October 21, 2011 
Black America's divide over Obama 
By Times Wire 
 
When Barack Obama was elected president, millions of Americans believed 
that  the United States finally was entering a postracial period when race no 
longer  mattered in any serious way. But the Obama presidency has, 
ironically,  heightened racial tensions, and we are seeing old divisions 
return.  
One of the most unexpected developments resulting from the Obama presidency 
 has been the resurgence of conflicts and name-calling among blacks 
themselves.  Not since the heyday of the Black Nationalist movement of the 
1960s 
and 1970s  has there been such bitterness among blacks about who is 
"authentically black"  and who is not.  
The source of this renewed infighting is the dashed hope that Obama, the  
first black president, would improve life for blacks - "his people." Life has 
 not improved for blacks under Obama. The unemployment rate among blacks is 
16.7 percent, nearly double the national average. Forty percent of black  
children are living in poverty, and the housing crisis has hit blacks harder  
than other groups.  
Many blacks are disappointed and angry, and those who speak out and 
question  Obama's performance are having their loyalties to "the race" and to 
the 
first  black president challenged. Some are being called, among other 
insulting names,  "Toms," "traitors" and "sellouts."  
Media personality Tavis Smiley, Princeton University professor Cornel West, 
 California Democratic Rep. Maxine Waters, and former pizza CEO Herman 
Cain, a  Republican presidential candidate, are four of the most outspoken 
critics of  Obama's performance.  
During the summer, Smiley and West conducted a 15-city "Poverty Tour." On  
their website, they say the tour was "to highlight the plight of poor people 
of  all races, colors and creeds so they will not be forgotten, ignored, or 
rendered  invisible during this difficult and dangerous time of economic 
deprivation and  political cowardice."  
Referring to Obama's debt ceiling deal with the GOP, West said the measure  
was a "war on the poor" and that Obama "has no backbone." Later, he said of 
 Obama: "He can speak to Jewish voters. … He can speak to gay voters. … 
Why can't  he speak to black voters?"  
Waters, while critical of the president, has not been as harsh. "The  
Congressional Black Caucus loves the president, too," she said. "We're  
supportive of the president, but we're getting tired. … We want to give the  
president every opportunity to show what he can do and what he's prepared to  
lead 
on. But our people are hurting. The unemployment is unconscionable. We  don't 
know what the strategy is."  
But West, Smiley and Waters are being excoriated. During one of his recent  
syndicated radio segments, comedian Steve Harvey, for example, accused West 
and  Smiley of using personal vendettas to undermine Obama's re-election 
prospects.  He mocked the outspoken duo as being affiliated with UTLO.org, an 
imaginary  website whose initials stand for "Uncle Tom Look Out."  
The Rev. Al Sharpton, an Obama loyalist, who has a radio show and a  
television program, issued a stern warning to the president's black critics.  
"I'm 
not telling you to shut up," he said. "I'm telling you: Don't make some of  
us have to speak up."  
And then there is Obama critic Herman Cain who, in addition to claiming 
that  racism in the United States "doesn't hold anybody back in a big way," 
said that  Obama has "never been a part of the black experience in America" and 
that black  voters are "brainwashed" for being loyal to Obama.  
On the Joy Behar Show, entertainer and civil rights activist Harry  
Belafonte attacked Cain, along with black Republicans in general.  
"The Republican Party, the tea party, all of those forces to the extreme  
right have consistently tried to come up with representation for what they 
call  black, what they call the real Negroes and try to push these images as 
the kinds  of voices that America should be (looking) to," Belafonte said. 
"So we've got  Condoleezza Rice. We've got Colin Powell. They are heroes for 
some people, but  for a lot of us they are not. And Herman Cain is just the 
latest incarnation of  what is totally false to the needs of our community 
and the needs of our nation.  I think he's a bad apple and people should look 
at his whole card. He's not what  he says he is."  
The fear for black leaders is not that the internal squabbles will cause  
Obama critics to vote Republican. It is that too many will stay home and deny 
 the first black president the votes needed for him to return to the White 
House. 

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