---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John A Imani <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Jun 22, 2012 at 10:04 AM
Subject: "On Barak Obama" (Posted January 20, 2009)
To: [email protected], [email protected],
[email protected]


John A. Imani:  "On Barak Obama"
 On Barak Obama

By John A. Imani
Member of the Revolutionary Autonomous Communities.


Let’s face it, comrades, we have our hands full.

With the system in shatters all around us, capitalism had played its last
card: it has elected ($700,000,000) a young, gifted and black president.

At the Martin Luther King, Jr Day here in LA one could strike by two
things, the first expected, the second, however, was surprising:

“Obama” was the word on many, nearly every, lip. The impact of the fact
that after 400 years of captivity, then second-class citizenship and
occupation of its community by a force not of that community (in our case,
the LAPD) (that) a person of color was elected to lead completely colored
the air as minor celebrities echoed and led the crowd in chants of the new
president’s name.

The surprising thing was that this goodwill extended to just so the
occupying force referred to above. Chief Bratton and Sheriff Baca led a
contingent of pigs that for some strange reason the crowds applauded them.
Not just the head cops but motorcycle, horse, bicycle, Segway riding,
walking armed pigs were waved to and cheered. It was like watching
concentration camp internees applauding their captors.

It was inexplicable.

Then the thought hit me: Obama = State. It dawned upon me that my comrade,
Joaquin, from Revolutionary Autonomous Communities (RAC) had been correct
when before the election he warned that if Obama was elected, it would make
it more difficult to rebel. The identification of the president, and all
the good will extended by this, had somehow ‘rubbed off’ on the first and
last line of defense of the state, the police. And the occupiers were
seemingly transformed, in the minds of the viewers, into their defenders.
This is how one might view this happenstance if one ignores the fact that
the existence of the police itself is laden with a fundamental
contradiction: that its interests and its existence is the protection of
the state and not of the people.

There is little doubt that the Obama regime will initiate some reforms. It
has no choice in this matter: it must generate purchasing power just as the
Bush regime did. The difference is promised to be, however, that while Bush
injected liquidity into the system with its vast purchases of arms, Obama’s
medication will be prescribed in the form of extension of benefits, lower
taxes on income and capital gains, workfare programs, etc. All of this in
an attempt to save a system, a la FDR, teetering on the brink of
self-implosion and ingesting vast sums of created public monies that are
but IOU’s written on the backs of today’s and tomorrow’s workers.

On a macrocosmic level, what this means is that when he sends in more
troops to Afghanistan that there will be some, who protested under Bush,
will be hesitant to take to the streets. Or, when times get harder and food
riots are necessitated, the televised image of concerned ‘Brother’ Obama
will keep some of the hungry at home mindful of the fact that “The brother
is doing the best that he can.”

Patriotism used to be the last refuge of scoundrels. Now it seems that its
place has been taken by this cynical use of a black man as figurehead,
standing in the same relationship to the real holders of power, the
capitalist class, just as Bush II, Clinton, Bush’s Daddy, Ronald Reagan,
etc. Of whom, pick your choice, it was and it would be easier to rebel
against. The question is “How to critique Obama and not alienate the masses
who see this presidency, perhaps in some way, as payment for our
sufferings, as reparations for our pains?"

http://joaquincienfuegos.blogspot.com/2009/01/john-imani-on-barak-obama.html


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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