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Election 2008

Nader Plays the Race Card

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted June 30, 2008.


Nader holds Obama to a different standard than he holds McCain or any other white mainstream politician; a standard based solely on his color.
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One presidential candidate has brashly played the race card. It wasn't presumptive Republican presidential candidate John McCain or his rival Barack Obama. Both have tipped lightly around race in the campaign. But Ralph Nader didn't have any qualms about bring race into the campaign. The perennial political gadfly accused Obama of saying and doing nothing to threaten the white power structure. If Nader had stopped there he might have opened up a reasoned debate on whether Obama panders to corporate interests in his stance on high gas prices, home foreclosures, the lack of affordable heath care, the Iraq war wind-down, corporate and environmental regulations, and labor protections. This might have prompted some to ask, does Obama rise to the standard of a politician who has actually sold his political soul to corporations and the Beltway establishment?

But Nader didn't stop at criticizing Obama for being a Beltway insider. He asked, rhetorically, "Is it because he wants to talk white?" as an explanation of why Obama supposedly doesn't take hard stances on these issues. He then tossed in a reference to Jesse Jackson as an example of someone who Obama allegedly doesn't want to sound like because he obviously sounds black. He didn't tell exactly how he thinks an African American is supposed to talk too avoid sounding white.

The one thing Nader got right is that Obama doesn't sound like Jackson. But this has absolutely nothing to do with him talking white. It has everything to do with him wanting to win. The instant that Obama declared his candidacy the buzz question in the press and among much of the public was whether an African American could be a viable candidate for the presidency. This was quickly followed with the question of whether whites would vote for an African-American candidate for the highest office. From the first start of Obama's campaign the overwhelming majority of whites said they do not vote for candidates based on their color but based on their competence, ability and qualifications. The polls show that whites continue to say that Obama's color is of no concern.

For his part, Obama early understood the potential minefield that race poses to his chances, and that even the slightest perception that there is a racial tilt in his campaign would render his campaign DOA. He has said and done everything possible to sell himself and his campaign as race neutral and all inclusive. He's stuck tight to the script in which he talks almost exclusively about the broad based issues of the Iraq war and the economy.

That script is too bland and saccharine to have much meaning to Nader. He's spent decades and three presidential campaigns blasting political cronyism, two party dominance, corporate greed and malfeasance, war mongering and profiteering. He plainly regards Obama as a corporate candidate who has no antidote to those ills. Nader could have easily made that point without racially knocking Obama. But he did knock him, and the only real explanation is that Nader holds Obama to a totally different standard than he holds McCain or any other white mainstream politician; a standard that's based solely on his color. Put bluntly, because he's black he must be by definition in Nader's eyes an inherent rebel or at the very least actively challenge the white corporate and political establishment. But that assumes that blacks are instinctive rebels because of their color. Earth to Nader on this one; the likes of blacks from Clarence Thomas to Colin Powell should have long since dispelled that myth. Yet, to even think that blacks should be open racial crusaders is crass, cynical, and even borderline racist.

The only standard that Obama can and should be held to is the one that governs mainstream politicians. Obama's a centrist Democrat, a consummate party loyalist and Capital Hill insider. Any change he could effect could come only from working within the tight and narrowly prescribed confines of Washington politics. Race has little to do with that. And even if that wasn't the case, Obama likely still wouldn't be on the frontline of the racial battleground.

He belongs to the younger, post-civil rights generation. That generation did not experience the terror of snarling police dogs, fire hoses, racist sheriff's batons, and Jim Crow segregation. They did not fight prolonged battles for equality and economic justice in the streets as those of Jackson's generation did. The racial battleground for Obama's generation has been in the courtroom, corporate suites, and university boardrooms. He fought those battles as a student at Harvard University, as a poverty organizer and civil rights attorney.

Obama blew off Nader's racial dig at him as a ploy to get attention by an aging political crusader whose political star has since long dimmed. Nader certainly wouldn't have gotten that attention if he had just rapped Obama for his alleged corporate and insider political sins. But then again that wouldn't have been Ralph.

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See more stories tagged with: election 2008, race, nader, obama

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His forthcoming book is The Ethnic Presidency: How Race Decides the Race to the White House (Middle Passage Press, February 2008).

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The point he is making...
Posted by: Clockwise Cat on Jun 30, 2008 4:38 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...is not so much a racial one as a progressive one.

Obama is a Democrat. Democrats are held to be more "progressive" than Republicans. Of course, these days Dems more or less mimic Republicans. And Obama is in the end is not THAT distinguishable from a Republican.

Obama is a pro-corporate establishment politician. He will not challenge the power elite, but rather coddle them. And the power elite happen to be mostly white men.

While it's a salient point that a black person can be whatever political stripe he or she chooses, the fact of the matter is, there is still rampant institutionalized racism in our country. That a black politician can ignore this is a bitter irony, indeed. NO ONE should ignore it, granted, and I truly despise our relentless emphasis on race - and yet, I can't help but be disturbed by a black politician not standing up to the white power structure.

Ralph Nader has done more good for this country than any US president, and it is very sad that people would denigrate him. He is not playing the race card so much as forcing Obama to "progressive-ize" regarding social ills.

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» RE: The point he is making... Posted by: Redviper
Nader the spoiler
Posted by: RobNLA on Jun 30, 2008 5:00 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nader ignores the hypocracy that is the McCain campaign and instead attacks Obama.

Clearly Nader is just attempting to be the spoiler candidate like he was in 2000. The US and the world has him to thank (in part) for helping Bush Jr. getting elected back then, and for the resulting economic and foreign policy quagmires we now face.

This time around Nader really is irrelevant. Here he is again splitting hairs against Obama, while Bush shreds our constitution in the name of war profits and while McCain promises even more of the same.

What Nader fails to accept is that the country has really had enough of Bush. That level of frustration and the intense desire for better leadership drowns out anything Nader might say on the sidelines.

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» RE: Nader the spoiler Posted by: bbfmail
» RE: Nader the spoiler Posted by: fanny666
Obama has played the "race card" too
Posted by: YBFREE.com on Jun 30, 2008 7:08 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama has clearly played the "race card" as well. He is clearly using his "race" to position himself as an agent of change. Powell and Rice NEVER did this, both were very open with his/her political alliances to the old guard.

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Earl is Wrong
Posted by: daniels on Jul 1, 2008 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Earl:

Ninety-seven percent of the Fortune 500 CEOs are white.

Obama is running away from the people and into the hands of the Fortune 500.

He's sucking up to the white corporate power structure.

How can you deny that?

You can't.

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» While interesting... Posted by: jonnymil
» RE: While interesting... Posted by: Scientz
» But... Posted by: jonnymil
Ofari said:
Posted by: jonnymil on Jul 1, 2008 9:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"He belongs to the younger, post-civil rights generation. That generation did not experience the terror of snarling police dogs, fire hoses, racist sheriff's batons, and Jim Crow segregation. They did not fight prolonged battles for equality and economic justice in the streets as those of Jackson's generation did."

Which is exactly why I would like to see Obama pick a front-line Civil Rights hero to join the ticket, like Jesse Jackson, Julian Bond or John L. Lewis, Gloria Steinem or Bernice Johnson-Reagon. Even SC Rep Jim Cliburn would make a statement.

The accepted theory is that people don't vote for or against Vice President, so whomever he picks will not likely hurt--or help him too much. This is a chance to make a bold progressive statement. I am also persuaded (like some Alternet columnists) that he cannot lose and is in striking distance of a landslide. If that looks more and more realistic, then a stunning and strong pick to state that we WILL improve racial relations in this country would cement and improve his message of hope.

That, anyway, is my hope.

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Let's not forget Condi Rice
Posted by: orionsan on Jul 2, 2008 10:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to add to your list of Clarence Thomas to Colin Powell - non-radical non-elected blacks in the government.

Which is the difference this article is missing.

Obama is going to enjoy many a vote simply because he is black, and there's nothing wrong with that.

What Nader is suggesting, is that Obama should pay attention to the needs of a large part of that constituency and not take it for granted, and there's nothing wrong with that.

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Nader the Spoiler
Posted by: Chris Herz on Jul 2, 2008 10:57 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read in their entirety Nader's supposedly racist comments. And in a way I suppose he IS guilty of stereotyping.

Mr Nader obviously shared my dismay to find that no sooner than nominated Mr Obama started tacking to the corporatist/racist/fascist line.

Mr Obama denounced his pastor and friend of years, a man who like an earlier Jeremiah was guilty only of truth-telling. He criticized Black men for the destruction of family life and social cohesion actually caused by our national structural racism and economic deprivation. He wants more death penalty and bigger prisons. He favors the out-sourcing of employment. He wants more intervention in South America and may well favor attacking Iran. He is equivocal on the war, useless government snooping, etc.

My work as a financial reporter leads me to believe he and the other leaders of his party will work after their election to gut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid in favor of increased war spending.

As a person of Jewish heritage I should know how easy it was for the Germans to find Jews who would serve as ghetto police or in the Judenrat. Why should Nader and I be surprised at the facility with which a contemporary Black American politician abandons the majority of his own abused and devastated people?

In this sense I too am guilty of the same things as Nader. Does that make me equally racist with the Republican Dixiecrats?

I feel it my civic duty to vote for either Ralph Nader or Cynthia McKinney with every hope that I too can become a spoiler.

Chris Herz
vheadlinevenezuelanews.blogspot.com
cdherz44@yahoo.com

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Nader's bias is less racial and more about Obama's claim he is progressive
Posted by: Earthian on Jul 4, 2008 9:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama claims too be a progressive. For example, in February he said "I am a strong progressive".

Here is the link:

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0802/10/cnr.05.html

By saying Obama talks "white" it is Nader's code for Obama sucking up to the largely white, corporate, militarist establishment, in opposition to Obama's claim to be a "strong progressive."

And how else is Nader going to get attention from a corporate media biased against true progressives?

For progressives to get media attention, they must engage in outrageous stunts. I hope Nader keeps getting attention somehow, and I hope McKinney and the Green Party do too.

To even imply Nader is racist is absurd. Nader is attempting to goad Obama to appeal to his base, a strategy that has won for Republicans for a long time. What is Obama's base? Progressives of many races, ages and walks of life.

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Nader playing the race card?
Posted by: Inti on Jul 4, 2008 3:42 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think so. First of all Nader is not running on a race platform like Obama is. Nader has never used his race as an tool to make good policies for the US. In fact, he cares about all people in this country and this is clearly seen in his denouncement of the white corporate power structure that is highly responsible for the terrible situation most black people are living in. The fact that Obama is pandering to this structure is already a sign that Obama is not the change this country needs. He is just another corporate democrat. Also, since Obama is going to be getting votes from blacks because he is black, then he knows very well what the expectations are from the black community. The problem is as one black leader stated, "Obama is a vacuous opportunist". He is riding on white guilt to get votes from whites and from blacks because he is black. Just look at Obama's advisors. They are from the Chicago School, i.e., don't expect anything to change. Its time people realized that Nader is right and knows and cares about the problems of this country. His CV makes him one of the greatest American citizens.

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Man From Atlan
Posted by: writerman on Jul 5, 2008 1:39 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, Nader used the taboo word "White". Blame the Clinton campaign for using a hundred different ways to say "Black", referring to Obama and his supposed unelectability amongst "White" voters. Blame the Clinton advisors who've joined the Obama team.
But don't blame Nader, whose only crime is that he's perhaps abrasive, but still more honest than we deserve or are capable of understanding.
I'm not black, but I am progressive. If Obama misses the point that people actually believe he's a progressive, he'll probably lose the election.

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wormfarmer
Posted by: wormfarmer on Jul 5, 2008 7:12 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama is near pandering. The only way to avoid living in the corpocracy is to vote for someone that rails against that control. Nader has ALWAYS pursued that end for the benefit of the constitution, and all of the people in this country. I'm not proud to be american, I'm shocked by how this country has ignored the transformation to ignorance. Dwight Eisenhower tried to warn us, control of this country is no longer the peoples', and if we don't vote our conscience now, when will we? We as a people, should display a society that believes in and promotes fairness and justice in this country as an example for other governments to emulate. This is America's responsibility.
Beware the military / industrial / corporate complex. Vote Nader.

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Democrat operative at work
Posted by: wobblie on Jul 8, 2008 7:02 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
nader is calling it like it is.

isn't obama playing the race when he lashes out at irresponsible fathers but barely mention institutional structure that make these things possible?

NADER O8

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if he said, "speaking to traditionally WHITE controlling populations of MONEY & POWER"...
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Jul 8, 2008 8:35 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
would that be different?

nope. it wouldn't... unfortunately he used sloppy terminology... probably because Americans are too stupid to follow what he's saying.

They've stolen your ability to reason & articulate or even LISTEN... & the problem is the person showing you that the TWO PARTY negotiated platforms are bullshit?

while you're busy arguing if the bone they're throwing you (healthcare they should have wrested from the hands of profiteers decades ago!)) is 'possible'... or if tasers tickle...


Money & Power are steadily eroding your ability to even LISTEN TO A PROTESTER WHO IS USING MEDIA TO DEMONSTRATE THAT PLATFORMS ARE STILL FAR FROM WHERE YOU NEED THEM TO BE...

what happened to Dean? Kucinich? Kennedy?

Obama is sucking up to traditionally European-heritaged populations of money & power... whaddya want him to do? show up in a dashiki & say he's gonna tear down their towers of power & corruption?

... duh.

but ask yourselves: if you compare THREE PLATFORMS from Obama, Nader & McCain... why is it that ONLY ONE HAS REFORMS YOU'LL NEVER BE ALLOWED TO HAVE??

I'm so tired of dumbasses snivelling about issues that aren't actually issues while they miss the freaking point of elections:

ELECTIONS ARE NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN THE PEOPLE & MONIED POWER... politicians are supposed to REPRESENT US AGAINST POWERFUL CORRUPTION.

if WE AREN'T AT THE NEGOTIATING TABLE, don't think politicians are necessarily motivated to NEGOTIATE ON OUR BEHALF WHILE THEY APPLY FOR PERMISSION TO GOVERN FROM MONEY, MEDIA & POWER.

wake the hell up, People... you're dropping the ball if you think NADER is a problem.

Nader is showing you that you're NOT AT THE NEGOTIATING TABLE & that YOU GOTTA STOP BEING SNIVELLINGLY GRATEFUL FOR TABLE SCRAPS.

Basel II comes knocking: "IMF finally knocks on Uncle Sam's door" | TheAge - Australia

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BlueBerry Pick'n
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If Nader was black
Posted by: orionsan on Jul 9, 2008 7:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
like Jesse Jackon is, would he have been allowed to say he wanted to "cut his n-ts off for talking down to black people" I wonder?

Oh, no wait, we can't even talk about these things. Or FISA, pay no attention to what's happening IRL. Go back to your second life and pretend reality doesn't exist.

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Earl: Worry About Your Own Political Party
Posted by: left_libertarian on Jul 10, 2008 5:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Earl, your DemocRATS are a bunch of spineless fools who have given Bush and Cheney a blank check to wage war and trample our liberties.

Go fix your party.

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Nader is Fifth Columnist for Corporate America
Posted by: john2007 on Jul 12, 2008 8:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've grown old watching and worshiping Ralph Nader, but that changed when he torpedoed Al Gore in 2000 by claiming there was no difference between Gore and Bush. Now he's at it again; making the same claim that the major candidates are beholden to corporate America while he is the only one who is really for the little guy. This is a half-truth that has the dangerous potential of a full fledged racist lie.

While I am absolutely certain that Nader is not a racist, his analysis and rhetoric might provide the spur needed by working class Democrats who are looking for a justification not to vote for a Black. If this happens, and McCain wins, Ralph will have delivered us all on a platter, again.

Who would have thought that America's most famous consumer advocate would turn into a fifth columnists for Corporate America?

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Max Beach
Posted by: maxbeach on Jul 14, 2008 2:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-"The one thing Nader got right is that Obama doesn't sound like Jackson. But this has absolutely nothing to do with him talking white."-

If I may politely refer the author to Jesse Jackson's recent comments about Obama talking down to black people.

-"Nader holds Obama to a different standard than he holds McCain or any other white mainstream politician; a standard based solely on his color. "-

Again, I urge the author to fact check, seek out and review any and all of Ralph Nader's statements about John McCain before saying Nader holds him to a different standard.

Come on Earl do your homework.

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So what Earl is saying....
Posted by: clintonius on Jul 16, 2008 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....is that Nader is basically correct, but should have used more tact?

Obama voted in favor of gutting the 4th Amendment. He called it a compromise...it was in fact a total an absolute capitulation to the Bush administration. Obama is getting closer to the ring and looking more and more like Golem every day.

NADER 2008

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It's all Nader's fault
Posted by: boing007 on Jul 24, 2008 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
RobNLA
Clearly Nader is just attempting to be the spoiler candidate like he was in 2000. The US and the world has him to thank (in part) for helping Bush Jr. getting elected back then, and for the resulting economic and foreign policy quagmires we now face.

Blame everything on Nader. Phooey! Blame yourselves.

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