that has rarely been as pivitol
in the national politic.
Women
and minorities received their day in the public arena like no
other this past November. It was rousing success. One I thought
impossible. To return now to the standard hue and cry is tired
20th century thinking.
It's
the equivalent of painting those of us who think Sarah Palin a
voodoo simpleton as misogynistic hate mongers.
Nice
try.
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