(ThyBlackMan.com) I’m not here to defend President Obama, because as I pointed out in previous articles, I have an issue or two with some of his policies myself, just like I’ve had with EVERY White president. But I think we owe this brother the benefit of the doubt. He’s plagued with enough problems in having to deal with world affairs and our domestic crisis, while at the same time, having to fight off racist Republicans and envious, self-serving turncoats like Tavis Smiley and Cornel West. So we shouldn’t add yet another problem to his plate by forcing him to have to worry about whether he has the support of his own people.
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To be quit frank, I think there are only two kinds of people in this world – good people, and bad people. In addition, I believe the battle over race was a part of the last war. Those who are enlightened recognize that the current battle is over class, because the current powers that be don’t care any more about poor and middle-class White folks than they do Black people. Most White people recognize that fact. That’s why Obama is president. So while I often write about what’s in the best interest of the Black community as a whole, I rarely make race a part of my personal political calculations.
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But I consider the presidency of Barack Obama a unique situation, and what we’ve been watching with respect to many Black Obama critics should be regarded as a teaching moment, because it represents a cultural dysfunction that’s been played out thousands of times over the past four hundred years. Many of us have heard stories about Black self-hatred all of our lives, but due to President Obama’s high profile we now have the opportunity, as an entire culture, to see it being played out in all of its ugliness for the very first time.
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But of course, there are going to be few of Obama’s critics who are going to ask, “What are you saying, that President Obama should be above criticism just because he’s Black?” Of course not, and the people who pose such a ridiculous question know that’s not what I’m saying before they even ask it. But just asking such a disingenuous question should also serve as a teaching moment – it shows the extraordinary lengths that such people will go to mask their “bligotry.”
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Questioning President Obama’s policies is not the problem – it’s the mean-spirited way in which it’s being done. In fact, Black haters are not merely questioning Obama’s policies at all. More often than not these people are simply using policy differences as a pretext for making slanderous assertions about the president’s character as a whole – he’s a “war criminal,” “a black mascot of Wall Street oligarchs and a black puppet of corporate plutocrats,” “a Rockefeller Republican in Blackface,” and even, “He has a certain rootlessness, a deracination” [WHAT!!!?]. Notice that three out of the four slanders are racial in nature, and these quotes are from just one man – Cornel West.
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None of the criticisms above were legitimate attempts to address the president’s public policies. They were racial slanders, clear and simple. That clearly demonstrates that many Black Obama-haters are not nearly as interested in addressing public policy as they are in attacking the man himself. These slanders also demonstrate that their allegation that people who object to their criticism are merely Obama cheerleaders. That’s not true – what we’re against is what we’ve always been against – racist attacks.
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But even those haters who have the good sense to refrain from blatant, racist attacks often make themselves known by going over the top in their allegations regarding policy. They’ll often say things like, “Obama is a part of the machine.” But since we’re not privy to the information that President Obama is basing his decisions upon, nor his motives for making any given decision, any allegation being made about him being a part of any “machine” are wholly without supporting substantiation at best. Critics who suggest this are merely commenting on what things LOOK like to their jaundiced eye – or what they’re trying to convince you to think they like – without having a shred of evidence to support their views. Their allegations have no more basis in fact than that of the birthers.
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The reality is, being the first Black President of the United States, Obama can’t approach the nation’s problems in the same way that they were approached by his White predecessors. In many cases he has to take a circuitous approach to addressing issues in order to prevent the GOP from mischaracterizing his efforts with their very special kind of malevolent spin. Thus, the way that things may look, may not always be what they seem. So anyone who would lend comfort to the most steadfast enemies of the Black community by helping to drag this Black man through the mud is on what my good friend, Playthell Benjamin, would call, a fool’s errand.
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There were people in the Tea Party who were consistently calling Obama a terrorist sympathizer, right up until he brought Osama Bin Laden’s head home in a bag. Bush spent nearly eight years and close to a trillion dollars trying to pull that off with no success, but Obama did it with three helicopters and a handful of courageous men, without busting a sweat bubble – and he did it while America thought he was just kickin’ it.
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So this brother ain’t no punk, and he’s not the kind of person we should second guess without very good cause. So yes, I think everyone in the Black community should get behind this brother – period. If we have a comment on policy, we should voice our concern, but we should do it politely, and very respectfully. Because while Obama is, and should be, the president of ALL of America, he is also the most high profile representative of the Black community in the entire world. So to be disrespectful of him, is to be disrespectful of us; and his success, is our success.
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With regard to Cornel West, I can only say this – any Black man who tries to publicly engage in the Dozens against the first Black President of the United States cannot be regarded as a serious intellectual. He deserves very close scrutiny, because his behavior is not only disrespectful of the president, but it betrays a gross disdain for the Black community as a whole. So he can say whatever he likes about his motives, but his behavior lends comfort to the most dedicated enemies of the Black community. Thus, the issue is not even debatable – the stupidity he’s engaged in amounts to tap dancing for the Klan.
Tap Dancing For The Klan.
Staff Writer; Eric L. Wattree
More thought provoking articles feel free to visit; The Wattree Chronicle.
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Hassan,
Maybe I made an unwarranted assumption about you. In this heated political environment many of us are prone to do that. I try to avoid that kind of inefficient thinking, but I’m just as flawed as everyone else. So if I was unjust in my assessment of you, please accept my apology.
Hassan,
I agree with everything you said but your first paragraph. I may be wrong, but I would think that being the only Black in a White environment would give Obama more insight into racism than most Black people have – but he’s also benefitted from the fact that he’s seen that white people aren’t all evil and racist. If anything, Obama is the epitome of what we mean when we say “African American.” After all, most African Americans are mixed. My great grandfather’s mother was a Black woman, “Miss Cassie,” but her skin was whiter than most of the people in congress; and my grandmother’s grandfather was German. So again, most of us are mixed. Obama is just closer to the mixture.
Eric,
Most of the criticism for Obama that I have heard, and even the remarks that I make are not based on his skin color, in fact I really don’t see him as a man that understands the “black experience”, after all the only black man that had any influence on his life while he was being raised by white people in an upper middle class Hawaii was Frank Marshall Davis, the unapologetic communist that wrote commentaries for a local newspaper.
The points of contention that I have for this president are THE PROMISES THAT HE MADE. And what he ran on. In spite of your political assessment of myself as being uninformed, I do have an understanding of how the government is supposed to work. And no, I am not a republican. Like Gerald Celente has stated about himself, I consider myself a political atheist. I am not hung up on skin color, party affiliation, what people do in the privacy of their homes, or if their beliefs or ideals differ from mine. And quite frankly both the republicans and democrats have failed this country terribly.
I do agree with Farrakhan with black people needing to become self-sufficient, buying land, growing our own food, and breaking away from old ideas. And yes, we need to keep moneys with in our own communities, but adopt more inclusive attitudes with those around us, and outside our race, and communities, for these people are potential investors in our own communities, possible customers, consumers, etc.
Also, I have recently moved to a rural area, the only black family in the area and we are Muslims to top it off. I plan on purchasing live stock, non gmo seeds, and providing wholesome food for myself, my family and my neighbors, many who happen to not have any work and are living at poverty level. I have something else to say about my white neighbors, they are kind, helpful, and have never treated poorly.
Also, in my form of protest I search the internet for American Made goods, even if I pay more for them, I have not shopped in a Walmart in over 10 years, and would prefer to do without than ever to step foot in one . That’s where we need to go as a country and a people. Race based politics, is nothing but obsolete, old warn out Sharpton/Jackson nonsense who both happen to be millionaires, live in well to do areas and send their children to be educated in private schools in white neighborhoods.
No one has to segregate us, because since the Civil Rights movement, we have just segregated ourselves.
I want to add: I believe that when people do not provide solutions, they are part of the problem.
OK, peace Eric! There is something else that I really don’t get with this website. It has been at least a year already that I raised this question: “How come there is no job section?” As you can observe the status quo remained. Most Black websites do not have a job section and we are complaining about our unemployment!!! Why are we always reacting instead of being proactive???
Pat,
I obviously wasn’t clear in my response. I’m in total agreement with you:
“There are those in the Black community who need to come to terms with the fact that there are some things that even the president can’t do – and signing a bill abolishing ignorance is at the very top of that list. That’s what it would take to accomplish some of the objectives that they’re trying to force upon him.
“The president can’t just wave a magic wand and instantly make everyone upwardly mobile. It doesn’t work that way. There’s an educational process that goes along with upward mobility, and that goes for whether the person is Black, or White. While there are many in the Black community who have the skills to hit the ground running, there are others who need to be trained, motivated, and refocused in order to simply maintain a job that pays wages high enough to lift them out of poverty, even if it was given to them.
“More money passes through the Black community than through most countries, so we could create our own jobs. But we don’t, and I’ll tell you why – because Black people are the product of the very same racist environment as White people, so we’re just as reluctant to patronize Black businesses as any Hillbilly. Unlike any other community in the world, we’d rather take our money and patronize other people – ANY other people – as long as they aren’t Black. That’s a hard pill to swallow, but it is, what it is.”
http://wattree.blogspot.com/2012/12/beneath-spin-eric-l_10.html
Eric,
What is your problem? When I wrote we are doing nothing, I am comparing ourselves to Asians for instance who do not waste their time talking. They are into action, they work together, build their enterprises, etc. In fact, they are the ones who have the less unemployment rate in the nation. My jaw dropped when I learned that 60% of our people dropped out academically. So, they have to be delusional to think that they will be employed if they made the choice to be uneducated. I could go on and on so, don’t assume things which are false. You seem to be someone who is very judgmental, who do not listen to people, do not ask the right questions before you make your own mind. This is not very smart!!! in addition, I am sick and tired to read on this site articles about our problems (black unemployment, etc.) without giving any solutions. Enterpreneurship is everything. It is time to wake up and smell the coffee. I will leave you with this quote from Henry Ford to meditate:
Any man who thinks he can be happy and prosperous by letting the Government take care of him better take a closer look at the American Indian.
Here is another quote that Black America should apply:
“Become a doer of the word and not a hearer only”
Hassan,
You’re uninformed. Don’t you know that the United States Constitution give sole control of all spending to the U.S. House of Representatives, and the House is controlled by the Republicans? so Obama can’t do anything for the Black community – or ANY community – without getting them to go along with him. And the only way that Obama can get them to go along with him is if he has the support of the people behind him.
So I have two questions for you. First, don’t you have sense enough to realize that your constant criticism of him does more harm than good? And secondly, why are you constantly criticizing Obama, and not congress? Hmmmmm. Are you a closet Republican?
In addition, Whenever I hear a person claim that President Obama is a slave to the corporatist Wall Street culture, I know immediately that he’s one of three things – he’s either ignorant, blind to reality, or he’s promoting his own agenda. Of course Obama is a slave to Wall Street – we all are.
You can’t live in this society without being a slave to Wall Street. But there are two kinds of slaves. There are slaves who are subservient and content to simply do what they’re told, and then there are slaves who engage in a constant struggle to free themselves and their people. So, while I’m not always happy with some of the day-to-day decisions that President Obama makes to promote our cause, I’m convinced that Obama is one of the latter. If he wasn’t, they wouldn’t be trying so hard to get rid of him.
The fact is, if you’re a casual observer sitting at home and keeping score based purely on your attitudes, prejudices, and feelings, it’s easy to pass your uninformed judgment on every decision that any politician makes. But the reality is, anyone who decides to go into politics has to be practical, and a huge part of that practicality entails recognizing the fact that you’re going to have to dance to the music that’s being played, and it’s Wall Street that leads the band. So regardless to who we elect, they’re going to have to have, at the very least, a working relationship with the corporate establishment – and ironically, it’s our own fault.
The primary reason that every politician in this country is forced to play footsey with the corporate establishment is because we, the people, are so lazy, undereducated, and disengaged from our own political well being that we allow the corporations to use money to control our minds. So the only way that a politician like Obama can even get through to us is by way of the corporate establishment.
The reason that money has such a large influence on our political system is because it’s used to tell us what, and how, to think. From the time that most of us get up in the morning until the time we go to bed at night, we spend most of our free time with corporate voices whispering in our ear. It could be the radio, television, or even the billboards that we don’t think we’re noticing as we’re driving in to work, but the fact is, they are all having a profound subliminal effect on our thinking and attitudes. They’re conditioning us to think, and to do, what they tell us to. Corporations spend billions of dollars a year to convince wimps with severe cases of acne and horrendous body odors that if they buy a certain kind of car, the beautiful model that’s sensuously stroking its hood, or someone just like her, is going to fall in love with them – and they influence our vote in exactly the same way. Thus, every politician must remain cogizant of that fact.
My personal favorite is the National Rent-A-Car commercial. They have a businessman walking through the air port in slow motion with dramatic music playing in the background. Then when he gets to the counter, they have the lady behind the counter making goo-goo eyes at him like she can barely restrain herself from jumping over the counter and attacking him. Then the clincher is, at the end of the commercial they have a deep, authoritative voice saying, “YOU DESERVE THIS!”
We’ve got to start thinking of this country like it’s a business, we’re the owners, and the politicians are our employees. Only then will we begin to recognize the importance of our full engagement in running that business. Because the fact is, if the United States was a business, and as owners, we simply lounged around at home watching BET, MTV, and ESPN while allowing our employees (the politicians) to run it in the ground by giving themselves unwarranted raises in the middle of the night, and squandering away our profits, it wouldn’t be the employees’ fault, it would be ours – and that’s exactly what we’re doing. So don’t blame it on Obama. How can he lead people who don’t have sense enough to follow? So he’s simply playing the cards he’s being dealt.
eric,
you are too easy. anyone, especially a black man or woman that does not share the blind loyalty that you have for the black president angers you. they are a bligot, black klan member, or hate themselves. but as i stated before anytime anyone brings up the facts about jobs, the economy, or the overall condition of the black community. they are labeled as nothing more than republican talking points.
and if anybody is predictable it is you, an internally conflicted man, obsessed with skin color.
That’s it, Pat.
Get mad and say we ain’t gon take it no more, then burn our own neighborhood down. it’s amazing.
I think it is better to say “unfortunately talking loud and doing little has always been our strong point.”
Dorothy, unfortunately talking loud and saying nothing has always been our strong point.
Word,
It should be embarrassing to be predictable:
“Questioning President Obama’s policies is not the problem – it’s the mean-spirited way in which it’s being done. In fact, Black haters are not merely questioning Obama’s policies at all. More often than not these people are simply using policy differences as a pretext for making slanderous assertions about the president’s character as a whole – he’s a “war criminal,” “a black mascot of Wall Street oligarchs and a black puppet of corporate plutocrats,” “a Rockefeller Republican in Blackface,” and even, “He has a certain rootlessness, a deracination” [WHAT!!!?]. Notice that three out of the four slanders are racial in nature, and these quotes are from just one man – Cornel West.
“If we have a comment on policy, we should voice our concern, but we should do it politely, and very respectfully. Because while Obama is, and should be, the president of ALL of America, he is also the most high profile representative of the Black community in the entire world. So to be disrespectful of him, is to be disrespectful of us; and his success, is our success.
“Any Black man who tries to publicly engage in the Dozens against the first Black President of the United States cannot be regarded as a serious intellectual. He deserves very close scrutiny, because his behavior is not only disrespectful of the president, but it betrays a gross disdain for the Black community as a whole. So he can say whatever he likes about his motives, but his behavior lends comfort to the most dedicated enemies of the Black community. Thus, the issue is not even debatable – the stupidity he’s engaged in amounts to tap dancing for the Klan.”
Thank you for validating my article.
Indeed Dorothy this is the community’s fault because we had a community organizer that made a living pimping the community and now he sits in the White House thumbing his nose at the very community that adores him.
Dorothy,
You’ve made several excellent points here. We are in dire need of two things in the Black community – educational enlightenment, and the attendant recognition that our politicians are not our leaders; they’re our employees.
I do believe every thing you have restated in this article has already been discussed, Tavis and West are in the site of bigotry and blasphemp when it concerns their own views of President Obama, and the Republican legislature. The dipiction of the black man in a Klan suit really adds fuel to a fire already burning. The problem is the fire is not on the cross it’s in our elite Brothers & sisters who are to afraid to represent the needs of their constituents the American fabric that need a new attitude, a new dress or suit, but needs to be educated enough to get to the invisible economic and financial level, our leaders have not begun to produce, create, discuss even if they care. ( We have a Few that depend on the forward movement of business as usual to throw a rope once in a while, we never know the outcomes. There is a serious disconnect in urban communities that is carried out because of some economic or classist adendum, the resources and future apear scattered and unattainable, this is not the Presidents fault, this has been a lack of leaders and politicians not educated in achieving the ethnic needs of their own communities, to take office,leadership,to earn a salary and afluence continues to be their goal the repetative imitation of understanding their jobs taught by their White counterpart, is not what Black Urban America needs are they lacking their ethic education and assume this is America it has to be governed this way, in spite of the poverty they are accused of they feel their consitituents are the problem, (I have no proof of this it is the unspoken asumption in communities) but is left unaddressed because then there would be an obligation to change it. Our mis education did not begin in the class room it began before attending school and allow Black elected to be elite in misrepresention, making a mokery of communities and the expectation of poverty seen as just a overall black struggle, but the truth should be told because the revolution which was suspended, has been taken off it hinges has destroyed our Public Schools, Church’s, and community development, giving rise to diversity (nothing wrong with that) but it appear to have halted the process and progress educating communities to build support and grow their own wealth and resource to sustain it. Maybe this is just my misunderstanding of whole of what is expected. maybe I have not been eloquent enough to satisfy the elite but it does not support my vision of how to help or leadership or elected officials. I do know it is important to keep their hands off free money, it not free squandering campaign, entitlement,pensions,501c3’s,liquor and drugs can not support,build or contain financial stability to properly educate and build new communities to support it self. So When article T.V. Shows and radio station, become secure because they are the voice of the minorities, in disgruntle and void that hear and see this fail to get the attention and become just another arena to express these needs over and over again, we soon see the change in their belief, become efforts to sustain their own needs, and truth becomes abstract.