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Acknowledging the Race Chasm

By David Sirota, Creators Syndicate. Posted May 9, 2008.


The pervasive racism that taints our political discourse will persist until we recognize and reject it.
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When it comes to race, American politics is as polarized as a red and blue election map. On one side are those who try to distract from the issue; on the other side are those who work to sensationalize it. As this campaign season shows, what unifies both is bigotry.

Take the reaction to my recent In These Times magazine article about Barack Obama winning states with either very small or very large black populations, but losing most states in the middle.

Those results, while troubling, aren't surprising. In very white states, racial themes are simply not part of the political dialogue, and a black candidate therefore faces fewer inherent disadvantages. In states with large black populations, race is a major political force, but the African-American vote is big enough to offset a racially motivated white vote. It is in the Race Chasm -- the states whose populations are more than 6 percent and less than 17 percent black -- where race is a political issue but the black vote is too small to counter a racially motivated white vote.

The trend continued in the last few weeks, with Obama losing two states in the Race Chasm (Pennsylvania and Indiana) and winning one outside the Chasm (North Carolina). Nonetheless, the response to this phenomenon by some in the intelligentsia has been willful ignorance.

The Atlantic Monthly's Reihan Salam said the data are not driven by race, but by Hillary Clinton's "waitress-mom sensibility sell[ing] well in these regions." The New America Foundation's Michael Lind said the evidence does not reflect America's historic black-white divide, but instead Germanic and Scandinavian migration patterns (I'm not kidding). This is typical behavior from the Establishment's "serious" thinkers. When confronted with race, they become ostriches and shove their heads in the sand.

The news industry and politicians, on the other hand, are happy to discuss and exploit race, whether by manufacturing controversy (think Jeremiah Wright) or by promoting racists (think MSNBC hiring Pat Buchanan, or Republican senators re-electing Trent Lott to a leadership position). The media and political elites aren't ostriches -- they behave like minstrel show producers, portraying African-Americans as subhuman, alien and unimportant, except for their entertainment value.

MSNBC's Chris Matthews, for example, differentiated between "regular people" and black people. Pundits refer separately to the "working class" and to African-Americans -- as if they are mutually exclusive. Hillary Clinton this week claimed, "Obama's support among working, hardworking Americans, white Americans, is weakening" -- the implication being that non-white Americans are lazy. These terms -- "regular," "working class," "hardworking" -- have become euphemisms for "whites," who are subsequently billed as the only ones who matter.

Think I'm imagining that last part? Then you weren't watching ABC's Nightline last week. The Jeremiah Wright brouhaha may be roiling the black community, correspondent David Wright said, "but the real question now is what do white voters think." That's right -- according to Nightline, painful questions in the black community aren't "real."

Such denigration happens all the time, and you can tell it is rooted in bigotry because the black vote is -- by any mathematical measure -- crucial. Political scientist Tom Schaller notes that if Clinton had won slightly more African-American votes, she might be winning. And black turnout for Democrats could decide general elections in many key swing states. Yet, we are still told "the real question" is only what white voters think.

Some will read this and go on pretending the Race Chasm doesn't exist, while others will keep insisting that the black vote is irrelevant. Both sides will claim they aren't prejudiced. But racism, whether from ostriches or minstrel show producers, is racism -- and it will persist until we recognize it and reject it.

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See more stories tagged with: racism, democracy, election 2008

David Sirota is a nationally syndicated weekly newspaper columnist for Creators Syndicate. He is the New York Times bestselling author of Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government and How We Take It Back (Crown 2006). He is also a senior fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network. His second book, The Uprising, is due in the Spring of 2008.

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The Race Chasm is manufactured to prevent a multi-racial political alliance against big business
Posted by: yellow on May 9, 2008 10:32 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Divide and rule is a very old tactic. In the US it is politically effective for big capital to divide the working poor and middle classes along racial lines in order to prevent a social democratic political alliance from coming into existance that will threaten the enormous profits of corporate America. The agenda of a multi-racial political alliance demanding social justice would definately reshape US political discourse and policies in virtually all areas. This is greatly feared by big business.

In America's history progressive political figures who threatened to bridge the racial divide in America in seeking change were assassinated. MLK was one very recent example. FDR sacrificed racial justice on the alter of economic reform, relief and recovery. We now need an agenda that achieves both racial and social justice. Obama is a good start. But there is much left to be done. The current political discourse must be pushed much further left to making acceptable a radical neo-Keynesian program of income and wealth redistribution, steeply progressive taxation, massive public investment, trade unionism, full employment and the funding of national, single payer programs like universal health care. We are still a long way from that place in our history.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Meh. They'll get over their 90% voting bloc...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 9, 2008 12:46 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In very white states, racial themes are simply not part of the political dialogue, and a black candidate therefore faces fewer inherent disadvantages.

...given time. "Racial issues"--by rights--should not be a part of political dialogue, and as soon as we recognize everyone as equals, the sooner we can put asshats and blowhards who make their living by exploiting/profiteering from the suffering of others out of business for lack of interest.

There is no such thing as "race", save in the minds of the ignorant, or those looking to turn a penny, i.e., Al Crapton and gang.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» If there is no such thing as "race," Posted by: xconservative
» You're confusing people... Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: You're confusing people... Posted by: no1kstate
» The REAL race baiters Posted by: Kym525
» Meh. The smallest minority is one. Posted by: ABetterFuture
» What a ditzy statement. Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: What a ditzy statement. Posted by: no1kstate
» The obsession with Sharpton Posted by: Kym525
» Nah. You seem hung up on preaching. Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: What a ditzy statement. Posted by: Lauren
» RE: What a ditzy statement. Posted by: desidid
» RE: The REAL race baiters Posted by: desidid
» My heavens... Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: My heavens... Posted by: no1kstate
» You pick your messiah... Posted by: ABetterFuture
Racism
Posted by: no1kstate on May 9, 2008 2:44 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Sharptons and Jackson may "sensationalize" an issue to the extent that they bring media coverage, but the issue they decry are real.

By every conceivable measure, anti-black racism continues to hold African Americans back. This is probably true for other ethnicities as well as the overall problem isn't just anti-black racism but white supremacy.

If not for this racism/white supremacy, "hard-working Americans, white Americans" would see they have much more to gain should true social and economic justice be obtained than they have to lose from rejecting the status-quo. They would realize that America's militarism hurts them much, much more than it helps. The "America" they love so much that Obama, if not the other two candidates, has to wear a flag-pin to get their vote "is just not that into them" . . . except when it needs labor and soldiers.

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The Media and Pundits made this about Race..!
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on May 9, 2008 3:23 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Media and Pundits have made this more about Race than the American people have David..

I just hope Obama isn't another Ron Brown which is still an open question for me..

I'm not voting for anybody as things are shaping up I am voting AGAINST all and any Republican fascist lying thieving scum bag out there the lesser of two evils is the best we can do..

Since Edwards dropped out..

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Chasm is an exaggeration I think
Posted by: foreverhope on May 9, 2008 3:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gap is more like it. Chasm would indicate a nearly insurmountable space, I don't think that is what we have in this country. Racism is DEFINATELY being RECOGNIZED as it is just about the only card Hillary has had to play and the media is of course exploiting that. She is claiming the support of "hard working white voters", that isn't true. The white voters supporting Hillary are elderly and mostely women. Barack's popularity among younger white voters has been growing as more people get to know him.

It is a gap, Hillary has taken advantage of that as a pure marketing ploy. Because of that is might FEEL like a chasm, but I don't believe it is as bad as that. Certainly having the discussion can only make things better. Without intending to do it she has really done all of us an enormous favor by more or less FORCING the discussion on us with the media's help. We are fortunate to have Barack Obama, an articulate bi-racial and brilliant candidate unafraid to meet and frame such a difficult and complicated discussion.

Racism was certainly a chasm when I was a child growing up in the 50's, entirely segragated, and in the 60's watching black people on tv news reports as they were mowed down with water hoses during the civil rights movement.

With the guidance, courage and brilliance of Martin Luther King Jr., John and Bobby Kennedy and others, over the past several decades, the chasm has closed to a gap and many bridges have slowly but methodically been built. Though segragation is thankfully a thing of the past, new challenges have been created that must be met, including an honest discussion about race that is only beginning now. It will take some time, but it is exciting to finally be having it. It is exciting to have a candidate that can thoughtfully articulate it. I believe with Barack Obama's leadership we will actually see the final bridge built, the gap closed once and for all. With the election of Barack Obama as president of the United States, as I am sure he will be, racism will symbolically be denounced and rejected in this country. I can't believe it is happening in my life-time, and so unexpectedly, I am delighted, it is THRILLING!

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There is only one "race" the Human Race..
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on May 11, 2008 11:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We know now do to genetics that we are 99.6% identical to chimpanzees..!

There is only a .4% difference between Chimpanzees and so called Human Beings..

What this means scientifically is that the difference between any different human in appearance is genetically and scientifically Immeasurable..

There is only One Race The Human Race..like it or not for better or worse and we still slaughter each other and killed off our own kind even babies..our young

So you keep talking about "race" whatever "race" it is your talking about, but there is only One Race, The Human Race and for us the outlook ain't so good..!

Simple as that...

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