05-02-2008, 7:55 AM
Jminta
Joined on 11-03-2005
Posts 1,162
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Not Battling Racism
Publication:New York Sun;
Date:Apr 24, 2008;
Section:Editorial & Opinion;
Page Number:8
Not Battling Racism
By J O H N M c W H O RT E R
There
are going to be books about this Democratic campaign. Presumably, a few
will address a staple question pundits are to attend to these days:
“the role of race in the campaign.” What people really mean by
that usually is the role of racism: the thinking person is supposed to
be dutifully watching for evidence that white people are “not ready”
for a black president, or that criticisms from Mr. Obama’s opposition
are rooted in racism. What seems to almost frustrate some is
that the answer to the question as to what role racism has played in
this campaign is: none whatsoever. Already many are wondering
whether Mr. Obama’s inability to “close the deal,” as Mrs. Clinton has
put it, with less educated whites indicates that they don’t like black
people. To conclude that racism is the issue here is, however,
reflexive and even lazy. What we are seeing is that to whites
of this stratum, there is nothing especially magic about Mr. Obama.
That is, a considerable amount of Mr. Obama’s appeal is based on his
charisma, his air of “freshness,” and so on. And yes, a considerable
part of that is his color. I have written this before and will write it
again: many white voters are stimulated by the idea of voting for a
black candidate for president, as a gesture toward getting past
America’s racist past. People isolating that sentence as
evidence that I oppose Mr. Obama’s candidacy will be neglecting
countless columns I have written supporting him in this space.
Nevertheless, anyone who claims that he would be where he is now if he
were white is exerting the same kind of mental gymnastics as someone
who claims “I don’t see race.” Mr. Obama’s color gave a boost to an
interesting and qualified candidate and, well, here we are. But
that boost, it would seem, came mostly from educated, collegetown
sorts. To this crowd, attendance to the fact that racism still exists,
policing themselves for remnants of it, and taking especial delight in
diversity are more important than to most blue-collar, small-town
whites. That is, opposition to racism as a high priority is, as the
blog has it, “Stuff White People Like,” the idea being white people of a certain demographic. This
does not mean that the whites in Pennsylvania don’t like black people,
are “not ready” for a black president, or are evidence of racism
“lurking beneath the surface of polite discussion.” It simply means
that these people are evaluating Mr. Obama in a neutral way, and find
Ms. Clinton more experienced, better prepared to steward a nation at
war, and perhaps even having paid her dues in a way that Mr. Obama has
not. To insist that this is about racism is logically
unnecessary, and even musing that racism might “play some part” is
idle. How could we ever know, and more importantly, what would be the
benefit of finding out, when we have so much else on our plates? After
all, if racism were the issue here, it would not, as many would have
it, be yet another indication from the campaign that bigotry still
rules in America. It would be the very first indication. Bill
Clinton, for example, is correct this week in dismissing the idea that
his comparison of Mr. Obama’s South Carolina win to Jesse Jackson’s was
racist. At that time, no one could have predicted how well Mr. Obama
was going to do with white voters in state after state, such that Mr.
Clinton’s putting it on the table that Obamamania would stay mainly a
black thing was reasonable. An inaccurate prediction, as it turned out,
but at that time, eminently reasonable. Mrs. Clinton’s
observation that Lyndon Johnson got the Civil Rights Act passed was
correct, despite what she and all of us know about the path breaking
legacy of Martin Luther King. Geraldine Ferraro’s statement of the
painfully obvious fact that Mr. Obama’s color has helped him rise to
prominence was no more racist than if she had said the sky was blue. What
Pennsylvania, and Ohio, have shown is that when Mr. Obama runs against
John McCain, preacherly cadences and uplifting rhetoric about unity
will not sway white voters for whom “the black thing” is not as high on
their list as it is for Blue America sorts. What will be important is
whether what Mr. Obama would do in office would be more beneficial than
what Senator Mc-Cain would do, period. Given what a masterful
speech writer Mr. Obama proved himself to be a month ago, it will be
interesting to see how he will reach the kinds of voters he has so far
failed to ignite. In doing so, however, he will not be battling racism.
He will be simply making a case for himself as a person. That
excites me, given that this would have been impossible of a black
candidate as recently as 20 years ago. Sniffing around for racism, in
this case, is refusing to admit when a battle has been won. Mr. McWhorter is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed, second it is violently opposed, and third, it is accepted as self-evident." Arthur Schopenhauer, Philosopher (1788-1860)
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