[Marxism] "The way to challenge racism is to call the racists out"
Fred Feldman
ffeldman at bellatlantic.net
Mon Apr 28 20:55:23 MDT 2008
http://www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat/315831/print
Playing the race card in North Carolina
posted by John Nichols on 04/27/2008 @ 4:01pm
The North Carolina Republican Party -- forged by the hand of Dixiecrat
segregationists like Jesse ("White people, wake up before it is too late. Do
you want Negroes working beside you, your wife and your daughters, in your
mills and factories?") Helms -- has never been cautious about playing the
race card. When North Carolina, Democrats nominated an
exceptionally-qualified moderate African-American candidate against Helms in
a 1990 U.S. Senate race, the North Carolina Republican machine countered
with a series of ads that emphasized Gantt's race and played on fears and
prejudices.
Of course, in the politically-correct world of special privileges demanded
by contemporary conservatives, no one was supposed to use the word "racist"
to describe the pro-Helms ads. And, so, much of the commercial broadcast,
cable and print media has to this day allowed the Helms and his partisan
allies off the hook for running a campaign that was conceived and
implemented with the aggressively racist intent of scaring white voters away
from voting for an African-American candidate who they agreed with on the
issues and who they knew to be more capable of representing them in the
Senate.
Because the media tends to be afraid of calling racists out, Helms and the
North Carolina Republicans had no trouble running a blatantly racist
campaign. And, when Helms was reelected over Gantt, a powerful lesson was
learned.
The unfortunate truth is that, when a political organization plays the race
card, gets away with it because journalists have been pressured to avoid
using accurate language and then wins on election day, that organization can
be expected to play the race card again.
And so the North Carolina Republican Party has.
Under the guise of opposing the a pair of Democratic gubernatorial
candidates who have endorsed Barack Obama for the party's presidential
nomination, the state party is airing a commercial designed to do exactly
what the Helms campaign's anti-Gantt ad did back in 1990: scare white voters
away from an African-American candidate they might otherwise support.
If the material in the current ad was accurate in its portrayal of Obama,
the North Carolina Republicans might have a defense. But it's not.
As images of Obama and the Rev. Jeremiah Wright flash on the television
screen, the candidate's former pastor is quoted out of context with the
purpose of making him look like a dangerous radical - and Obama like either
a dupe or a fellow-traveler on the anti-American fringe.
The transcript of the current commercial goes like this:
Narrator: For twenty years, Barack Obama sat in his pew listening to his
pastor.
Jeremiah Wright: And then wants us to sing God Bless America. No, no, no.
Not God Bless America, God (censored) America.
Narrator: Now Bev Perdue and Richard Moore endorse Barack Obama. They should
know better. He's just too extreme for North Carolina.
Chairman Linda Daves: The North Carolina Republican Party sponsored this ad
opposing Bev Perdue and Richard Moore for North Carolina Governor.
Despite the efforts of the party chair to confuse the intent of the ad, this
is another case where no serious observer will be confused by what the North
Carolina Republican Party is doing. They're playing the race card.
The question now is whether they will, again, get away with doing so. Obama
and his supporters ought not play on the "politically-correct" - or, to be
more precise, deliberately incorrect - commercial media to clarify things.
But they might want to point Americans to some genuine journalism. On Friday
night, my friend Bill Moyers interviewed Wright at length for the PBS
program "Bill Moyers Journal." During the course of the interview, Moyers
played an extended clip of the sermon that was sampled in the North Carolina
Republican Party commercial. It becomes clear that Wright was speaking in a
savvy, nuanced manner about complex questions of regarding U.S. foreign and
domestic policy and, far from displaying extreme sentiments, the former
Marine was discussing concerns that are common among Americans of every
racial, ethnic, income and even ideological grouping.
At one point in the interview, Moyers asks Wright whether there has been a
failure of communication between the pastor and his critics.
"When something is taken like a sound bite for a political purpose and put
constantly over and over again, looped in the face of the public, that's not
a failure to communicate," answers Wright. "Those who are doing that are
communicating exactly what they wanna do, which is to paint me as some sort
of fanatic or as the learned journalist from the New York Times called me, a
'wackadoodle'... I think they wanted to communicate that I am unpatriotic,
that I am un-American, that I am filled with hate speech, that I have a cult
at Trinity United Church of Christ."
This is precisely what the North Carolina Republican Party is doing. And
their purpose is clear. They want, in Wright's wise words, "To put an
element of fear and hatred and to stir up the anxiety of Americans who still
don't know the African-American tradition..."
The hero of the North Carolina GOP, Jesse Helms, once said, "Democracy used
to be a good thing, but now it has gotten into the wrong hands."
In fact, democracy is still a good thing. It only looks bad when hand of
racism touches it. And the way to challenge racism is to call the racists
out. Barack Obama and his supporters must understand that what the North
Carolina Republican Party is doing is just the beginning of a fear-mongering
campaign that will only be halted if it is identified for what it is: a
crude playing of the race-card for political purpose
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