Friday, March 30, 2007

More on Why Churchgoing Women Like Obama

The BlackProf as it turns out got the email I recently wrote about called "On Barack: An Open Letter and Invitation to Thoughtful Brothers and Sisters In America" some weeks before I did and actually got into online conversation with the author. Like me, he originally noted that:

Many of our folks are into forwarding email, and I just received the following from a couple of independent sources. I’ve posted the open letter in its entirety.


Ms. Barcardi Jackson, author of the incredibly viral email that lays it on the line and soon will probably be in most black people's inboxes soon, turns out to be, gasp!, a real person.

In Spencer Overton's original post on her Open Letter, Jackson left a comment explaining what drove her to put pen to paper:

I was moved to write the open letter, not as a work of scholarship or even necessarily for publication, but simply because I was frustrated with the level of the discussions about Obama and desperately needed an outlet. To be clear, my frustration did not stem from black people not supporting Obama. I agree that we are not a monolithic community and should not be sheep. Rather, my frustration stemmed from the repeated shallow critiques of Obama, which did not go to his record, his experience or anything remotely relevant to the question of his qualifications for President.

I am not a member of Obama's campaign staff and my letter was neither reviewed nor approved by any member of Obama's staff. I simply wrote it and emailed it to my friends and colleagues, some of whom encouraged me to post it. I posted it on two sites - blackplanet.com and Young Philly Politics
[...]
I stand by the sentiments of my letter regarding our tendency to hold aspiring and successful black people to a higher standard than we hold others (well, except when it comes to the black people who entertain us). Even worse is the tendency to put blackness in a box and dare each other to cross one of the lines. I was deeply disappointed to see people I have long admired and respected appear to follow the same old script of criticizing Obama without substance while completely ignoring that the questions being raised about him were problematic and suspect.
.

My, Ms. Jackson sure is ahem, articulate, ain't she? The reason this email is raging around the internets (at least for black people) is that her frustration with both our current leaders and with how the media portrays those leaders hit a nerve.

Look people, if this doesn't tell you that black people have arrived online -- politically and otherwise -- well it should.

I received some really interesting comments in response to my post. Mamas are touchstones in black culture. You ignore a riled up well-networked and well-educated churchgoing black mother to your peril. They have this tendency to vote.

Here's rikyrah:

While I, and my sisters have been in the Obama camp from the beginning, my mother has not. She's been in Camp Hillary.

Until the Selma speech.

My mother is STILL talking about his Selma speech, and I think he's turned a corner with her.

My mother watched SOTBU. I make sure of it, and her favorite was Dr. Julia Hare. She is 'entertained' by some of those on stage, but considering that my mother doesn't 'get' why Black folks have stopped raising their children, Dr. Hare's remarks were right up her alley.

She also admires Representative Ellison because of how 'those people' tried to attack 'that young man for wanting to swear in on his holy book'.

She also loved Tim Reid's comments about 'pull up your pants and get a job'.

Mama respects Tavis Smiley. She believes he's trying to 'uplift the race'. He and Tom Joyner (she loves Tom's HBCU involvement).


Francis Holland says:

Although I support Hillary Clinton for president and Barack Obama for vice president, I agree with everything this woman has said in her e-mail. Barack Obama would make an excellent president if elected, and the fact of having the first Black president would do for Blacks the same thing that having a Corvette does for Chevrolet: Having a race car in the family makes ALL the cars seem a little bit faster and better.
[...]
The criticism of Clinton are true in the letter above, but Clinton also appointed more high-level Black officials than any other president always has. He also defended affirmative action, defended women's rights, and got us through eight years without getting our troops shut up or starting a war. Blacks were more likely to be employed when Clinton was president.

But I strongly encourage supporters of Barack Obama to work hard for him so that he will at least make it onto the ticket as the vice presidential nominee. That'll depend in large part on how many people turn out to vote for him.


But will the Clinton and Obama campaigns (note that Edwards doesn't squeak into this discussion among black folks in the same way) listen and respond?

Update on CBC Fox Debates

So even Jesse Jackson Sr. has weighed in on this. You know, I got an email from somebody asking me what all the fuss is all about, what we're so afraid of? FOx isn't going to brainwash people, after all, is it?

It's less fear than outrage. Why on earth would the Congressional Black Caucus choose to align itself with a network that has proven itself to be racist as a course of normal business operations? As part of their branding strategy? If the Ku Klux Klan or Council of Conservative Citizens had a cable news network, would it be appropriate to collaborate with them on hosting presidential debates, particularly when one of the candidates is black, a CBC member and a consistent target of the network's hatred and misinformation? Like Jesse says, why let the Fox guard the henhouse?

Here's just one example of Fox's fare (thanks Media Matters):

Yet the description of Trinity as "separatist" continued. While discussing Obama's church on the February 28 edition of Fox News' Hannity & Colmes, co-host Sean Hannity stated that "many" call Trinity "separatist," adding that "in some cases, even drawing comparisons to a cult." Guest Erik Rush, a columnist for the conservative website WorldNetDaily, said that the church's "scary doctrine" is "something that you'd see in more like a cult or an Aryan Brethren Church or something like that."

Referring to "The Black Value System," Rush also stated on Hannity & Colmes: "I would go beyond saying that they're Afrocentric. They're African-centric. They refer to themselves as an African people, and that somewhat disturbs me from the viewpoint of, well, do they consider themselves Americans? Do they consider themselves Christians? Are they worshipping Christ? Are they worshipping African things black? Well, I mean, what is it?" Later in the segment, when co-host Alan Colmes asked: "Are you questioning Barack Obama's Christianity?" Rush responded simply: "Yeah."


Right. Fox attacks the very roots of our culture yet they are appropriate partners? None of this makes sense given that there are other networks that would probably be eager to partner with the CBC including the major non-cable broadcasters. Cuz you know what, neither my mama nor my big mama plans to pay for TV anytime soon. They ain't got no cable. Nor probably do the mamas and big mamas of most CBC members either. Y'all know what I am talking about. All this talk about reaching the widest possible audience is a bunch of hooey.

Tavis Smiley is hosting a presidential debate on PBS which is accessible to almost all Americans and that's a good model. No, none of this makes sense unless there is cheddar, benjamins, gravy, big $MONEY$ involved - h/t Politico. Shame on the CBC. If they're not careful, the black eye from this is going to leave a mark.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Tuskegee Airmen Finally Get Respect


photo courtesy of Bluedharma via Flickr

Amidst a sea of horrible tragedies today, it is an honor to post the following story:

Tuskegee airmen, black aviator heroes of World War II, awarded Congressional Gold Medal

President George W. Bush and Congress awarded the Tuskegee Airmen one of the nation's highest honors for fighting to defend their country despite the bigotry they faced at home before and after World War II.
I don't even know if schools or parents teach about the Tuskegee Airmen anymore, but they were a big deal when I was coming up. I had the privilege to actually meet a group of them when I was a kid, and my mother was so proud. She would constantly remind me of this meeting well into my adulthood because of their tremendous and unsung contribution to American history.

For those unfamiliar with the Airmen, (from its website):

The Tuskegee Airmen were dedicated, determined young men who enlisted to become America's first black military airmen, at a time when there were many people who thought that black men lacked intelligence, skill, courage and patriotism. They came from every section of the country, with large numbers coming from New York City, Washington, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia and Detroit. Each one possessed a strong personal desire to serve the United States of America at the best of his ability.
As is often noted about black military service, it was no easy task for these men to join the armed forces. Racism affected their entry into the service and their return home. The destructive effects of racism and segregation hurt not only these black airmen, but the US military. Again from the site:

During this period, many white units were undermanned and needed qualified people but were unable to get the experienced black personnel because of the segregation policy.
Well it's a good thing we are in the 21st century and have learned our lesson right? We'd never sabotage our mission's success by discriminating against qualified people who could get the job done. No, of course we wouldn't. This is the new America.


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Karl Rove Rapes Hip Hop Culture

Why is this even remotely ok? Why is ridiculing black art so incredibly funny? Would have been funnier in blackface and fake gold grills maybe. Must be watched to be believed.

h/t Think Progress

CBC Makes The Wrong Choice on Fox Debates

Why Lord. Why?

Like Fox co-hosting one Democratic debate with the CBC (at one of the theaters they own in Detroit no less) and one Republican presidential debate is "fair and balanced." Why not just have Rush Limbaugh or Hugh Hewitt -- or MC Karl Rove -- officiate at both in blackface? That would really gild the lily.

Come on.

Here's what James Rucker over at Color of Change has to say.

"The CBC Institute’s decision is shamefully out of step with most
Black voters, and we will continue to push on the CBC Institute to
drop this deal.” Rucker goes on to say, “Every presidential
candidate now must decide whether to legitimize Fox – a network that
calls Black churches a cult, implies that Senator Barack Obama is a
terrorist, and use