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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

Amina Luqman didn't quite hit it out of the park...call it a grounds rule double


There is no better example than Clinton's comment about the disproportionate effect HIV has on black communities. She said that if "HIV-AIDS were the leading cause of death of white women between the ages of 25 and 34, there would be an outraged outcry in this country." For Obama to have said the same words in the same fiery manner could have been political suicide. By forfeit, Clinton essentially becomes the black candidate; it's not a space America would allow Obama to fill.

That right there is the heart of Amina Luqman's article, Obama's Tightrope. No Black person with any awareness can doubt the truth of that statement.

The average black American onlooker can't help feeling proud but also just a little hurt watching Obama. Proud of his ability to traverse minefields on a national political landscape and hurt by what America demands of black candidates seeking public acceptance and trust. During the debate, black Americans in the audience sat, hands poised, yearning to applaud a black candidate able to articulate our passions and sense of injustice. We wanted to hear that he understood and loved us -- not in the general, "we the people" sense but in the specific. Yet we know that with each utterance about injustice, each puff of anger or frustration about racism, we lose the very thing we seek: a viable black candidate. The closer Obama comes to us, the further he would be from winning the nomination and the presidency.

That is a reality of race and national politics in America. Part of Obama's appeal to white America lies in his hopefulness. It's in the way he looks toward a brighter future, and it's in his promise to bring us all along.

Yet the subtext of his appeal is in what he does not say. It's in his ability to declare that things must get better without saying who or what has made them bad. It's how he rarely chastises and how he divides blame and responsibility evenly; white receiving equal parts with black, poor equal parts with rich.

Pretty good...pretty clear.

I do have a problem with it. Sort of.

The "we" Obama has created leaves blank the space traditional African American candidates would have filled with passion or a clear articulation of the state of black Americans. It's left some black voters unfulfilled and some white voters with a sense of acceptance and absolution from past wrongs and present-day injustices.

I don't want this to be true, though it probably is. I'm hoping we're at least starting to demand more that mere words delivered with passion.

In contrast, Hillary Clinton is on relatively sure footing. Obama must tilt away from clarity and passion about issues disproportionately affecting blacks while Clinton is free to perform the black candidate's role. In last week's debate, it was she who took on the traditional black candidate's persona, she who was both passionate and rhythmic in her cadence. Her endings built to crescendos. Be it real or pandering, Clinton can openly connect and show solidarity with black Americans in ways that Obama cannot.

Solidarity with Black people must go past rhythmic cadences, beyond the surface crap that Democrats give Black folks (and, for the record, which Republicans give their religious base).

Plus, a 'clear articulation of the state of black Americans' has actually never been given in the political agora. Never.

 

I asked this question to someone.

WHAT would have been the headlines IF Obama had said the EXACT same thing that Clinton said. Nothing more. Nothing less. The SAME thing.

Be honest...we know that the headlines wouldn't have been ' Obama wins debate'.

Come on.

 

I did appreciate the article.

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