Conservatism, in and of itself, is certainly no vice. But pointing fingers at Jackson and Sharpton seems sublimely ironic if not hypocritical from men whose political existence is defined by their skin color and whose most extraordinary achievement is being on the wrong side of history. I'm not sure which possibility is worse: that these men do not realize they're being cynically used as beards for conservative racism or, worse, that they don't care as long as it politically elevates them.
There once was a girl named Tawana
who, having missed her curfew and fearing punishment from a
violent step-dad, apparently rolled around in dirt and feces and
alleged that she’d been beaten and raped. The Reverend All
Sharpton, whom many then and now believe to be an opportunist,
rushed to the girl’s defense, widening the schism between blacks
sympathetic to the girl’s claims and whites who assumed, from
the beginning, that the girl was lying. It was a perfect storm
of seeming exploitation as the child seemed to exploit both her
race and gender in an effort to avoid punishment and, finding
herself in a national spotlight, either didn’t know how to
un-ring that bell or possibly liked the attention. Tawana
exploited Reverend Al and Reverend Jesse Jackson, both of whom
had built careers in occasionally extreme, fast-food
gerrymandering of Dr. King’s civil rights campaign. The cynic
saw Tawana exploiting exploiters who’d built careers exploiting
political and social injustice. There is a sunnier and more
heroic perspective on Reverends Jackson and Sharpton that posits
them as political activists with purer motives. I suspect the
truth lies somewhere in between, with the needle pointing
slightly toward altruism. Without drinking the Kool-Aide, I
suspect both Jackson and Sharpton are both men of integrity who
passionately believe in the cause of social justice for all of
us. I think they both got played in the Tawana thing, an
occupational hazard for what they do. While tarnishing Reverend
Jackson’s reputation somewhat, the Tawana Brawley case
catapulted Reverend Al into the national spotlight, and his own
amazing intellect and rhetorical powers did the rest, creating
one of the most articulate and persuasive defenders of human
dignity on the world stage today.
Public attention is an intoxicant. Once drunk with it, it is
difficult to retire again from the spotlight. Since the dawn of
time, I’d imagine, there have been men and women willing to
exploit some advantage of gender or ethnicity to curry political
favor or make a buck. Witness former Georgia Congresswoman
Cynthia McKinney, whose insufferable, ego-driven mania was
defended and even cheered by her largely black constituency even
as McKinney devolved, before our eyes, into chronic narcissism.
Her public appearances made her seem unreasonable and,
ultimately, irrational as McKinney became, increasingly, an
Oprah off the farm whom the media treated with relative kid
gloves because of her race, gender and the wellspring of support
she enjoyed within the black community. reset video
Your browser does not support inline frames or is currently
configured not to display inline frames. Good will McKinney
cashed in when her irrationality and self-absorption jumped the
shark on March 29, 2006, when McKinney was stopped by a Capitol
Police officer as she attempted to stroll around the long lines
waiting for the magnetometer at the U.S. Capitol Building.
McKinney had left her ID in her office, and the officer did not
recognize her—a notion that seemed to astound McKinney, who was
her own biggest fan. When the officer refused to allow her to
pass, McKinney rolled her eyes and attempted to storm past him,
at which point the officer grabbed her arm—an action McKinney
later described as an assault. McKinney then, as she described,
“defended” herself, slapping the officer, who then should have
placed the Congresswoman under arrest. For what I can only
assume are reasons of politics and race, the officer did not
arrest McKinney, but the matter was referred to the District
Attorney and Congressional ethics committee, with McKinney
facing possible criminal charges if she did not apologize for
assaulting the officer.
What followed was a weeks-long media circus with McKinney
sopping up media attention like gravy, defending the
indefensible as "racial profiling." Her utterly ridiculous
campaign to avoid a simple apology revealed a troubling
irrationality and pettiness to her character which, thankfully,
got her booted out of Congress in the next election. Had she not
been a woman, not been black, there’d have been no issue.
Frankly, there’d have been no story. Despite her lame protests
to the contrary, McKinney seemed to relish the attention on her,
blacks rallying to her defense. She became the new, Bergdorf
Goodman Tawana Brawley, backed into a corner by her own
childishness and exploiting the very people she portended to
speak for.
McKinney’s media circus also revealed how ultimately gullible
black America is, as perhaps millions of blacks, across the
country, backed her play at least initially. It is our most
troubling attribute, our willingness to jump to the defense of
anyone black without examining the evidence, without asking
questions. Church ladies, whom McKinney exemplified, rallied to
her defense. McKinney ultimately issued a half-hearted, selfish,
meandering statement which might be considered an apology if you
were really high on something. The cop, whose entire life and
career had now been ruined by the media circus, never pressed
charges and let the whole matter drop.
In the meantime, the desperate and tragic case of two little
boys, Purvis Parker and Quadrevion Henning, who’d gone to play
basketball and never came home, was pushed from the national
headlines by McKinney’s clown act. You see, national media only
allots so much space for “black” news, and McKinney’s pompous
grandstanding was a much sexier lead story than the agony of
waiting in Milwaukee. Representative McKinney could have used
all that attention to talk about the missing boys, about tax
reform or the plight of Georgia’s underserved economic areas.
Instead, she mostly talked about herself. Meanwhile, Milwaukee
police badly mishandled the case and ultimately closed it long,
agonizing days later, when the two boys were found dead in a
storm drain. The official story went forth that they had been
playing and one or both of them fell into a storm drain. But the
circumstances surrounding the boys’ disappearance and death
remain suspicious, with the slow, reluctant actions of the
Milwaukee police going unscrutinized, least of all by the woman
hogging all the attention at the moment. Cynthia McKinney’s
childish, immature exploitation of her constituency, her gender
and her race helped obscure what would, in the alternative, have
been national attention on this still suspicious case of two
dead boys. But the cameras weren’t in Milwaukee. They were in
Washington. On her.
This is the real tragedy of individuals exploiting race and
gender out of self-interest: it makes real efforts toward
equality and social justice that much more difficult. It’s hard
to tell who’s legit and who’s just another woman/black/Latino
out to play us for dopes. Black America, for certain, has become
rightfully more cynical, maturing past our irrational support of
all things black, Much as white Americans may wish to believe
black America supported Barack Obama from the start, truth was
we didn’t get on board until Obama’s campaign appeared to be
viable. Black America was, at least initially, firmly in Hillary
Clinton’s column, at least until Mrs. Clinton’s ill-advised
speech at Coretta Scott King’s funeral. I firmly believe, had
Hillary kept her mouth shut at the funeral, where husband Bill
Clinton was the rock star, she’d be president today. Trying to
follow Bill’s home-run eulogy, Hillary revealed she was not, in
fact, Bill Clinton. That she wasn’t as smart as Bill, who’d have
had the political savvy to know when to fold ‘em. In that
moment, Hillary went from being a lock to being just another
candidate in the eyes of black America. Obama, on the other
hand, had to earn every black vote. We liked him, but we really
didn’t know him or trust him as implicitly as we trusted Bill
Clinton. Obama had no coat tails to ride on, and we were
skeptical of his motives and the viability of his candidacy.
Obama spoke to the mainstream, insisting on not making history
so much as making change. And yes, of course, we ultimately
rallied to him, but in early going, for most of black America,
Hillary Clinton was a foregone conclusion.
Which brings us to the curious case of men like Michael Steele
and Alan Keyes, men whose conservative credentials I don’t
doubt, but who both seem to be cashing in on their skin color as
much as the reverends or Tawana. Steele, elected the first black
chairman of the Republican National Committee, was also the
first African American to serve in a state-wide office as the
Lieutenant Governor of Maryland from 2003 to 2007, and was the
first Republican elected to that office. For weeks now, Steele
has been glibly criticizing the new president and rallying the
GOP’s calorie-starved obstructionist strategy. Were Steele
white, I wouldn’t envy his job. The Republicans simply don’t
have any ideas other than to criticize and obstruct everything
the president does while quietly hoping—hoping—the recession née
depression gets worse or at least hangs on until the fall of
2010. Any economic relief between now and then, any military
success between now and then, spells doom for their party. These
men and women are hoping, quietly, for economic gloom, for more
people to lose their jobs and homes, for more soldiers to lose
their lives, for Iraq to collapse and Afghanistan to explode,
for Iran to nuke us—something, anything, they can campaign on in
2010. Which makes these people truly evil, and Michael Steele is
their man in black face.
I can’t possibly begin to imagine what delusion Mr. Steele is
suffering from in thinking he’d have that job were there not a
black man sitting in the Oval Office. Whether that is true or
not is wholly irrelevant: it looks true. It looks patently
obvious, an undeniable fact. Politics is all about public
perception, perception often overcoming the reality of any given
situation. Whatever the reality of Steele’s elevation, it looks
like they picked him because he was black. Because they were
roundly and appropriately criticized for having so few black
delegates (35) at the Republican National Convention. Because
there’s a black man in the White House. True or not, that
perception handcuffs Steele and renders impotent Steele’s most
important task: increasing diversity in the GOP. The Republicans
aren’t going to attract blacks by kicking the first black
president in the shins while that president deals with
unprecedented threats to the economy and national security of
this nation created on their watch. Putting a black face on that
criticism only exacerbates the gulf between blacks and
Republicans, Steele’s very appointment revealing how woefully
out of touch with reality the Republican Party is.
I would take Steele a lot more seriously had John McCain won the
election, or had the GOP more smartly named Steele after George
W. Bush’s successful reelection. As such, Steele’s elevation
seems dubious and insults my intelligence, even as Steele
himself has lost much of my respect if not for sin but for
certainly the appearance of sin, Mr. Steele’s good now being
evil spoken of. His grinning, teeth-bearing, satisfaction at the
GOP having left “…a goose egg on the president’s desk,” just
made him seem pathetic and irrational. The Republican strategy
is so woefully wrongheaded now, holding their breath and pouting
at a time of national crisis. Steele seeming actually pleased to
be tying the hands of the president who made Steele who he is
today.
And, it may cost him. His political ambition could be capped
here, as the GOP House Nigger, his credibility completely lost
as he seemingly exploits his race, seizing the opportunity only
something as inexplicable as a black presidency might ever
afford him. I can hardly fault anyone for taking advantage of a
tremendous opportunity, and it is likely Mr. Steele believes he
can spin straw into gold within the next year or two and outrun
the obvious and reasonable charges of being the GOP’s hand
puppet. If this is the road to greatness for Michael Steele, it
takes an unpleasant shortcut through a grimy alley, Mr. Steele
emerging from the other end smelling of the feces Tawana Brawley
covered herself in. While he may think of himself as perhaps
better than Jackson or Sharpton, he comes across in the eyes of
black America as much worse. Steele’s complaints about Mr. Obama
seem obviously, childishly political and self-serving, Mr. Steel
willing and eager to exploit his skin color for a grab at the
brass ring.
Dishonorable mention should also go to Roland Burris, a bizarre,
narcissistic little man who has run around repeating, "I am the
junior senator from Illinois," to every microphone he could
find. In the wake of the Rod R. Blagojevich scandal, in which
the Illinois governor apparently attempted to sell the senate
seat vacated by Barack Obama, Burris--who's already had his
elaborate burial shrine built and engraved, and who named his
children Roland and Rolanda--became a controversial figure after
Blagojevich appointed him to the Senate shortly before the
governor was impeached. Embroiled in controversy and stinking of
scandal, Burris nonetheless gleefully accepted the appointment,
rather than risk losing it in a perhaps nobler gesture of
waiting for the smoke to clear. As such, his senate term was
tainted from the very beginning, and the attendant sideshow
carnival tended to derail the president's message on many
occasions. There's no doubt the Burris acceptance and forced
seating were unarguably self-serving, yet another black man
using the new president and his race (Burris is currently the
nation's only African American senator) to further his political
ambitions.
[NYTimes.Com] Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the Senate’s No. 2
Democrat, met privately Tuesday with the state’s junior senator,
Roland W. Burris, to suggest that he resign but was rebuffed.
“He said he would not resign, and that was his conclusion,” Mr.
Durbin said. He said Mr. Burris, who recently acknowledged that
he had tried to raise money for former Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich
before being appointed to fill the seat vacated by President
Obama, also said he had not made up his mind about seeking
election in 2010. Mr. Durbin told him it would be “extremely
difficult for him to be successful in a primary or general
election under the circumstances. It’s now up to Senator Burris
to deal with the facts and challenges before him,” he said.
Mr. Burris, 71, who has denied any wrongdoing, told reporters he
had been advised not to discuss the situation. He left the
afternoon meeting with Mr. Durbin without giving his account of
it. Despite admissions by Mr. Burris that he sought to raise
campaign money for the now-impeached governor and had contacts
with the governor’s brother, Senate Democrats appear resigned at
the moment to his remaining in Congress.
Which brings us to Alan Keyes. Where do I begin to discuss Mr.
Keyes, a man whose made a career out of being The Black Man
White Conservatives Send In When They Themselves Can’t Risk
Being Perceived As Racist. An American conservative political
activist, author, former diplomat and perennial candidate for
public office, Keyes ran for President of the United States in
1996, 2000, and 2008, and was a Republican nominee for the U.S.
Senate in 1988, 1992, and 2004. Keyes served in the U.S. Foreign
Service, was appointed Ambassador to the Economic and Social
Council of the United Nations under President Ronald Reagan, and
served as Assistant Secretary of State for International
Organization Affairs from 1985 to 1987. [Wikipedia]
Keyes, who has lost every election he’s run for, posits himself
as an arch conservative and a critic of an America that sees
blacks as only liberal Democrats. His is a kind of Holy War,
Keyes being a kind of conservative apologist and alternative to
Sharpton and Jackson. He’s always come across, to me, as just as
big an opportunist as either man, whom he ironically criticizes
even while exploiting his own race in much the same way he
accuses them of doing.
An earnest conservative, like Clarence Thomas, earns my respect
a lot more than a political animal like Keyes whose objectives
seem to be underscored by a tragic self-loathing. Over the years
he has come across as increasingly reactionary, perhaps
climaxing with last week’s remarks which have, most certainly,
caused the U.S. Secret Service and FBI to open a case file on
him. Keyes seems to be a black politician who either hates being
black or for whatever reason embraces no black causes in any
meaningful way. And he does this under cover of being an
conservative, as if conservatism and social justice are somehow
mutually exclusive.
Last week, Keyes stopped woefully short of inciting violence
against the president of the United States, whom Keyes described
as a "radical Communist" who must be stopped. Keyes seems to
obviously loathe the president (he moved to Illinois to run a
carpet bagger campaign against Obama in 2004), and came just
short of encouraging the U.S. Armed Forces to not follow their
commander in chief’s orders. Keyes’ rhetoric, which can be
viewed here, all but calls for Obama’s assassination and/or
military coup, Keyes now embracing the reactionary rhetoric of
scary people who’d voted for Gidget and Grandpa. His rhetoric
only seems rational to thumb-sucking children with AK-47’s and
AR-15’s in gun racks mounted on their Ford F-250’s. These are
very scary people Keyes is stirring up, which makes Keyes more
than just laughably pathetic, it makes him dangerous.
This is a tragic display of black hatred so deeply ingrained
that we have a black man spewing hate at another black man while
claiming race has nothing to do with it. The emperor everyone
knows is naked but him. Which isn’t to say every black person
who criticizes the president is self-loathing or reactionary.
But this is sad by any reasonably objective perspective.
And this is the new American growth industry: black people who
will attack the president. The religious and political right are
taking applications now. It is a sure-fire way to be seen, to
make headlines, to become elevated. The conservative opposition,
reeling from Obama’s massive stimulus plan and his massive
budget which hammers the rich in order to give relief to the
poor, is precisely what the GOP feared would happen in an
Obama-Pelosi-run world: a repudiation of the past eight years of
bankrupt Washington values. But, going after the president is
difficult. Making a case for continued tax breaks to the rich,
in the face of economic disaster, is a fairly impossible task.
The GOP’s usual rhetoric, irrationality and lies, just bounce
off the new guy as both tactics are now transparently political
at a time of national crisis. The GOP Borg Collective is,
therefore, in a stirred frenzy trying to find some effective way
to undermine and thwart the president, and they are hungry for
black voices to carry their message.
Men like Keyes and, to a lesser extent, Steele, stand out not
because of innovative thinking or even a wealth of
accomplishment. They stand out because their views tend to be
diametrically opposed to the African American mainstream.
Standing relatively alone, they tend to stand out, playing the
race card in reverse by finding support and acceptance mainly
from white conservatives eager to prove they are not bigots.
Conservatism, in and of itself, is certainly no vice. But
pointing fingers at Jackson and Sharpton seems sublimely ironic
if not hypocritical from men whose political existence is
defined by their skin color and whose most extraordinary
achievement is being on the wrong side of history. I'm not sure
which possibility is worse: that these men do not realize
they're being cynically used as beards for conservative racism
or, worse, that they don't care as long as it politically
elevates them.
Christopher J. Priest
1 March 2009
editor@praisenet.org
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