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May 19, 2010

How the First Black President’s Approach to Race Is Transforming What It Means to Be White | News & Politics | AlterNet



 

Very interesting article that I think helps explain the rampant Tea Partyism.

How the First Black President’s Approach to Race Is Transforming What It Means to Be White | News & Politics | AlterNet

By displaying all these tropes of traditional whiteness, Obama’s candidacy disrupted the very idea of whiteness. Suddenly whiteness was no longer about educational achievement, family stability or the command of spoken English. One might argue that the folksy interventions of Sarah Palin were a desperate attempt to reclaim and redefine whiteness as a gun-toting ordinariness that eschews traditional and elite markers of achievement.

Obama’s whiteness in this sense is frightening and strange for those invested in believing that racial categories are stable, meaningful and essential. Those who yearn for a postracial America hoped Obama had transcended blackness, but the real threat he poses to the American racial order is that he disrupts whiteness, because whiteness has been the identity that defines citizenship, access to privilege and the power to define national history.

In 1998 Toni Morrison wrote that Bill Clinton was the first “black president” because he “displays almost every trope of blackness: single-parent household, born poor, working-class, saxophone-playing, McDonald’s-and-junk-food-loving boy from Arkansas.” Ten years later the man who truly became America’s first black president displayed few of these tropes. Instead he was a scholarly, worldly, health food-eating man from Hawaii. In this sense, Obama was the white candidate in 2008, and a substantial portion of white voters preferred Obama’s version of whiteness to that of McCain and Palin.

Which brings us back to Obama’s Census choice. Despite his legitimate claims on whiteness, he chose to call himself black. As historian Nell Painter documents in her new book The History of White People, white identity was a heavily policed and protected border for most of American history. A person born to an African parent and a white parent could be legally enslaved in America until 1865. From 1877 until 1965 that person would have been subject to segregation in public accommodations, schools, housing and employment. In 1896 the Supreme Court established the doctrine of separate but equal in the case of Homer Plessy, a New Orleans Creole of color whose ancestry was only a small fraction African. President Obama’s Census self-identification was a moment of solidarity with these black people and a recognition that the legal and historical realities of race are definitive, that he would have been subject to all the same legal restrictions had he been born at another time. So in April, Obama did as he has done repeatedly in his adult life: he embraced blackness, with all its disprivilege, tumultuous history and disquieting symbolism. He did not deny his white parentage, but he acknowledged that in America, for those who also have African heritage, having a white parent has never meant becoming white.

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March 20, 2010

Healthcare Reform: Thoughts on the Tea Party and Tavis Smiley from @profblmkelley and @harrislacewell



 

@profblmkelley: Tea people are acting like healthcare is for black people only. Tavis is acting like health care excludes black people. They all hate Obama.

@profblmkelley: These slurs highlight the larger sentiment of why they oppose healthcare. They think that “the other” will benefit.

@harrislacewell: Yep @profblmkelley It’s an indication of American individualism becoming selfish tribalism. But interestingly so is the Smiley mess.

————–

@MotherJones: TeaParty Heckle Dems w Racist, Homophobic Slurs http://bit.ly/ar7yS1

“A lot of us have been saying for a long time that much of this is not about health care at all. And I think that a lot of people out there today demonstrated this,” Clyburn said at the Capitol Vistors Center after the speech, where protesters continued to shout “vote no” at the passing members of Congress. Rather, he explained, the protesters’ opposition was in reaction “to extend a basic fundamental right to people who are less powerful.”

When asked whether he felt apprehensive as a result of the racist attacks, Clyburn replied: “As I said to one heckler, I’m the hardest person in the world to intimidate.”

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December 5, 2009

Articles I’m reading about Afghanistan



 

Editor’s note: Fareed Zakaria is an author and foreign affairs analyst who hosts “Fareed Zakaria GPS” on CNN on Sundays at 1 and 5 p.m. ET

New York (CNN) — When President Obama announced plans Tuesday to send 30,000 more U.S. troops to Afghanistan, it appeared to be a major escalation of the war in that country. But, foreign affairs analyst Fareed Zakaria says that the United States may in fact be “scaling down” the goals of the military operation.

In an interview with CNN, Zakaria gave the new plan a good chance of succeeding in achieving its more limited objectives. But he said Obama’s idea of setting a target date for starting to draw down U.S. troops was a strategic mistake — though he suggested the president may have needed to do so for political reasons.

Zakaria, author and host of CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria: GPS,” spoke to CNN Wednesday.

CNN: The president outlined an intensive but short-term boost of the military resources in Afghanistan. He didn’t call it a surge but is this effectively the same as the Iraq surge?

Fareed Zakaria: Actually I think this is a different surge than the Iraq surge. And not enough people have noticed that — because the president did increase the number of troops and in fact, in many ways the number of troops that he has increased in percentage terms is much larger than the Iraq surge.

The Iraq surge added … something in the range of a 15 percent increase. Obama is effectively doubling the number of troops in Afghanistan, if you consider he’d already sent in about 17,000 extra.

But unlike in Iraq, I think that what Obama is trying to do is to scale back the objective. The objective is far more clearly defined as dismantling and disrupting al Qaeda, which means creating conditions on the ground which make it more difficult for al Qaeda and its allies to create bases, to create strongholds or to topple the Afghan government.

The major population centers of Afghanistan will be protected. They’ll work to train Afghan forces, buy/rent any tribal militias you can, but not get into the broader nation-building aspects that were very much part of the Iraq strategy.

So in a way, while this is a surge, it is not the kind of big counterinsurgency doctrine with its very expansive governance and development components that the Iraq surge entailed. On the surface, it looks like a scaling up. In fact, in many ways, this is a scaling down of objectives in Afghanistan.

CNN: So it is a rejection of the strategy that Gen. McChrystal was pushing for?

Zakaria: I think it is a refinement of it, or a modification of it. I think it is an attempt to recognize that in Afghanistan, you could not do classic counterinsurgency, because the country’s too big, too spread out, the geography’s punishing. So in that context, real counterinsurgency would require hundreds of thousands of troops.

I asked the president — the day he gave the speech, he talked to a few of us at lunch … I put this exact question to him. He said, the way I would put it is that we’ve drawn on the wisdom of the counterinsurgency doctrine and adapted it to Afghanistan, recognizing that it cannot be completely or fully implemented in Afghanistan. …

He did not talk very much about the issues like the eradication of drugs, development, female education that have tended to be part and parcel of this broader conception of the mission in Afghanistan.

So yes, to the extent that the counterinsurgency strategy had a very expansive mission that was non-military, this one seems a little bit more targeted, more focused and comes closer to being really more counterterrorism rather than counterinsurgency.

CNN: Do you think it will work?

Zakaria: I think there’s a very good chance that militarily it will put the Taliban on the defensive. It will disrupt them. It will allow us to secure population centers.

There is a longer-term question though: What can you really achieve in Afghanistan? Afghanistan is one of the worst countries in the world — very decentralized, very tribal in nature and I think it is going to be a place that is going to be troubled. It is going to have elements of instability and insurgency, corruption, drug production, for a long time.

I hope the Obama administration recognizes that if the goal in Afghanistan is to cure all those troubles, we’re going to be there forever. So I think a surge like this can work in the tactical sense of giving us an upper hand, of putting the Taliban on the defense. But ultimately it’s not going to turn Afghanistan into France.

CNN: What do you think the impact of the new strategy will be on Pakistan?

Zakaria: That’s the crucial question in a sense. I was struck by how, if you were to look at this from Mars, at what is happening on the ground, you would notice that all of al Qaeda is in Pakistan, the entire leadership of the Afghan Taliban who are directing the insurgency are in Pakistan. They are called the Quetta shura. Shura means council. Quetta is a city in Pakistan, in fact some of them are now apparently in Karachi.

So you look at the situation and say why are we adding troops in Afghanistan when the problem is in Pakistan? …The president framed the issue of Pakistan in a way that suggested that there was a growing partnership between Pakistan and the United States. I hope that’s true. It’s alas been true in the past that Pakistan’s basic objective has not been to strengthen the Karzai government but in fact to weaken it because they view the Karzai government as pro-Indian.

The real weak spot in America’s strategy … remains that we do not have much control over what Pakistan will do, and Pakistan’s cooperation is crucial to making this work. Because otherwise the terrorists have a safe haven, they have support, they have funds, they have arms and with all that, it becomes essentially impossible to do much more than play a game of whack-a-mole — you hit them in Afghanistan and they retreat back to Pakistan.

CNN: Do you think the president was justified in raising the specter of nuclear disaster in connection with terrorism and Pakistan?

Zakaria: I used to believe that the Pakistani nuclear weapons were secure and the Pakistani army was strong enough to maintain control over them, but I have seen recent reports, including one from Bruce Riedel who is advising the president on this which cast doubt on the security of nuclear command and control, the security of the weapons themselves.

So yes, reluctantly I would have to say the president was right to raise the specter of some possible collapse of parts of the Pakistani state which could put the nuclear weapons in the wrong hands. I think it’s remote, but … you want to do what you can to minimize the chances of a remote but very bad outcome.

CNN: In your meeting with the president, did you get a sense of what toll this decision-making process is taking on him?

Zakaria: No, the president is amazingly calm, amazingly collected. He’s a very cool character. He was deliberate, rational, he never got ruffled. We asked some tough questions. That is his style. … We talked about the political costs and he was very clear about that. He said, I understand that this is not popular, I understand acutely this issue because it is least popular in my own party. But I can’t make decisions like that.

He said if I made decisions on the basis of the polls, we might not have a banking system today, meaning he would have not come to the aid of the banks and they would have collapsed. We might not have had General Motors today.

In a short period, he’s actually had to go through a lot of these trials-by-fire and I think he sees this as one of them.

CNN: Do you think it was a good idea to set a timetable?

Zakaria: No, I think the timetable doesn’t make any strategic sense. You can plausibly claim that it is a forcing mechanism for the military, that it puts Karzai on notice — which may be true, but all of that could have been conveyed privately. … The public declaration is a political act.

I think the president felt that with the country where it is, and his party where it is, he simply would not get the support he needed without some sense that this is not open-ended. …. It’s a bad strategic idea but is it cripplingly bad for the strategy? I don’t know, I think these things can be exaggerated. …

He said, we’re not going to be sitting around doing nothing while they wait us out. We’re going to be taking control of population centers, building the Afghan army, taking territory from the Taliban, hammering them where we need to, so they will be in a much weaker position 18 months from now than they are now. …

Still the best-case scenario would be simply not to say anything but I think he made a judgment that he would not have the country with him if he did that. We’re not talking about a war that is just beginning. We’re in the eighth year of the war. And there are political realities he probably has to take into account.

CNN: Let’s jump ahead to 2011. What would be the indication that this operation had been successful?

Zakaria: What we should be looking for is two things. One, in the key population centers that would contain 70 percent of the Afghan population, is the government in Kabul, with our assistance, clearly in control or does it still face a Taliban insurgency?

Point two: Are you finding that there are elements of the Pashtun community that are moving away from the Taliban and toward the government so that you now have a kind of relatively stable majority coalition within the country. … If those conditions are true, you then can start thinking about drawing down.

It’s very important to remember we’re only talking about drawing down the surge. We’re not necessarily talking about drawing down American troops to zero. My guess is that there will be a substantial American presence in Afghanistan for a long time.


airforce

Not that I want to give too much succor to Jon Meacham, but I think the way the Afghanistan debate has played out over the past nine months or so illustrates one important respect in which the United States really is a center-right nation. That’s the fact that an obvious subtext to the administration’s decision-making on Afghanistan has been a political context in which senior military officers— Petraeus, Mullen, McChrystal, etc.—want a surge of forces in Afghanistan, want $30 billion more per year in spending in Afghanistan, and don’t want the availability of those resources to be subjected to any kind of budgetary constraint. And in practice, it’s very politically problematic for a president, especially a Democratic president, to get into fights with senior military officials.

And if you think about a comparable situation with the civilian bureaucracy, you’ll see that things are very difficult. It’s not a serious problem if a Republican president pursues a course that senior career officials at the Environment Protection Agency believe are destroying the planet. Nobody says we need to “support the Civil Rights Division litigators” or “give the social services workers the resources they need to finish the job” of fighting child poverty.

So you have a situation in which not only is the military’s budget dramatically larger than any other government agency, but one in which the senior defense department bureaucrats have wildly more social prestige and political influence than do comparable figure in other agencies. The idea that we should “fully resource” the Department of Education’s missions of providing decent schooling to all Americans constitutes some kind of nutty fringe idea and the political establishment (correctly, I might add) recognizes that “do whatever teachers want” is not the be-all and end-all of education policy. And you certainly don’t see Republican candidates rushing to get “cover” from retired public employees union officials as a way to establish their “credibility” on domestic policy. But in terms of America’s engagement with the rest of the world it’s more-or-less taken for granted that insofar as the military’s senior leadership isn’t too badly divided, it should have the predominant voice, and that when military leaders’ views are ignored they should be ignored in the direction of more aggressive use of military force.

It’s a huge problem, and evidently not one Barack Obama is interesting in taking on.


At today’s Senate hearing on Afghanistan, a noteworthy discussion about the role of contractors. Sen. McCaskill demands more oversight from Defense and State…
At this morning’s hearing on President Obama’s new Afghanistan strategy, several important questions came up on the subject of contractors on the battlefield. The queries came from Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., chairman of the subcommittee on contracting oversight, who has been a staunch critic of government waste and lack of monitoring of contractors in war zones.

 In the face of an upcoming troop buildup in Afghanistan, McCaskill expressed concern to Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about the growing number of contractors supporting U.S. forces there. There are currently 75,000 contractors in Afghanistan, supporting 71,000 U.S. troops. In addition, there are 5,200 security contractors working for the State Department. McCaskill seemed alarmed by the large percentage of Afghans who are part of that contractor work force — 50,000 of the 75,000 battlefield contractors and 5,000 of the 5,200 security contractors are Afghan nationals. Clinton said the decision to employ so many Afghans was somewhat intentional. But she assured McCaskill that they were being properly monitored. Also at the hearing, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Michael Mullen, said that hiring Afghans makes sense because it brings money into the local economy and contributes to stability.

 McCaskill also confronted Gates on another matter that irks her: the decision by the Defense Department to award Afghanistan logistics contracts to two vendors — Fluor Inc. for the north section of the country, and Dyncorp for the south. McCaskill said she was disappointed that the Pentagon is creating two monopolies rather than have contractors compete for specific tasks. This region-based arrangement, although more efficient for the Pentagon to manage than task-based competitions, opens the door for waste and corruption, she suggested. To make matters worse, the Pentagon has not yet filled 600 oversight officer positions to monitor contracts in Afghanistan. Gates said he was not aware of the large number of vacancies but would look into it.

 Near the end of the discussion, Clinton brought up the uncomfortable issue of how the government should manage the risk of working with contractors without creating excessive bureaucratic impediments to getting the job done. “We have to be able to manage risk without being risk averse,” Clinton said. If oversight is taken to the extreme, government officials are not able to make “smart decisions,” she said. “We want to account for every penny,” but the government has to be able to balance the inherent tension between oversight and agility in doing business. McCaskill agreed that there is “real tension,” but based on what happened in Iraq, the government has to do a better job monitoring contractors. In Iraq, McCaskill said, it was all about writing contracts as quickly as possible, no matter what the cost, and getting things done quickly, but also carelessly. “We need to find a balance,” she said.

 Finally, McCaskill asked Gates to tighten oversight over the so-called “Commander’s Emergency Response Fund.” The CERF is a discretionary fund that commanders can tap into for reconstruction and other local projects deemed critical to winning over the population. Since 2004, the Defense Department has allocated $1.6 billion to CERF in Afghanistan. “We need to take a look into CERF,” McCaskill said.

70,000 contractors. yikes.

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December 3, 2009

EX WE CAN!! [Obama Ecstasy pills hit the streets]

Filed under: Hardly Newsworthy, Humor, Obama — Tags: , , — webadmin @ 2:47 pm


 

PALMVIEW, Texas – President Barack Obama’s approval rating may be hovering in the 50 percent range, but that doesn’t mean America’s Commander-in-Chief isn’t catching on with new constituents. There is now a line of Ecstasy pills made in the image of the 44th president of the United States, according to Texas police who have snatched a batch off the streets. Ecstasy is known for a sense of elation, diminished feelings of fear and anxiety, and ability to induce a sense of intimacy with others. Perhaps a good Election Day strategy to get out the vote? A stash of the brightly colored tablets was found Monday during a south Texas traffic stop. Police in Palmview detained a driver after finding black tar heroin, cocaine, marijuana and several Ecstasy pills in the back of his car. The drugs look like a “vitamin for kids,” police spokesman Lenny Sanchez said. Police say that other Ecstasy pills they found were made to look like the cartoon characters Homer Simpson and the Smurfs. The 22-year-old driver is expected to face felony drug possession counts. almview is near the border with Mexico. No word on the driver’s political affiliation.

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October 9, 2009

Kanye on Obama’s Nobel Prize

Filed under: Obama — Tags: , , — webadmin @ 12:28 pm


 

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September 14, 2009

Kanye’s Interrupting Everyone These Days

Filed under: Obama, Politics — Tags: , , , — webadmin @ 12:37 am


 

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August 25, 2009

Make up your mind. He can’t be all four.

Filed under: Humor, Obama, Parody, Politics, Republicans — Tags: , , , , — webadmin @ 7:05 am


 

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August 7, 2009

My Fake Kenyan Birth Certificate

Filed under: Humor, Obama, Politics, Republicans — Tags: , , — webadmin @ 7:48 am


 

get your own!

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August 5, 2009

Reality Bites



 

PBE on the teachable moment from the gates thing

I mean, look, Obama tried to avoid facing race issues head-on during the campaign, and understandably so. All I’m saying is that he can not NOW come back and do what he failed to do a few months ago.

The race speech he gave, Obama wasn’t talking to us, black Americans. He was talking to white Americans. And I think most of us understand that. We also understand why he couldn’t run as a “black man” during the campaign, he probably wouldn’t have won.

So for him to come back now, and start talking about huge concerns in the black community like racial profiling, well, it’s going to fall flat. With blacks, because we know he’s not – and can’t speak freely and truth to power; and with whites because they don’t like it. Too many want to pretend that it doesn’t exist.

Everybody knows that once you start “passing,” you gotta keep “passing.” It’s hard to cross-over, and you definitely can’t have it both ways. Obama got “passed” during the campaign, and he needs to continue doing so if he wants to remain in the Oval Office. He can’t start talking that “race” stuff.

You have known me long enough to know that I have never been an Obama-maniac, but I try to be fair and call a spade a spade.

Obama slipped the other week, which I wrote about. And then he tried to get back into character. He’s the president of the United States and had to practically apologize to this cop who more than likely was in the wrong for saying something that was probably 100 percent accurate.

The president forgot his “place,” and that speaks volumes. So in that respect, it was a learning experience for him.

But the fact that a black man, who happens to be the leader of the free world, still has a “place” should be a wake-up call to everyone.

So yes, in that respect the rest of us learned something. But I don’t think many of us realize the meaning behind what we learned.

exactly. couldn’tve said it better myself.

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July 29, 2009

Maddow and Harris-Lacewell on Racist Obama



 

awesome piece – I love Rachel Maddow and Melissa Harris-Lacewell – here they are analyzing Beck and Limbaugh among others trying their darndest to race bait and stoke people’s fears of Obama’s initiatives being pro-Black rather than pro-American. This is why Obama dare not address race – and we saw with the Gates comments – it’s a battle he cannot win. He has to let others fight that fight. What the hell is Biden doing these days anyways besides insulting Russia?

wrt the conversation on race, MHL linked to this article she wrote about Katrina and how whites and blacks interpreted the problem of the botched response to Hurricane Katrina ( incompetent governance vs systematic racism ) and how it affected the views of how to solve the problems:

Do You Know What It Means: Mapping Emotion in the Aftermath of Katrina – Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society

Abstract

This article explores the interconnection of race, politics and emotion in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Not only did Americans of different races perceive vastly different realities about the events in New Orleans, but black and white Americans felt different about what happened. The affective responses of African Americans were more pronounced than those of their white counterparts. These emotions are rooted in America’s racial history and it resonance in contemporary US society. Using data from several national surveys conducted in the weeks following September 11, 2001, and the weeks following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, this article maps the differences in emotional responses among black and white Americans to both disasters. The survey data is used to suggest that Americans’ political and racial beliefs were significantly related to their psychological experiences in the weeks following Katrina.

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