Left Margin

Racism & Reaction Must be Confronted

By Carl Bloice - BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board
Black Commemntator
September 24, 2009

http://www.blackcommentator.com/343/343_lm_racism_reaction_confronted.html

David Brooks ought to go running even more often; maybe
take a different route sometimes. A couple of weeks ago
the New York Times columnist was doing his usual
Lincoln Memorial to the Capitol and back trek when he
encountered a bunch of "tea party" people demonstrating
and "carrying `Don't Tread on Me' flags, `End the Fed'
placards and signs condemning big government, Barack
Obama, socialist healthcare and various elite
institutions." Nearby were people at a celebration of
African-American culture and Brooks says he noticed
"the mostly white tea party protesters were mingling in
with the mostly black family reunion celebrants. The
tea party people were buying lunch from the family
reunion food stands. They had joined the audience of a
rap concert." From this harmonious vision Brooks
concluded that as far as the tea baggers are concerned
"race is largely besides the point." Now get this.
There are "some people" in the country, he writes, "who
see every conflict through the prism of race." Who?
Racists? No, it's "many people from Jimmy Carter on
down" who have suggested that "the hostility to
President Obama is driven by racism."

The reason I say Brooks should jog more often is that
in other parts of town he might discover that in the
neighborhoods of the District of Columbia most people
would prefer not to see political issues through the
prism of race at all; they prefer racism would just go
away. But it doesn't. It keeps popping up. Compare the
placards Brooks saw that day on the Washington mall
with what others saw. "At a rally in Washington a few
days ago after the President announced his healthcare
plans to Congress, protestors bore placards featuring
slogans including `the zoo has an African lion while
the White House has a lyin' African and, `Somewhere in
Kenya, a village is missing its teleprompter',"
reported the Financial Times last Friday. That's just
sampling of the demeaning racial slurs that have been
directed toward the white House over recent weeks.

"I have no patience with those who want to pretend that
racism is not an out-and-out big deal in the United
States, as it always has been," wrote Brooks' fellow
Times columnist Bob Herbert last Saturday. "We may have
made progress, and we may have a black president, but
the scourge is still with us. And if you needed Jimmy
Carter to remind you of that, then you've been
wandering around with your eyes closed."

Or running.

"These are bits and pieces of an increasingly
unrestrained manifestation of racism directed toward
Mr. Obama that is being fed by hate-mongers on talk
radio and is widely tolerated, if not encouraged, by
Republican Party leaders," wrote Herbert. "It's
disgusting, and it's dangerous. But it's the same old
filthy racism that has been there all along and that
has been exploited by the G.O.P. since the 1960s."

And here we come to the crux of the matter.

Rightwing populism is dangerous but the greatest
potential peril lies not in the presence of some loony
or deluded, irrational people parading through the
streets. It arises from the certainty that there will
always be someone lurking about in a trench coat to fan
the flames for their own cynical purposes. It was true
in Central Europe 70 years ago when fascism arose and
it's true there today, what with agitation against
immigrants and ethnic minorities. It's been true in our
country for just as long.

Of course, the tea party uprising isn't just about
race. It certainly isn't just about healthcare. You
watch, as each and every item on the Obama
Administration comes to the fore they will be out there
waving their personally vindictive signs and the
vituperative tenor of their attacks will increase. No
sooner than the President had announced his decision to
can his predecessor's mad `star wars' missile project
than he was being accused of everything short of
treason. The assaults on Obama will continue to be
tinged with racism and they will continue to draw out
numbers of people aghast that the country elected an
African American president. But it will be in context.
This venom is being supported and stoked by powerful
forces whose objective is nothing less than bringing
down the Obama presidency. While the know-nothings are
being wild in the streets, the Republican spinmaster
Karl Rove is calmly assuring readers of the Wall Street
Journal that this is all to the good and if all goes
well for them, they could be back on top by the time of
the 1010 Congressional elections.

"Mr. Obama is forgetting that the political landscape
can change when the pool of people who vote changes,"
Rove wrote in the Journal a few days after the
President' healthcare address to Congress. "In 2008,
five million more people voted than in 2004. Mr. Obama
drew two million more African-Americans to the polls.
He also shifted support among younger voters (ages
18-24) from 54 percent, Democratic, 45 percent
Republican in 2004 to 66 percent Democratic, 32 percent
Republican." Rove went on to suggest opponents of the
President can siphon off some of the youth vote by
convincing younger voters that under the health care
plan now before the Senate they would be fined for not
having health insurance. "Fining them only antagonizes
them," he wrote.

Rove went on to make it clear rightwing strategists are
aiming their message at older voters, "The political
risk for Democrats is clearest among seniors," he
wrote. `This matters because seniors make up a
disproportionate share of the off-year vote," he went
on "CNN exit polls showed that they were roughly 16% of
eligible voters in 2008, but 29% of the turnout in
2006. The generic ballot among seniors in 1994 was 45%
Republican and 43% Democrat.

But it's not just any elderly voter they are going
after.

"As The Hotline's Amy Walter wisely pointed out, 1994
became the `angry white male" election because those
who were displeased with the direction of the country
were "more engaged than those who just two years
earlier were voting for Bill Clinton and singing `don't
stop thinking about tomorrow'," wrote political
commentator Charlie Cook a couple of weeks ago. "But
`angry' is only a third of `angry white male,' and
anger is only part of the story today." If recent
polling number "are even halfway accurate, they should
frighten Democrats." Cook went on. "Their surveys show
voters 65 and over, who gave Democrats a 50 percent to
39 percent edge on the generic ballot in November 2006,
giving Republicans a 51 percent to 43 percent edge now.
If that reversal holds, Democrats could be ruing the
"year of the angry white senior" at the polling place,
not just the town hall."

Who said the "southern strategy" was dead?

"Last weekend's grassroots rally against ObamaCare in
Washington was a sign that voters are getting active to
oppose the president's agenda," declared Rove. "If it
keeps up, middle-class anxiety about the national debt
could make 2010 a tough year for any Democrat up for
re-election."

This isn't just about Obama and it isn't just about the
Republican Party's cynical electoral calculations. As
one internet observer put it, "the Teabaggers are only
pawns in the rich man's game." There are powerful
people in this country (many of whom couldn't care less
what the color the President is) who are determined to
turn history back. To them the emerging progressive
political forces that were to a large extent
responsible for Obama's election is an anathema. The
moves of the current administration - as hesitant,
timid and often contradictory as they may seem to many
of us - suggest a direction in which they don't want to
go. On a whole host of issues, from climate change to
green jobs to policy toward Latin America and beyond,
they are out to return us to the policies of the Bush
Presidency - or worse. To this end they are willing to
exploit every social issue they can latch onto, from
gay rights to taxes. And, of course, they are more than
anxious to trade on the current economic crisis and the
government's seeming largess to Wall Street CEOs and
reluctance to get really serious about the economic
precariousness of working people.

Those who have termed this rightwing upsurge
"populism," are correct. "This is right-wing populism
in the classic American style, as inchoate and paranoid
as that hawked by Father Coughlin during the Great
Depression and George Wallace in the late 1960s," wrote
the Times' Frank Rich Sunday. Even Brooks is willing to
use the label.

However, Brooks, who often comes across as the learned
conservative cultural anthropologist always trying to
position himself in the political "center," wants us to
see the Obama Administration and its supporters as
elitists and the tea baggers as "plain people" arrayed
against "the cosmopolitan elites." "Given all of this,
it was guaranteed that he would spark a populist
backlash, regardless of his skin color," he writes.
"And it was guaranteed that this backlash would be ill
mannered, conspiratorial and over the top - since these
movements always are, whether they were led by Huey
Long, Father Coughlin or anybody else." What he does
not accept, apparently, is that racism has always been
a central factor in populism. (It has historically also
been the Achilles heel of populism on the left.)
Couglin was an anti-Semite and he preached anti-
Semitism. Wallace was a racist and he promoted racism.
Both served the interest of others with wider agendas.
Both constituted serious threats to democratic advance.

Where to from here? Stepping up efforts to secure
progressive aims, like meaningful healthcare reform and
an end to the war in Afghanistan is crucial to
combating the right and buttressing the movement that
was critical in the last Presidential election. It
seems to me there must also be resolve to form a
unified front against racism and reaction. Ignoring,
obscuring or downplaying the threat will serve no good
purpose. This is serious business.
_____

BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Carl Bloice
is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National
Coordinating Committee of the Committees of
Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and formerly
worked for a healthcare union.
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