(ThyBlackMan.com) Herman Cain knew two things were certain to happen when he blathered that Racism doesn’t hold anybody back (though he added a tiny caveat “in a big way.” One it would get the media tongues wagging furiously. The second is that it would increase the rapture of ultra conservatives for him. He was right. But Herm also knows that the racism-is-no-big deal line is reinforced when a black president that reinforces the delusion that racism is still just a minor blip on the nation’s chart, and millions can take comfort that as Herman Cain implies any failings by blacks to duplicate Cain’s fete and be the boss of a major corporation they have nothing and nobody to blame but themselves.
It’s easy to peddle that line when millions believe that decades of civil rights laws, court decisions and affirmative action programs have pretty much wiped the last vestiges of legal racial discrimination off the nation’s map. The line seems even more plausible when millions see blacks heading the nation’s top corporations and financial houses. They turn on the TV and they see packs of white news anchors, correspondents and commentators on all the major networks and cable stations. They see blacks at the top of the heap of the richest and most recognizable names in sports and entertainment. They see blacks living in every suburban neighborhood, sending their children to chic, pricey and trendy private schools. They live in cities that are run by black mayors, where blacks how power and sway on city councils, boards of education and often hold the top police and city department posts. They live in districts that are represented by a black state senator or congressional representative.
This progress is not an illusion. Some blacks like Herman Cain have gotten a small piece of the economic pie, and have markedly increased their political reach and standing. This makes it even easier to buy Cain’s line and to get mad at those that don’t and accuse them of screaming racism whenever anything goes wrong. However, Herman Cain knows but would never dare publicly admit the tormenting facts that countless studies, surveys, reports, and investigations, lawsuits, and court challenges, and the mountains of EEOC complaints have irrefutably documented.
Blacks are still two and three times more likely to be unemployed than whites, trapped in segregated neighborhoods, and that their kids will attend disgracefully failing, mostly segregated public schools. Young Black males and females are far more likely to be murdered, suffer HIV/AIDS affliction, to be racially-profiled by police, imprisoned, placed on probation or parole, permanently barred in many states from voting because of felony convictions, much more likely to receive the death penalty especially if their victims are white, and more likely to be victims of racially motivated violence than whites. Research studies that show that whites with a felony record are more likely to be hired in some places than college educated blacks.
Herman Cain would never purse his lips to acknowledge the stark fact that middle-class blacks such as himself that reaped the biggest gains from the civil rights struggles often find the new suburban neighborhoods they move to are re-segregated and soon look like the old neighborhoods they fled. They are ignored by cab drivers, followed by clerks in stores, left fuming at restaurants because of poor or no service, find that more and more of their sons and daughters are cut out of scholarships and student support programs at universities because of the demolition of affirmative action, and denied bank loans for their businesses and homes.
Herman Cain could easily find himself being by passed by a fearful cab driver who didn’t watch Fox News and know who he was while on his way to an important business meeting. In fact just a week before Herman Cain cavalierly blew off the still corrosive chain of racism that still shackle millions of blacks as no big deal he huffed at the revelation of the “Niggerhead” rock on his GOP presidential rival Rick Perry’s property. Herman Cain quickly corrected his memory lapse and got back on script and shrugged it off as much ado about nothing.
The fierce battles over affirmative action, police violence, the segregation laws still on the books in some Southern states, the nightmarish scenes of thousands of poor Blacks fleeing for their lives from the Katrina floodwaters in New Orleans, and the big fight over what if anything should be done about the plight of the black poor are further bitter reminders of the gaping economic and racial chasm in America. They are hardly things of a by-gone, forgotten past.
Cain’s record of achievement– corporate head, head of the prestigious National Restaurant Assn., a stalwart military career, radio talk show host, syndicated columnist, and now GOP presidential candidate is the storybook dream and envy of millions and is commendable. Many other blacks can tell similar stories of their personal triumph. But their triumphs don’t cancel out the naked fact that the very barriers they overcame are still rigidly in place for millions, and if caught in the wrong place at the wrong time for them too. When that happens they rudely find that racism is anything but dead, and that can hold for Herman Cain too.
Written By Earl Ofari Hutchinson
One can find more info about Mr. Hutchinson over at the following site; TheHutchinson ReportNews.
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I like your article. But Herman Cain did do a bit more. He was VP at Pillsbury and brought them back from the brink of bankruptcy. He was also the head of the Federal Reserve in Kansas. That being said, I know he does not believe some of the foolishness he says. I saw every single Republican debate and he is an intelligent man, but they were never going to let him get the nomination.
It’s interesting that Herman cheated with so many white women, and the one woman who came to the forefront who was not white had the last name WHITE. WOW. As an author, commentator and professional public speaker, I would debate Herman any time. But he is correct about a few things that African Americans need to face. There are economic policies, political policies, state and federal laws, prejudices, misperceptions and blatant acts of racism which are set in place to hold us back. Can they? For most African-Americans, yes they can because many of our people have no idea of how to overcome them. The slaves were freed by a Republican. Frederick Douglas was a Republican. And most of our people have inherited the political party of our slave masters – the Democratic Party. In the south, they had the slaves.
This man is an idiot. A modern day “Uncle Tom”, in every sense of the word. It is a shame the republicans are bringing this garbage to the table.