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Intro: "Two Princeton scholars clash over the president's record, but the real divide is between assimilation and racial unity."

Left to right: Cornel West and Melissa Harris-Perry. (photo: Ricardo DeAratanha/LAT - Chaz Neill/PictureGroup/AP)
Left to right: Cornel West and Melissa Harris-Perry. (photo: Ricardo DeAratanha/LAT - Chaz Neill/PictureGroup/AP)



For Blacks, a Rift Over Obama

By Erin Aubry Kaplan, Los Angeles Times

19 June 11

 

Two Princeton scholars clash over the president's record, but the real divide is between assimilation and racial unity.

t was the kind of insular, issue-driven, black-on-black debate that ordinarily doesn't attract the media spotlight, even on the slowest news day. But thanks to the unprecedented profile of Barack Obama, the most famous black person in modern history, this one got hot.

Last month, in an interview with Chris Hedges on Truthdig.com, Princeton professor Cornel West gave a scathing assessment of Obama's presidential performance so far. West let it rip with a kind of racially tinged dissatisfaction with Obama that's been brewing for months. Specifically, he called the black president out for what he sees as his complicity with the agenda of white, moneyed elites. He called Obama a "black mascot" for Wall Street, and at one point accused him of not acting like a "free black man."

The outburst prompted a swift and contemptuous rebuttal from West's fellow Princeton scholar and Nation columnist Melissa Harris-Perry, who described West's complaints as chiefly personal, not political, sparked by such things as Obama not returning the prof's phone calls promptly or giving him choice tickets to the inauguration. She went further, characterizing West's attack as "a self-aggrandizing, victimology sermon deceptively wrapped in the discourse of prophetic witness," and questioned whether his life of privilege (like her own) as a professor at an Ivy League university was any more authentic than Obama's.

Black folks on the blogosphere and elsewhere who were alarmed by the airing of dirty laundry between two of the best-known black scholars in the country weighed in, generally on one side or the other.

But the real divide is not between West and Obama or West and Harris-Perry, it's between two age-old, unresolved strategies black leaders have adopted throughout history to ensure black survival in America: nationalism and assimilation. Assimilation holds that blacks must claim their place in the mainstream to be successful; nationalism maintains that black success starts - and perhaps ends - with building and sustaining group unity. Fueling the latest image anxiety is a taboo question that animated the comments of an increasingly irate West: What good is Obama to us? By 'us' I mean black masses who are a crucial and historical part of the American working class and poor for whom West has always advocated.

Though she blasted West for his diatribe last month, Harris-Perry doesn't actually disagree with his view of the social landscape. Her defense of Obama also includes a view many blacks share - that the president, while hardly perfect, has been hampered by organized right-wing movements whose reflexive opposition to him is partly rooted in racism.

West is correct about Obama's lack of urgency about black issues. Perry is correct about the depth of resistance to Obama himself. But the combination of these two truths is hard to grasp: Obama is both the man in charge and the black politician stymied by the system he oversees. Broadly speaking, he is both the oppressor and the oppressed. This strange new fact feels like matter colliding with anti-matter, something that was never supposed to happen; black people, to say nothing of the media, don't quite know how to make sense of it.

But at least West and Harris-Perry are forcing into public consciousness a complex racial reality. After the collapse of the Black Panthers and black power in the '70s, assimilation became the black success strategy by default. The result was that assimilation - more precisely, financial and educational success - has happened for some blacks, but is beyond the reach of a vast number of others. The now numbing statistics about incarceration rates, inferior schools, entrenched poverty and the rest describe a population that, far from being integrated, still lives as a separate nation. That's all the more reason that blacks long to see President Obama as at least a sympathizer and fellow traveler rather than part of the institutional indifference that has proved as detrimental to black welfare as Jim Crow.

But Obama is a product of institutions. He is a fortunate middle-class son of the post-'60s, pro-integration era whose own success was due less to black empowerment than adherence to mainstream mores and values. Black nationalism or any clear support of black unity or racial justice is an anathema to those values; it certainly would have doomed Obama politically. This is true even though politically speaking, the president owes blacks as much as he owes Jews or any other constituency that voted for him in significant numbers.

The real problem with the assimilation-versus-nationalism battle is that it isn't really a battle anymore because black leaders, whatever philosophy they espouse these days, rarely put black interests first. Harold Cruse warned about this in his classic 1967 book, "The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual." In Cruse's view, the crisis then was a direct result of the black intelligentsia repeatedly abdicating its responsibility to assess black social conditions and craft action agendas entirely unique to America's racial history. As long as it deferred to integrationist approaches that didn't primarily have blacks' interests in mind, Cruse said, black people would always be reduced to reacting and protesting crises in the future. West's broadside of Obama is such a protest, though in it is a hope that a black man who is in a historic position to address the latest crisis will find it in his conscience to do so.

But putting aside the question of whether Obama is in a position to do much of anything, can principles of assimilation and black unity coexist at the top? Can they coexist at all? The big unstated fear among many blacks, including West, is that Obama will turn out to be yet another disappointing black politician, one who readily articulates the needs of those at the bottom but doesn't ultimately address them. That's a crisis of another color.


Erin Aubry Kaplan is a contributing editor to the Times Opinion pages. Her collected essays will be published in October.

 

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+69 # John Talbutt 2011-06-19 18:06
The problem I have only recently come to see is that Obama moves to the right further than necessary. One might conclude that his previous liberalism was pragmatic but at heart he is a blue dog democrat at best.
 
 
+44 # Bill Clements 2011-06-19 18:59
Yes, I agree; Obama is a New Democrat just as Bill and Hillary Clinton are.
 
 
+43 # maheanuu 2011-06-19 21:37
"At heart he is a blue dog democrat at best"

John, if you were a carpenter, you couldn't have hit that nail more squarely or any harder, you drove it into the plank completely, no other pounding needed.

I am not black, but having spent 20+ years in the military, and having many shipmates and friends who are black, I felt very honored to have been able to vote for and elect the first black president. I had hoped that he would have stood for truth and justice. I had hoped beyond ordinary hope that this man was going to do what The Pledge of Allegiance says in it's final line. "With Liberty And Justice For All"! I haven't changed my mind, I am for sure disappointed, but not crushed. I only wish that he wasn't so swayed by conservatism, and the "We should just all get along and move on" syndrome.

Just this old Chief's 2 cents
 
 
+14 # Ellen Simer 2011-06-20 06:34
Quoting
The problem I have only recently come to see is that Obama moves to the right further than necessary. One might conclude that his previous liberalism was pragmatic but at heart he is a blue dog democrat at best.


It was inevitable - the first black person elected President of the United States would be certain to be a figure of controversy that extended beyond the sheer "novelty" of his color. The old "crime" called "driving while black" could be replaced here with subconscious thoughts about what "governing while black" might mean to different people ... John Talbutt's unspoken/unwritten racial expectations for him are made clear.
 
 
+3 # Bill Clements 2011-06-20 17:11
Please flush out your remark on Talbutt's "unspoken/unwritten racial expectations." What would they be, based on his remarks?
 
 
0 # rf 2011-06-29 04:31
Perhaps the racial expectations are here, but I, a white guy, voted for him and did many other white voters, to a great extent because we were looking for an 'angry black man' to change things cause the white guys up there weren't getting it done. Alas!
 
 
0 # Tim@ggtr.com 2011-06-24 21:57
Obama did not abandon the people who elected him, the people abandoned him. How can he succeed without strong vocal support. There are powerful forces resisting change. It was called "yes we can" not "yes he can". Change will not happen without overwhelming support from citizens who will vote and Inform themselves. A movement that sustains an underlying consensus will succeed. Restore The American Dream can provide that cohesion.
 
 
+1 # rf 2011-06-29 04:32
He abandoned us right away when he installed the Bush economics team as his own. Just another rich guy in Washington!
 
 
-1 # BarbB 2011-07-03 15:57
Tim, I seem to be the only one who agrees with you. That is the correct slogan "Yes WE can, not "Yes He Can." The people in America are just sitting back and allowing the conservative forces to just take over, while expecting Pres. Obama to be their sole liberal mouthpiece for them. We progressives need to be much more outspoken, starting now, as the re-election campaign begins.
 
 
+42 # rm 2011-06-19 18:47
If we take the view of Prof. Harris-Perry, then there is no hope. Jim Crow never left and only Uncle Tom styled African Americans will ever rise to levels of leadership. It is hard to know what Obama thinks of himself. He very passionate speeches about America going in the wrong direction and that he was about real change, sound very cynical today. He has followed the exact same direction as the Bush/Cheney regime. He acts just like another Bill Clinton, always eager to carry water for the hard right wing.

His golfing phot-op with John Boehner yesterday was as disgusting as Clinton's sharing the stage with Gingrich.

Obama never indicated any support for the protesters in Wisconsin. He could have done that quite easily.

I guess I'm with West -- Obama has betrayed us. He was a stealth neo-con just like Bill Clinton. He takes orders from the big banks and the pentagon. I hope he loses in 2012.
 
 
+27 # cadan 2011-06-19 20:44
rm --- i'm certainly disappointed by what Obama has done in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, and very especially Libya.

I do however think that he has opened up the door for who can be president, and not just Black but ultimately also Woman, Latino, Asian, Jew, Mormon, Muslim, and Gay.

And he's the most intelligent president we've had in a long time. It is so good not to have to be embarrassed by a president who doesn't sound very smart.

(And i voted for him because i was afraid Hilary would be too hawkish.)

Now, that brings us to 2012.

Should i vote for him, or vote for a 3rd party candidate?

And, would we have a better chance at peace with a Republican (bearing in mind, e.g., that Eisenhower ended Truman's war, and Nixon, eventually, ended the war against Vietnam)?

I don't know.

But my hope is that somehow Obama will redeem himself.

It is not too late to make a move for peace, to quit bombing Libya, and find some face-saving way to get out of Iraq and Afghanistan.

For sure if Obama does this i will vote for him.
 
 
+34 # C. Price 2011-06-20 02:10
We cannot mention who started the Korean and Vietnam wars without mentioning who started the Iraq and Afghanistan and Kuwait wars. Our chances at peace have no connection to the political party in power in the White HOuse. Both are guilty of unnecessary aggression.
Your selection of choice should be based on which candidate has the better program to benefit America, and that means all of us, not a few on the top of the economic scale.
 
 
+3 # America 2011-06-20 04:16
America was tentative about voting for an African American but they did in big numbers. Obama's failures will only CLOSE the doors for the future for the people you mentioned.

There is no time left for him to redeem himself. It is OVER. He wasted the first two years and lost the mid-term.. now the Republicans call the tune. Just watch for all the compromises and give aways.

It is not going to get better. It will only get WORSE!
 
 
+4 # GG 2011-06-20 16:52
[quote name="America"]America was tentative about voting for an African American but they did in big numbers. Obama's failures will only CLOSE the doors for the future for the people you mentioned.'
So Blacks get one shot and other folks get unlimited opportunities in the political game! Say that is not what you really meant - or some negative accusations may fly in your direction.
I'm sure you will agree with me that a mascot of Wall Street is not necessarily a defender of the Black community.
 
 
+2 # Ellen Simer 2011-06-20 06:39
Cadan, that was a straight-up superb summary of the thoughts many of us had - and have - about what we did/how we voted in that election and what we hope for now that we see what we have. Thank you.
 
 
+5 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:14
Nixon didnot take us out of Nam.

'New Democrats" are Republicans...Republicans are Nazis so what is the third party gonna end up being after they hit the big time?
 
 
+1 # Suavane 2011-06-20 19:29
A few comments: I can't think of a President in modern times that didn't face a war or conflict during his watch.

Your comment about Republican Presidents ending wars is not completely accurate. Our involvement in Vietnam began with support troops sent to help the French in their fight with North Vietnam by President Eisenhower. And Nixon, was at war with our fellow Americans protesting the war in Vietnam.

President Obama has kept his promise to wind down our involvement in that area in a responsible manner. With Libya, he answered a humanitarian call for help by rebels protesting the Kadafy regime who were being attached by his military forces. Our troops are supporting the effort to rid Libya of Kadafy by using technology, not by putting our troops in harms way.

This very different way of handling conflict in our efforts for positive change in foreign lands should be of some comfort to you and others who oppose war.

The recent move toward democracy in the middle east can be traced back to the President's speech regarding his middle east policy in June of 2008 in Cairo, Egypt.
 
 
0 # sonrisa 2011-07-15 13:41
oh puh-leeze! if it wasn't for that Daley machine asswipe we WOULD have a woman Prez & she'd be a damn site better too! But then my 3 year old niece would make a better Prez. The Daley's wanted to own a Prez, plain & simple, & they did whatever it took to make that happen
 
 
+27 # nichd356 2011-06-19 22:17
what an idiotic remark to say that you hope obama loses. would you rather have bachman or ron paul ?
 
 
-1 # Ellen Simer 2011-06-20 06:43
Quoting
what an idiotic remark to say that you hope obama loses. would you rather have bachman or ron paul ?


Okay, point taken. But the choice between Bachman and Ron Paul leaves us NO choice - it would have to be Ron Paul. I might wonder just how Ron Paul would govern, but I shudder to think it could be Bachman in command of our troops.
 
 
0 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:19
Will we have achoice//OBama is not doing anything well. The rest of America is brainwashed...I believe they have their won channels and are being brain washed superbly.
Yesterday I was told how horrible it is for people living on pensions, when I reiterated that our Bipartisan should give up their salaries I was told no Republicans are really good. I come home and find out our Congress just gave themselves a $3000 raise yet Seniors got nothing...it was seniors again commending Republicans. Perhaps their voting rights should be like driving examined as they get older, I am one.
 
 
-1 # GG 2011-06-20 16:54
Quoting
what an idiotic remark to say that you hope obama loses. would you rather have bachman or ron paul ?

Ron Paul sounds like a progressive compared to the real Obama and I am not talking about Obama, the candidate.
 
 
+10 # RosanneGP 2011-06-20 07:55
Quoting
I hope he loses in 2012.


What makes you think things will be any better if he loses? is half a loaf worse than a kick in the face? Think about what you are planning to do and what the consequences will be.
 
 
+23 # cassandra123 2011-06-20 07:55
If you must call the President "names," then at least get your facts straight. OFA (Organizing For America), the citizen group supporting President Obama that evolved from the '08 campaign, was very much involved in the Wisconsin protests. In addition, the President stated his support for the protesters on television. I support the President. I am a black person, and I disagree with Professor West. President Obama is "The President" of ALL Americans. In my opinion, he does not carry water for the right wing. Our nation was on the brink of a collapse when President Obama took office. His job is to make sure ALL of America survives this emergency. His policies are American! His policies are not, and should not be Black/White/Brown/Other. His policies must be American. We must come together as Americans to solve our problems. Bringing the nation together has been the overall goal of President Obama. If we come together as a nation, there is no problem that we cannot solve. Let's join with President Obama to make America work again. The republicans clearly care only about power and money. They will not work for the people.
 
 
-8 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:21
I voted for Obama, campaigned for the slug and I have Marched for months infact years, dear. Where was OBama, Biden? I have more shame on Biden as he is more of a job promoter. I believe Biden a better man
 
 
-10 # S. Wolf Britain 2011-06-20 13:37
No, "ObamaFRAUD" carries water for the neo-CON/neo-LIBERAL wing, the corporate-fascists now thought to be "right-wing" when in reality they are left-wing. Totalitarian communism/socialism AND fascism have long been left-wing, and their so-called "right-wing" extremism, totalitarianism and repression is truthfully neo-liberal and therefore left-wing. Sure, they put on a good show of being "Christian", "benevolent", "compassionate" and/or "conservative", but they are anything but. They are for neo-liberal, left-wing, totalitarian absolute corporate-fascist control, subjugation and domination of EVERYONE; it doesn't matter what color they are; regardless, they want everyone except for the corporate-fascist oligarchy to be slaves with no True Liberty(ies) and/or Freedom(s) at all. ObamaCON is part and parcel of them, selling us ALL out. So, please stop being fooled and living in a fantasy world; for, only then, or when you fully face what's really going on, can you Truly be a force for True Good in this world. Until then, you're just part of the problem...

(Continued below.)
 
 
-8 # S. Wolf Britain 2011-06-20 14:21
(Continued from above.)

...We cannot join together with this false "unity" that ObamaFRAUD, globalists, the "New World Order (NWO)", world-government mad- men and women of all "colors", authoritarian statists, and those who seek absolute control over everyone and the entire world, are promoting; unless of course we want our own enslavement; which, unfortunately, is what it seems like most people, especially "Americans" want, though of course they believe that it is otherwise, and are completely fooled, like you, that it will be a "good thing".

Look at what's really happening. They, including ObamaCON, are doing away with all of our True Human and Civil Rights in the name of "protecting" us. It is sick! Stop falling for it! All of this so-called "national security" that they're bringing (upon) us and surrounding us with at the (complete) expense of our True Liberty(ies) and Freedom(s), is a "control grid" being set up all around us; which, very soon, none of us will be able to escape. And, at that point, when the noose is completely closed, irreversibly around our collective necks in the guise of delivering us from destruction, it will be far too late once the deluded majority of which you are a part realizes it was (all) a trap...

(Continued below.)
 
 
-10 # S. Wolf Britain 2011-06-20 15:26
(Continued from above.)

...To be in unity with and supportive of that truly, fully and completely false "joining together" is in reality to support and be complicit in all of its mass-murder, endless war, indefinite detention, doing away with due process and the rule of law, torture, etc., and the very soon to be ushered in, if we don't stop it, global enslavement. Therefore, everyone who isn't fooled, sees through everything that's going on (and/or everything that is being made to APPEAR to be going on), and who refuses to bow down to ANY of it, cannot join in and/or with ANY of it, particularly ANY support of ANY of it of any kind. So, all True Persons' of Conscience will NOT in any way, shape, form or fashion WHATSOEVER, come together with that so-called "nation"; for that is the "Nation of Madness", the "Nation of Self-Deception", the "Nation of Total Deception", the "Nation of Absolute Control and No True Liberty(ies) and Freedom(s)", and/or the "Nation of 'National' and Global Enslavement".
 
 
+5 # Capn Canard 2011-06-21 16:02
I disagree with your assessment. So very Sophomoric and thin! While I do agree that Liberalism, especially as manifest in the Neo Liberals of the New Labor, is a movement that has been hijacked by the INTERESTS of WEALTH. It is not political parties that are the problem. It is the movement of WEALTH, of MONEY, and sitting around debating whether it is Neo-Liberalism or Neo-Conservatism is pointless. This is the MOVEMENT OF WEALTH FROM THE POOR AND MIDDLE CLASS to those who are already WEALTHY. In either interpretation the middle class gets screwed, but it is easier to steal from them if they spend their time worrying about Wiener's gone wild. Sociological babbling ignores all facts on the ground. I believe that Naomi Klein has captured this all quite nicely in her book "The Shock Doctrine" where shock is the method by which change can take place without any real resistance. Look at Wisconsin and see FASCISM in action, same with Ohio, Florida, Michigan, etc etc etc. If there is global enslavement you will be enslaved to MONEY/WEALTH and not to fantasy of left leaning Ideology.
 
 
0 # mem0426 2011-06-21 17:27
Cassandra, thank you for the most sensible and unbiased comment yet. The President has actually stayed as true to his campaign promises as the harsh realities of taking over a nearly crumbling economy and devisive nation would allow. How can we honestly expect Mr. Obama to forward and unifying agenda that will benefit all Americans before he's sucessfully dug us out of the quaqmire left by his predecessors. If he runs, I'm voting for him because he at least deserves a chance, over a reasonable amount of time, to set the course of unity, prosperity, and growth for all.
 
 
+1 # gilbert 2011-06-22 22:24
you have to understand that any president in our current system caters primarily to entrenched elite power. Obama like any other president caters to wall street, big oil, pharmacetical industry and finance industry. Presidents no matter how eloquent, are in power to serve the highest bidders. Obama's policies are conforming to the norms of major establishment figures. Take for example his continuence in the wars in Iraq and Afganistan. Obama is catering to the right-wing to a certain extent, but he is following standard empiral doctrine of incessant war. No matter how liberal you think a president is, always keep in mind that our oligarchy is ruled by concentrated power, that are happy to sustain the illusion of change. Remember the matrix movie. If you do remember, remember how the architect created zion as a mechanism to control conscious minds that could threaten the matrix. That same concept applies to the office of the president and our political system. What we really need is mass movements to dismantle our oligarchy.
 
 
+2 # Rodney 2011-06-20 18:56
Who would you like to see replace him in 2012 and what would that person do better?
 
 
-2 # tomo 2011-06-21 17:22
Well, replacements for Obama might be John Garamendi, or Russ Finegold, or Al Franken, for starters. They each would be likely to act in accord with the promises Obama made in his 2009 campaign--promises in which Obama has no interest. If these men don't meet your requirements, how about Ron Paul? He would not act according to Obama's 2009 promises--but I think he just might prove that greatest of rarities in the politics of the last three decades: an honest man in the White House.
 
 
0 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 19:53
Get real #tomo- Ron Paul wants to abolish the Civil Rights Act and other federal anti-discrimination laws. He would return us to pre-1960! Obama ran as a left of middle President who happened to be Black. No other way could he have been elected. If he had run as a "Black President" representing "Black Issues" he never would have received a majority of votes.
 
 
+1 # clj 2011-06-21 06:01
One has to understand that Barack Obama is an "African-American" and shares little in terms of cultural propsective with "Afro-Americans." His world view was shaped by the environment he grew up in, thus, he has little empathy with those coming from different points on the racial and social compass. He is first and foremost an elitist. Why has no one challenged him on his lack of HBCU grads in his administration? He has fewer high level afro-americans at senior positions than any President in the modern era! He has totally shunned blacks/afro-americans not having Ivy league backgrounds! Why? He doesnt share any aspects of the civil-rights struggle and does not feel those educated in the civil-rights environment of the HBCU are competent enough to serve him. Thus, he is has also discriminated against the largest, most educated part of his base support.
 
 
+5 # cassandra123 2011-06-21 09:03
Hi clj,

I do not know where you are getting these "supposed facts." My brother works at a HBCU in a leadership position. The HBCUs' state that President Obama has supported these institutions. I graduated from Howard University in 1969, and I continue to have friends who work for HBCUs. Your statements are misinformed, and, I think they are deliberately attempting to create chaos among President Obama's supporters before his 2012 Campaign gets off the ground.

Also, if you are a black person, I find your attempt to divide the African/Afro American community to be just awful! Given your statements, I question your involvement in ANY civil rights activities. I went to jail in the early '60s with many people. None of the participants I know would make the statements you are making. You need to stop. You are placing yourself in a "Clarence Thomas" like group. Your ideas seem hateful and jealous. You are not helping black people from HBCUs with the kind of suggestions you are making.
 
 
-7 # cl Johnson 2011-06-21 06:09
Barack Obama is representative of the public he feels he was elected to serve. He has no identification with main stream afro-americans. In fact there is very little in his middle class, white, elitist background that connects him with black America! Thus, his performance as President is just what we should have expected. I think it especially noteworthyu of his lack of blacks in his administration, especially those with HBCU backgrounds. I think the glaring hole is indictative of his, the APresident's world view and especially the way he looks at black americans and their needs and capabilities. Dont expect anything in terms equality from him because he does not feel you, if you are black, to be equal to him!
 
 
+3 # cassandra123 2011-06-21 09:25
Hi cl Johnson,

You continue to raise the HBCU issue. Well, as a matter of fact, President Obama, in February, 2011, provided financial support for HBCUs that has helped to make sure the HBCUs are available to continue to educate students (black/brown/minority/white--by the way-many white students get educations at HBCUs, so just put a cork in this divisive HBCU diatribe).

Also, President Obama is representing ALL PEOPLE who are Americans. At his speech right after his election, he stated he will represent ALL AMERICANS. Get a real grip on the facts, if you intend to comment on the President and his policies. Again, your ideas sound nasty, and jealous. By the way, I have met this President. When he left Harvard Law School with the Magna Cum Laud Law Degree, and decided to go to the south side of Chicago--and, he owed huge law school loans that he has repaid--he did not make much money nor have a prestigous title. That is not an elitist career decision. You remind me of the paid republican commenters I often encounter on some online sites.
 
 
+21 # mary1066 2011-06-19 19:58
The main polemical point of Harris-Perry's article was that Blacks differ in their views and political positions, like other people, and that it's a shame that the machinations of the mainstream press don't allow that possibility without seeing a level of crisis that the differing views of say, feminists, or labor and union acitivists, or the Left in general, or above all Whites in general, don't arouse.
 
 
+28 # Virginia 2011-06-19 20:12
Specifically, he called the black president out for what he sees as his complicity with the agenda of white, moneyed elites. He called Obama a "black mascot" for Wall Street, and at one point accused him of not acting like a "free black man."

West certainly has good points - but this isn't just about the blacks' rift. I know plenty of brown, yellow and white folks in Hawaii (the birthplace of our native son) that feel the same way. Maybe we can use one of the numerous, empty, abandon foreclosed properties to erect a monument someday.
 
 
+26 # Richard Spring 2011-06-20 05:41
I disagree that the issue is primarily racial, though you can examine things through that lens. The primary issue is top-down "class warfare" and whether Obama can or will do anything at all to curb it. Any Republican who is elected will clearly step on the accelerator in funneling money to the corporate oligarchy.
 
 
+44 # volcanoexpert 2011-06-19 20:16
How about we forget the "black thing" and consider Obama's ACTUAL "achievements! He has "out -Bushed" Bush. . leaving in place virtually EVERYTHING that Bush did by "executive fiat!" He has allowed Bush to skate on ALL the anti-Constitutional and "illegal" acts undertaken druing his tenure; he has NOT closed Guantanamo; he has ramped up Afghanistan (Bush's illegal war); he has left in place the idiotic tax "reliefs" granted to the rich; he has done NOTHING re: immigration policies implemented by Bush; etc etc. . .There is lots more and NONE if it has anything to with being "black!" The SOB is; and, has been, the best friend the Republicans and neo-cons could ever have asked for! PLUS, he's provided them with a phony. paper target to focus their diatribes against! [I almost forgot. . he's done NOTHING to promote jobs and get people back to work!]
 
 
+25 # joan 2011-06-20 01:24
Sayly I must agree. This is neither a black or white issue but a sad political reality. Barack Obama, despite the huge swath of problems he inherited, has squandered perhaps one of the greatest opportunities offered a politician in many years - the possibility to make a real difference in the lives of American citizens. And from an environmental standpoint, he is worse than GW. Putting aside the black/white issue, where is the man's passion, his fighting spirit? I see none of that. We are sinking further into a fascist state, with lots of assistance at the top.
 
 
0 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 20:02
You want to focus on environmental issues? If so, why don't you point out he has been blocked from helpful legislation by Blue Dog Democrats and Republican opposition to any of his appointments in this area?
 
 
+9 # C. Price 2011-06-20 02:14
Has Mr. Obama provided a healthcare legislation and a repeal of DADT? C'mon, let's have a little balance here.
 
 
+11 # volcanoexpert 2011-06-20 05:41
the healthcare legislation was, to put it simply, ANOTHER monster handout to Corporate America!

DADT has been "repealed". . However, it has NOT been implemented. . Instead it has been shunted to "sometime in the future!" Because "we have to go slow on these sorts of things!" [Or, we might offend the bigots!]
 
 
-1 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 20:10
After Clinton proved that a President couldn't even get healthcare reform out of committee, Obama was forced to leave it to Congress. What he got was the best compromise we could ever get out of present Congress per Teddy Kennedy! As far as DADT the imposition of this rule by presidential edict rather than going through the process would be a disaster and politically niave. With the first Republican President repealing first day in office. The way Obama is doing it will be permanent even if slower.
 
 
+2 # crankyactivist 2011-06-22 15:09
Volcano is right on (the money?) West's critique does not only advocate for people of color but of all races who are in the 98% who are not benefitting from our corporate government. He is concerned about the poor and the working class and has a class analysis, unlike Obama who never mentions the poor.
 
 
0 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:23
One item doesnot a president make
 
 
+12 # rm 2011-06-20 05:11
Volcano -- you hit the nail on the head! Thanks. This is not a race issue. It is pure policy. I accept that a true reformer would face really huge opposition from Wall Street and the military industrial complex. He may not succeed but nothing could stop him from talking change and reform every day. Instead, he talks like a war president and a free market (i.e., code for wall street) president.
 
 
+3 # montanamaven 2011-06-20 09:19
Yes, he has betrayed most Americans of every color. He was groomed and selected as a Trojan horse to dismantle the last vestiges of the American middle class. (Keynote speech at the 2004 convention was to launch him). Bush I couldn't get NAFTA passed, but the Blue Dog (Republican lite) Clinton did that as well as dismantle welfare and Glass Steagall. Bush II couldn't privatize Social Security, so Obama was selected for this task. I expected this but not with such breathless speed.
 
 
0 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 20:16
This rhetoric is way over the top and greatly misinformed. Obama is working within the system because he has no choice! Republicans and Blue Dog Democrats (most of whom were elected from districts that voted for McCain) blocked Obama and even with that he passed the most progressive legislation first term since 1964. Please,look at the facts!
 
 
+2 # GG 2011-06-20 16:59
More drones than Bush, more immigrant harassment, maybe as much violation of international law via targeted assassins.
Your list is incomplete.
 
 
-1 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 19:59
Not true! Obama's first term ended with more progressive legislation adopted into law since Lyndon Johnson! Let's let facts get into the way of some of this discussion-please!
 
 
+4 # gilbert 2011-06-22 22:56
I AGREE our president just like the rest of them is a war criminal that should be tried at the Hague. As long as the institutional structure of our current system remains in tact we are going keep producing puppet presidents who cater to concentrated power. In my opinion both parties are two factions of the business party. The Democrats are better for the average American because they are't as entrenched in the pockets of elites as Republicans. However both parties are just a facade necessary to maintain the convenient illusion that we live in a true democracy. Real leaders for the masses aren't presidents but victims of state sponsored terrorism (MLK, Malcolm X, Fred Hampton, Che, Fidel Castro and many others). I will end with this, power always seeks to maintain itself.
 
 
+14 # Dr. Dapo 2011-06-19 21:07
I completely disagree with professor Harris-Perry for failing to see what Obama has become to the society. President is a war monger. He is an incompetent republicans ass kisser. He is a shame to all of us. I disagree with Prof. Perry failing to really address where Obama fits in. He doesn't tell who is President Obama. I keep hearing about the pressures coming for the mean-spirited and wicked republicans, but President Obama has yet to prove to me who he is-what he brought to the table. I never plead for hands out for my people-Black people, but let Obama show me he has done for the 'least' among us. So shameful-it really makes me sick, when the republicans ask the president of the US to jump, he asks how high. The republicans run the show. The mid-term election, the president gave it to the republicans on a silver platter. Prof. Harris, you are wrong and my dear brother Prof. West is 100% right. I'm sick of a war-monger. War is an abomination.
 
 
+1 # efsawyer 2011-06-20 04:21
Quoting
Once I saw it was published in the LAT, I could understand the uninformed wording that resulted in the "collapse...of black power." Incredible! Personally, I'd call it murder!
THE FBI'S COVERT ACTION PROGRAM TO DESTROY THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY
By July 1969, the Black Panthers had become the primary focus of the program, and was ultimately the target of 233 of the total authorized "Black Nationalist" COINTELPRO actions.
Also, there is a tacit misunderstandin g of all parties that comes from thinking Obama is not the product of "trained incapacity," the same as his predecessor, but, in contrast, the GW, Obama is really 'smart' in the sense that demeans "intelligent"--the very thing that made Malcolm X and Martin Luther--especially the day he denounced the Vietnam War and, I suppose, signed his death warrant. This debate is pretty 'stupid' for the way it kills the subject on the table. But that's what are country is. Murderous and in denial. The question for thinking people is how to have our April Spring? Meanwhile the "rationalization " of (cost-effective) domination goes on...


BRAVO.
 
 
+7 # Stirling 2011-06-20 06:18
I was in Chicago when Mark Clark & Fred Hampton were murdered. My mother worked for Banabas Sears, Special prosecutor at that time, she said that the photographs showed that all the shots came from outside and that no shots came from inside. It was a bench trial and the judge was bought. That is why states attorney, Edward Hanrahan was not found guilty.
 
 
+11 # SharonToji 2011-06-19 21:25
I think Cornell West is on the wrong track. Obama is not doing a "Step'N"Fetch it." He's dong a rich man. He's become wealthy, and he has the same blinders on that most wealthy people have. He just can't see us all down there at his feet, scrabbling away for enough money for rent or house payments, groceries, car payments, and maybe a college fund for the kids. He's a millionaire, and he's acting like one. After he's finished being President, he'll give speeches for millions of dollars, and I'm not sure that I'll trust him to do what Bill Clinton does, start a foundation and spend money doing good works across the world. I actually think the Clintons, and particularly Hillary Clinton, are more liberal than President Obama. But I'll vote for him, because the alternative means the Supreme Court goes down in flames. At least that's one thing where he appears not have betrayed us.
 
 
+4 # Ellen Simer 2011-06-20 06:50
Quoting
He's a millionaire, and he's acting like one. After he's finished being President, he'll give speeches for millions of dollars, and I'm not sure that I'll trust him to do what Bill Clinton does, start a foundation and spend money doing good works across the world. But I'll vote for him, because the alternative means the Supreme Court goes down in flames. At least that's one thing where he appears not have betrayed us.


So far....
 
 
+10 # soularddave 2011-06-19 22:02
The real question is this: Should we have voted for McCain/Palin or Obama/Biden? From there, it was question of who would be more effective at running the country as we would have liked?

We get the chance to make these same decisions again next year, knowing who's now in the White House now, and by then, who he's up against. Let's not get bogged down in what percent of the campaign 'promises' came to fruition.
 
 
+1 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:27
none ever do. Still hoping for the Rabitt trick to come. I think it wise not to come out now while the circus is in town. Some one with integrity, intelligence is watching, waiting. That could very wll be our next answer. This 2011 show of idiots is great, I would run if I could since we already know their stupidities and weaknesses. A good Contender doesnot show his hand in the beginning of a game.
 
 
+22 # drush 2011-06-19 22:08
Cornell West grinds my axe also. Obama has set the Nation back. His appointments are appalling. He takes the easy path. "War abroad and surrender at home". Obama is smart, lacks courage. Enamored with the "powerful" rich. Taxing wealth only make sense, that where the money actually is. Kiss up and kick down. That is why we seethe. I'm with Cornell, thanks brother.
 
 
+6 # Ellen Simer 2011-06-20 06:52
Thank you, Drush. Concise and on the mark.
 
 
+2 # cassandra123 2011-06-21 09:46
drush,

Did you watch "The Rachel Maddow Show" on Tuesday, 06/20/11? In case you did not, she identified the fact that the republicans will not confirm President Obama's appointments for government agencies, the court, and now for Commerce Secretary. They refused to confirm a Nobel Economics Prize winner, Jamie Diamond, who is an expert in the field of JOBS and UNEMPLOYMENT. The republicans are trying mightly to make sure President Obama cannot do the things to improve America, even if the republican policies destroy our economy. When you say, he takes the easy path...I disagree. He is taking the most difficult path. But, the path is the one that is the BEST for our country. Everytime the republicans say NO, he has to try something different to help us win the future. And, I consider him to have great courage. He devised the plan that got Bin Laden. The republicans refuse to replace Fish and Wildlife Directors, Justice Department leaders. The President does not now nor at any time has he has the people he has wanted to appoint in jobs in government. Republicans are saying NO to simple government positions just so this President cannot make changes to programs that George Bush put in place that are bad for citizens.
 
 
-1 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 20:27
Ahhh! An informed opinion for a change! The ranting seen in abundance here is sad.
 
 
0 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 20:23
Why don't you work to give Obama the Congressional support he has not yet had to date before you judge him? Sorry, but as someone who has worked in the streets for 40 years for Democratic candidates you really don't know didley about that of which you speak!
 
 
0 # Richard Wylie 2011-06-21 20:25
Wait a minute! 60% of his appointments and 80% of his court appointments have been blocked by Republicans. Can't even get a vote on the floor! How is this Obama's fault? How about getting real with the facts?
 
 
+18 # Savvylady 2011-06-19 22:38
Wow! I could not disagree more with the last writer. Obama has done a LOT...even though it is far from perfect and far from what I had hoped. The health care issue was huge, getting Osama was huge, and getting us out of Iraq (which was the ILLEGAL war, not Afganistan) are all to his credit. He saved millions of jobs with the stimulus and basically saved the auto industry. Do I think he has done enough--absolutely not. Do I think he will do more--not sure. I think he has made some critical mistakes in who he has appointed--absolutely. I think the real test of his heart will be when all of use progressives, regardless of color or gender, band together and elect progressives to Congress in large numbers. We've got a good chance of that in 2012 when a more of the blue dogs lost. Progressives need to go after those seats with a vengeance and also vote for Obama because not to do so is suicide and traitorous for our country.
 
 
+6 # America 2011-06-20 04:22
WHAT has Obama done? A flawed implentation of a potential game changing Health Care Reform? Changes to the Financial system which also have gaping holes that Wall Street and the banks continue to exploit.
Did you notice that annual fee for credit cards (which was discontinued years ago) have return. These corporatoins have retaliated with fury, under the covers. Why because of the ineptness of his staff in the execution of the potentially great reforms,
 
 
+7 # Michael C 2011-06-20 06:47
The War in Iraq is still going gangbusters. Even when "most" or the troops have been withdrawn - and the withdrawal is still only a promise - there will be 50,000+ mercenaries.
 
 
+5 # simple truth 2011-06-19 23:29
Obama's been handled & groomed by Brzezinski, Kissinger, and the military industrial complex (MIC) since his college days. Go study his past. He was installed as a Senator, and sold to the American public by the media, which is controlled by the MIC. He's a lying puppet, just as Bush was. Obama's just a better groomed, a more articulate showman, actor, and script-reader than brain-damaged Bush was.
Sad to see so many folks still refuse to admit this simple truth to themselves.
 
 
+8 # Howard Dickler 2011-06-19 23:57
Once I saw it was published in the LAT, I could understand the uninformed wording that resulted in the "collapse...of black power." Incredible! Personally, I'd call it murder! Also, there is a tacit misunderstandin g of all parties that comes from thinking Obama is not the product of "trained incapacity," the same as his predecessor, but, in contrast, the GW, Obama is really 'smart' in the sense that demeans "intelligent"--the very thing that made Malcolm X and Martin Luther--especially the day he denounced the Vietnam War and, I suppose, signed his death warrant. This debate is pretty 'stupid' for the way it kills the subject on the table. But that's what are country is. Murderous and in denial. The question for thinking people is how to have our April Spring? Meanwhile the "rationalization " of (cost-effective) domination goes on...
 
 
+4 # efsawyer 2011-06-20 04:23
THE FBI'S COVERT ACTION PROGRAM TO DESTROY THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY

By July 1969, the Black Panthers had become the primary focus of the program, and was ultimately the target of 233 of the total authorized "Black Nationalist" COINTELPRO actions.
 
 
+4 # montanamaven 2011-06-20 09:27
October 6, 2011 (10th anniversary of Afghan war) people are taking over Freedom Plaza in D.C. It is not another "protest rally" where you carry clever signs on a Saturday and then go home. The people going there pledge not to leave. It wants to be our Tahrir Square.
 
 
+26 # Ralph Averill 2011-06-20 00:25
If you really want Obama the president to act more like Obama the candidate, work to put a Democratic majority back in the House, and strengthen the majority in the Senate.
"Hoping he loses in 2012" is utter stupidity.
 
 
+5 # montanamaven 2011-06-20 09:28
Been there done that. Electoral politics haven't gotten us anywhere. Direct action like US Uncut and the October 6 Freedom PLaza action is what is needed.
 
 
+5 # Nel 2011-06-20 02:24
Any assessment of Obama's performance that ignores overwhelming power of the elephant, (THE LOBBY), is invalid, hypocritical. C. West knows that, yet he does not have the courage to say so because he does not want to lose his job. Probably both Obama and West think that keeping the job is the best strategy in the long run to regain USA sovereignty.
 
 
-1 # Nel 2011-06-20 03:19
PS, C. West is not L. Farrakhan. See http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article28344.htm
 
 
+19 # TB 2011-06-20 03:51
The idea that Blacks are anymore divided on President Obama than the rest of the Country takes the paternalistic view that every Black person "feels, thinks and acts in lockstep". These types of headlines perpetuate the same type of stereotypes as the ones that surrounded the OJ Simpson trial when pundits declared what "Blacks overwhelming believed". For some Blacks, Obama is a symbol of possibilities but that doesn't mean they voted for or support him. For others, he is a sell-out, because he hasn't done what they wanted him to do. He is a man, elected to represent this Nation. If you think you can do better, get involved, run for office or at least vote. But to sit on the sidelines and complain without action accomplishes nothing. I would much rather see 4 more years of Obama that have any of the Republicans candidates or leaders running the show. 2012 is more critical than 2008 because now we can all see what the Republican agenda really is--a war on women, workers and the poor.
 
 
+7 # America 2011-06-20 03:59
Obama has not made a move even after 2 1/2 years, to level the playing field for black and white opportunities. For decades this was a problem. Blacks are noticably absent from his cabinet. George Bush's first appointees were Colin Powell and Condolezza Rice.

He has not addressed the issues of the inner cities (like Detroit, Cleveland, Newark, Washington Dc etc etc.)which are predominantly black.

Obama takes the black vote for granted even though he has not addressed their cause!!!! In 2008 25% of the Democratic vote was Afican American (AA) even though they are only 12% of the total poulation.

Obama can ignore the AA vote at his own peril.

There is now no great desire, as there was in 2008 with the promise of a black President to vote Democratic. Nothing has changed with the so called 'black' President. A smart Republican candidate for President will have a golden opportunity to grab a large part of the AA vote which could make the difference.

Bottom line:
When Obama had the big majority in Congress he never addressed these issues and having lost the majority in the mid-term there is now NO possibility.

His defeat is at hand, the only shred of hope is that the Republicans themselves are disorganized and do not have a cohesive message and well defined candidate yet!!
 
 
0 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:34
I believe if he was a better leader blacks who are Republicans, a really unbelievable stupid thing, would have changed parties. However, with his lack of attention to America, Jobs, and his lack of cleaning out Washington, he has perhaps lost more
black votes along with other Racial and Religious groups.

I hate quarterbacks who wait til the last quarter to try to win the game, it usually backfires.
 
 
+2 # TrueAmericanPatriot 2011-06-20 11:40
Quoting
I believe if he was a better leader blacks who are Republicans, a really unbelievable stupid thing, would have changed parties. However, with his lack of attention to America, Jobs, and his lack of cleaning out Washington, he has perhaps lost more
black votes along with other Racial and Religious groups.

I hate quarterbacks who wait til the last quarter to try to win the game, it usually backfires.


KH, the black republicans are who they just want to be; no persuasion from Obama, or anyone else, no matter how effective of a leader they are, these individuals have assimilated themselves with the good ole boys. Michael Steele thought at one time "that he was in like flynn," only to find out he was no longer needed after the repugs re-took the House. I have and continue to watch all of the stonewalling and sabotage of the "extreme reich," in an effort to frustrate the electorate (succeeded in 2010) enough to lie their way back into power. Focusing on the House and Senate activity will give you a broader picture of what is going on. On Election Night 2008 when Obama was declared the winner, I kept telling my friends and fellow citizens, THIS IS NOT OVER! Our next goal was to flush the rest of the repugs and blue dog sellouts right into the sewer. Few listened, stayed home during the midterms, and are now suffering.
 
 
-3 # Paul Foster 2011-06-21 11:40
What about Erik Holder the attorney General- pretty high level for his first term How about the EPA administrator? He tried to get a African AMmrican for homeland security as well.
 
 
+13 # Sunnyduck 2011-06-20 04:16
Mr. Obama was elected President not Dictator. Has everyone forgotten our dysfunctional senate? Or our 2 party form of government that lumps together all sorts of ideologies under 2 banners? Blue Dog democrats would not be democrats if 3rd, 4rth or 7th parties could gain access to representation in Washington. But they can't so these people turn to the Democratic party and President Obama has to deal with it all – it is definitely like herding cats. Do I wish the Obama administration had accomplished more – absolutely. Am I grateful for what they have done – absolutely. Do black Americans have issues that need to be addressed because the basic social injustice that they are suffering is due to long standing systemic racism – absolutely. Long term the election of a black President will help in resolving the issues facing the black community because if nothing else it has allowed the undercurrent of racism that has always been with us to rise to the surface for everyone to see. It can no longer be denied. We can't pretend anymore that as a country we have arrived at a post racial stage... The last thing we need is to have this President lose the next election.
 
 
-4 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:36
Blacks do not have the precedent in getting favors and I am glad for that. he has not played that bad trump. All Americans desrve his attention, only he looks to Republicans like some idols.
 
 
+3 # SallyB 2011-06-20 04:24
The thing is that at the end of the day, we are all Americans, be we black, white, latino or whatever. Remember that Obama reminded us in 2004 at the Democratic convention that there isn't a black America or a white America or an Asian America or a Latino America, we are ALL the United States of America. Until people realize this and want to compartmentaliz e themselves, nothing will ever get accomplished. Everyone seems determined to be one thing or another: conservative, liberal, black, white, Asian, Native, Latino, gay, straight, what-have-you, and as long as we as Americans don't want anything to do with "the other" but want to stay with our own kind, then problems will persist. Obama showed us where his vision lies as a Senatorial candidate in 2004. He's not "just black" or "just biracial", he's President of a vast and diverse country made up of all kinds of people, but at the end of the day, we are ALL one people who should be working toward a common end, and that is a better country for EVERYONE regardless of race, gender, sexual identity, age or whatever compartment people want to assign to themselves. Let's stop pidgeon-holing everyone into their own little boxes and instead, let's try as one people to solve our nation's greatest problems, because together, gathering our collective strengths, we can do anything. History has proven this. Victimization solves nothing.
 
 
+6 # montanamaven 2011-06-20 09:52
That speech was pablum. There is not one huggy feely America. There are two Americas; one for the privileged and one for the rest of us. And Obama has chosen which one he is working for. Read former Chicago activist/writer/scholar Paul Street's 2008 book"Barack Obama and the Future of American Politics."His new book is "The Empires's New Clothes". Street said the complaint early on was not that he was too white but that he was too bourgeois.
 
 
+7 # cdcl44@yahoo.com 2011-06-20 04:34
The real truth has been ignored in all this; Obama is bi-racial, as his mother was white as well as his father being black. The black community and media have invalidated his white heritage so they could trumpet having the first black president.Now he is criticized for not being black enough, instead of making his duel race a unifier rather than concentrating on one side to create division.
 
 
+8 # genierae 2011-06-20 04:43
In the preceding comments I didn't see one reference to the fact that Barack Obama is half white and was raised by his white mother and grandparents. How could he get a deep sense of his black identity in this kind of environment? I think that he learned early on to play down his blackness and assimilate as best he could. He must have felt "different" all of his growing-up years and as children do, would have tried very hard to fit in with his white family. As an adult he seems to be more inclined to his black heritage and so he has known both sides. I also think that he sees himself as someone who can always find common ground between two opposing parties, and that makes sense considering the way that he was raised. Throughout his life he has tried to resolve his racial heritage and this has shaped his character. Now he feels the same about bringing together Republicans and Democrats. I think that he is genuinely sincere in his efforts to find common ground, its just that Republicans are such neanderthals these days that he doesn't have a chance.

It seems to me that the job of president is now just a front for the power behind the scenes. I don't think that any one person can create real change in this corporate environment. True change must come from outside.
 
 
-1 # Ellen Simer 2011-06-20 07:01
I take the point and think there is something to what this writer has to say:


[quote name="genierae"]In the preceding comments I didn't see one reference to the fact that Barack Obama is half white and was raised by his white mother and grandparents. How could he get a deep sense of his black identity in this kind of environment? I think that he learned early on to play down his blackness and assimilate as best he could. He must have felt "different" all of his growing-up years and as children do, would have tried very hard to fit in with his white family. As an adult he seems to be more inclined to his black heritage and so he has known both sides. I also think that he sees himself as someone who can always find common ground between two opposing parties, and that makes sense considering the way that he was raised. Throughout his life he has tried to resolve his racial heritage and this has shaped his character. Now he feels the same about bringing together Republicans and Democrats. I think that he is genuinely sincere in his efforts to find common ground, its just that Republicans are such neanderthals these days that he doesn't have a chance.
 
 
+3 # K.D. 2011-06-20 04:50
The problem with Obama is that he's not the leader we thought he would be. Whatever Congress does, or does not do, Obama's job is to get out in front of the issues and define them for an increasingly illiterate population who cannot think critically. Obama has not done this. Why? I can only speculate, but my guess is that he became president because he sold himself out, like all politicians. At bottom, though he's far more intelligent than most, he's one of THEM. Politicians share common personality characteristics . What motivates them has little to do with the common good, and everything to do with acquiring power, money, and prestige. This is what our system reinforces, and he's a perfect example. Remember, as a senator, he abstained from many votes that would have defined him and shown us who he really is. Truth is, he was a stealth candidate. We progressives filled in the blanks and we all know the results. He's no Lincoln, not even close. To be a Lincoln is not to be a "purist," but to be a leader, and a pragmatic one, at that, a leader with courage and conviction, willing to face challenges Obama has no stomach for. I'm white, but I'm with Cornell West. Obama, in his collusion with Wall St., in abandoning his promises in the name of "compromise," makes disenfranchisem ent color blind. We are all black now--no disrespect to real black persons intended.
 
 
+4 # imapony 2011-06-20 05:20
"We are all black now"--Prof. West told us that when he spoke to my college a few years ago. ('04? '05? Bush era.) Indeed, it remains true!
 
 
+2 # charsjcca 2011-06-20 05:45
Interesting. The lack of sovereignty on part of the descendants of American slavery can be accounted for by the Americanization of every social movement that has come forth. The acceptable ones are, in many cases, half-breeds such as Tiger Woods, Barack Obama and Valerie Jarrett. Who knows from what mind they are speaking. They do not know Black Wall Street or the Chitterlin Circuit as social forces in America.

When the Deacons for Defense and Justice and the Black Panther Party formed the Americanized Blacks were swift to castigate them, casting away Black Power as incompatible with their goals. The evidence is that those movements were correct in their analysis of American culture. Marc Morial declared in August 2008 that America was an "AIRTIGHT CULTURAL VACUUM," thus capable of only responding to itself and their peers. As the late Malcolm X uttered, "Boss, are WE sick?" when characterizing the behavior of the Americanized Black folks. They take on the misery of the Big House.
 
 
0 # KittatinyHawk 2011-06-20 08:40
History is correct, we are all half breeds. there is not one nationality, color in us. With Wars, Crusades even the very argument of where we come from we are genetically unable to be one color.
That making hypocrites all the more funny to have to listen to.
 
 
-4 # delphine herbert 2011-06-20 06:12
The President has been blinded by all the shit thrown in his face as he continues to try to be the Great Corporatist Conciliator. If I were he, I would choose to go forward with COURAGE ENACTING all the things he should have done two years ago regardless of what campaign politics dictates. He might find the majority responding once again with pride, respect and enthusiasm. As it is, this strong 2008 Obama supporter is sitting the next election out.
 
 
+4 # Ellen Simer 2011-06-20 07:10
[quote name="delphine herbert"] "If I were he, I would choose to go forward with COURAGE ENACTING all the things he should have done two years ago regardless of what campaign politics dictates.

But - that's the deal! He has no mandate to "enact" anything - he can lead and make appointments, propose policies and sign into law those acts which had to first be approved by those who really do "ENACT"!!
 
 
-1 # TrueAmericanPatriot 2011-06-20 11:48
Quoting
The President has been blinded by all the shit thrown in his face as he continues to try to be the Great Corporatist Conciliator. If I were he, I would choose to go forward with COURAGE ENACTING all the things he should have done two years ago regardless of what campaign politics dictates. He might find the majority responding once again with pride, respect and enthusiasm. As it is, this strong 2008 Obama supporter is sitting the next election out.

BIG, BIG, MISTAKE! This is part of this country's problem now. People who have shed their blood and given their LIVES for you to have this privilege, and you choose to thrown it away like a cheap toy? If for no other reason, HONOR THE MEMORY AND EFFORT of those who help make the right for you to vote possible.
 
 
+2 # chick 2011-06-20 20:51
Thanks for voting Republican because that is what you would be doing.

I am getting sick of all you complainers.
What a lot of you did is give up and vote more Republicans in and now realize what a terrible mess this country is in.

Like Wisconsin for example and Florida and Ohio and shall I continue?

We have got to have a strong Democratic base to be behind the president and maybe then he can do something. You and I both know he never really had a strong Democratic base behind him even though some said the Dems had the majority.

They never did it was a very slim one and with the blue dogs that was it.

You do no want to see
No Social Security
no minimum wage
no child protection
no FDIC gone to protect your money
no workmans comp.
no legalized abortion
no public schools only charter.
no voting privilege unless you own property.

I can keep going on and on and expand on each but I hope you rmember what has come out of the mouths of these Repugs.

By all means complain, don't vote, and you will get all of the above.
 
 
-1 # Paul Foster 2011-06-21 11:43
Amen to that!
 
 
+13 # Disgusted Nana 2011-06-20 06:26
It is disappointing and saddening that all of you seemingly educated folks don't seem to understand how the US political system works nor do you understand how the US political system has been corrupted. You speak in such naive terms. The President is one man who is not to be a dictator in this system. He is also President of the entire country and must think for the the entire country. The main point is that the Congress, which most black people don't even pay attention to these elections, is the most important body in the process. If you still "believe" in the political system, until Blacks financially support and vote in people who will truly represent them and not the people who presently pay for them to be there, we will not see any sense of responsibility to us. Plus today, money has co-opted every rule, the good and bad that we are talking about doesn't even exist anymore because everything now is predicated on a few white men making loads of money and controlling everybody in the process. By our ignorance or just plain old denial, we help them. Wake up people!!!
 
 
0 # RICHARDKANEpa 2011-06-20 06:51
I would like to thank Erin Aubry Kaplan and RSN for his thoughtful article. It is reason that RSN is a cut above the political gossip sheets that pass as news on the Internet. Weiner gossip doesn't dominate the blog.



Computers teach people not to think. I wonder if Kaplan wrote his rough draft on a computer screen.
 
 
+4 # Luis 2011-06-20 07:35
Cornel West's critique was against the moneyed interests Obama has been supporting for some time now, be they the military-industrial complex or the corporations getting at the public schools pot of gold. This article is a perfect example of the neo-liberal/DemoRat strategy to distract from that critique. Also, are all Americans (as this article presumes in considering that assimilation = acceptance of materialistic/hypercapitalist values) in favor of moneyed interests? I think not...
 
 
+4 # BishopAndrew 2011-06-20 07:53
Obama is Jack Kemp reincarnated! well he is more a moderate republican than a Democrat on his best days. He fiddles while the poor and in firmed and the elderly and the worker and the student burn. He didn't give a damn about the folkes in Wisconsin and come next election he will try and say he did but as the old saying goes fool me twice shame on me. I wont be fooled next time. Lets deny him the nomination we did Lyndon Johnson. Ah those were the days when it mattered what you believed and cost you something if you put your butt on the line for that belief.
 
 
+9 # Lulie 2011-06-20 08:39
Yes, the game is rigged. Yes, Obama faces strong, moneyed opposition. What makes me mad is that he doesn't even TRY. He gives in before the fight begins. And if we say that fighting for what's right, fair and reasonable is naive and useless, we might as well just give up our democracy and wait for the dictatorship to formalize.
 
 
+4 # Janice Gilmore 2011-06-20 09:07
I have been a life long Democrat, but this party has huge problems. Number one, by reading the comments it is obvious that a lot of people do not know how the system works. A president does not have all power. Obama did the best he could with what he has to work with. Democrats eat their own. They will always come up short because they do not have sense enogh to band together to make the country better. Now we have an intelligent Black president and Democrats join the Republicans to knock him every opportunity they get. When the Republicans get back in they are going to make your life even more miserable. Look what has happened in 2010 elections. Republicans gone wild all over the country. And West should be out encouraging black fathers to step up and support their families, there is so much that can be done in the black community to make out plight better. But you have these people who feel that Obama is higher than God and he can do anything despite all the racism (yes right in his own party) and push back against everything he tries to do. He has to be pragmatic to get anything done. Those right wing hacks are not going to vote on anything that will help him to be successful. A lot of you bloggers need to go back and learn how the system works and how much power a president really has. Then maybe we won't see so many ignorant comments!!!
 
 
-1 # genierae 2011-06-20 14:43
Ms. Gilmore, you are exactly right. Thank you!
 
 
+1 # Disgusted Nana 2011-06-20 09:16
Most of us just talk about wrongs but don't take action. Obama said himself that he could not cause change by himself, that we were the ones we were waiting for, yet we still suffer from the Jesus syndrome, we expect to be saved by one man! He doesn't have much choice, when he looks to see who has his back, we aren't there!!! Wake up people!!!
 
 
+3 # Bill Clements 2011-06-21 07:28
I think the situation is a bit more nuanced than you are suggesting. As if it's simply up to all of us to become "agents of change" (many of us are already committed to that and acting on it).

Obama had a sizeable portion of the population supporting him when he began his presidency, and yet, that tremendous good will, the sincerest desire for truly transformative change (after all, didn't we elect the first Black president?) did not affect the choices he made for his Cabinet at the very outset (Geithner, Summers, Bernanke, et al); people who played a central role in the country's economic collapse of 2008 (Cf. Inside Job).

We HAD his back when he made those closed-door deals during the health care debate, when he refused to support single payer, when he backed off on closing Guantanamo, etc., etc. It's not like he made these decisions because we didn't have his back! On the contrary!

I don't know about others, but I don't suffer from the Jesus syndrome! But I think many of us expected more leadership, more push-back, based on the contents of his campaign speeches. Alas, we come to discover he is a New Democrat and all that that entails.

Many of us are FULLY awake and see the situation for what it is! I have his back on some things, but not all because some of his actions simply do not reflect my progressive/liberal beliefs.
 
 
+1 # Wotan 2011-06-20 09:48
People like Professor West should spend their time helping to circle the wagons
around Obama and re-elect him. The alternative is to keep bickering and whin-
ing and dividing the Democrat base and let
the Republicans take over. Then West will
really have something to whine and bicker
about. Unless he is one of THEM!
 
 
+4 # Bill C 2011-06-20 10:32
This certainly generated some heat, but I regret it's become a racial issue as the chief concern as voiced by Cornel West is that Obama ran on a populist platform but is letting his wall street campaign financiers call the shots. He has failed to maintain a transparent administration, continues to use military might without oversight in Libya for example, has failed to close the gitmo prison, and ignores the more populist and sound economic advice of Reich and Krugman. There are those who are disgusted with Obama and our wealthy elite Democratic elected leadership and those who are apologists for it. Obama himself said, as did FDR, that we needed to maintain pressure in him to honor his commitments. Apologizing for him because his job is so hard or because the GOP is intransigent hardly keeps any pressure on him.

I hold out no hope for our republic unless we can obtain two significant constitutional amendments: 1 to totally eliminate private campaign contributions, 2 to limit all corporate charters to five years length, at which time they are reviewed for their social and environmental actions at which time their charter is either extended or permanently revoked.
 
 
+3 # genierae 2011-06-20 14:56
Bill C: Stating facts about the problems of the Obama administration is not apologizing for it. Wishful thinking about what he promised during his campaign is useless, as he was not then in a position to know what he was really getting into. He is one man, and he is not supported by his base or by his fellow Democrats in Washington. He is under constant attack by the Republicans, their top priority is to destroy him, and they will take the country down in order to do it. This is not an apology, this is reality. The government of this country is hopelessly broken and it will not be saved. We must look to our own resources and work in our own local areas if we want to create change. No one is going to save us, we must gather our courage and work to save ourselves.

By the way, it hasn't "become a racial issue", it has always been one. This country was founded by white supremacists and as long as the color of his skin is black, racism is a big part of the picture.
 
 
0 # billy bob 2011-06-21 10:34
AWESOME IDEAS.
 
 
-1 # Paul Foster 2011-06-21 11:47
Abama tried to hold the trials in New York and what happen. Noone supported him and the new York Demoncrats did not back his decision. So where do you put the prisoners?
 
 
+3 # Robert Schrank 2011-06-20 11:47
What Obama lacks is a mass supported base. I was part of that kind of base that pushed FDR to bring about the New Deal. A. Philip Randolf President of the Sleeping Car Porters Union complained to the President about Black unemployment. FRR's reply was "okay Philip I agree with you now make me do it." Obama has no one out there that can make him "do it." What we have is lots of whiners and few if any organizers.
 
 
+1 # genierae 2011-06-20 14:58
I completely agree Mr. Schrank, bravo!
 
 
0 # billy bob 2011-06-20 17:35
The rift is not a "black thing". It's what's going on among everybody who voted for a liberal to undo the damage extreme conservatism has done to our country for the past few decades. We thought we'd hit rock bottom with king george II. We thought we'd elected someone who would really try hard to undo some of bush's legacy.

This isn't a "black thing" at all. If Michael Steel ran against Howard Dean for president. Howard Dean would get the overwhelming majority of the black vote. Black people are a lot more involved than the media gives them credit for.

This isn't a black thing any more than it's a personal thing a lot of us are dealing with right now. I, for one, have never been more disappointed in my life. I KNEW he wasn't a liberal. I pay attention. I still thought he'd, like most politicians, pretend he was more moderate than he really was. I guess I was right. Instead of being a liberal pretending to be a moderate to get elected, he's a CONSERVATIVE pretending to be one.

CONT.
 
 
0 # billy bob 2011-06-20 17:35
CONT.

Still, he's better than any repuglican. As for me, I'll probably vote for him in 2012 - BY DEFAULT, unless a true Democrat can successfully primary him. As soon as the polls are closed, I plan to take a thorough shower.

I have TWO relatives who met him personally and shook his hand on separate occasions. One of them is a repugnican who still didn't vote for him. Do you know what BOTH of them said about him? He really SEEMS genuine in a way you don't often run into around politicians.

It's true. He really SEEMS genuine.
 
 
-1 # wfalco 2011-06-20 17:45
Dr. West is disappointed because Obama is not "black enough."
This assumptin should not, necessarily, be completely disregarded by whites.
One only needs a little rational empathy to understand the gist of his concerns-primarily Obama's over -willingness to include Wall Street/corporate interests disproportionat ely in his policies. Fair enough...BUT...Obama has no choice but to play his moderate politician hand-at least for his first 4 years.
I believe the President is holding some hidden trump cards. It is a bit of a gamble but I am almost certain it is a game he is playing. The initial 4 year plan is to play the Uncle Tom. At least attempt to get enough white people to respect him, if not like him. And playing the cowboy sure does not hurt (see dead Bin Laden.)
I am fairly certain this is a highly intelectual man who is one step ahead the rest of us. The game he is playing is dangerous.
He may lose a sizeable portion of his base. But on the other hand he may get re-elected. My hope is that his true color(s) will shine once that occurs. The agenda will change to a more traditional liberal agenda-but only if he gains Dems back in the House and Senate-another critical piece to this political poker game.
 
 
0 # billy bob 2011-06-20 21:43
I agree ALMOST COMPLETELY. I've been thinking this for some time. Here's the problem. I also think it's a stupid game to be playing. Is Obama like bush I, or bush II? bush I was a one-termer who played exactly the same game to get re-elected and didn't. bush II disregarded the game and got as much of his (and his daddy's) agenda accomplished as possible, as quicly as possible, knowing full-well that he'd probably only be in office for one-term. He went on to have two-terms and double the opportunity to follow that agenda. Power is fleeting. People entrust you with it to get something done. Puting off your agenda is a very dangerous game indeed. You may not get the second term. In Obama's first term he had the potential support of a majority of both houses, including a 60 seat majority in the Senate. He squandered it. He won't get that opportunity again.

My hunch is that you're right about his plans. I just think he's wrong to make such convoluted plans in the first place, rather than just getting the job done immediately.

CONT.
 
 
+1 # billy bob 2011-06-20 21:44
CONT.

I have another hunch. It's that he's really trying to ease us into a liberal generation that will continue to have a demographic advantage for the next few decades. I think MAYBE he's thinking that by staying timid, he'll leave opportunities open for another Democratic president, and another. It's possible. If that's the case, I still disagree with his strategy, no matter how well thought out it is. The time is now. The problems we face are now. Many of the problems we face will get A LOT worse if they aren't solved immediately. We may not have another chance like the present - ESPECIALLY in regard to issues like the environment, the economy, the education of our youth, and our standing in the world as a whole.
 
 
+3 # tomo 2011-06-22 13:24
Often, billy bob, I've thought as you and wfalco do, about a game within the game. Sometimes I fantasize about Obama being visited with "an offer he cannot refuse."

Other times I think of him--as you and wfalco do--as luring the opposition into a sense of complacency so that, in a second term, he can emerge and conquer. Either of these scenarios could be some part of the picture.

As for the second one (luring the opposition into complacency), I object to it as you do: it's not likely to lead to succeed. In accord with a general pattern, Presidents are WEAKER in their second terms.

Finally, and as my real thought: I think the fellow has simply fooled us. He played us. He hopes to play us again. For a fact, all he needs is more points scored than the other guy/gal, and he may get that. What I know is that whatever his vote, my vote won't be a part of it.
 
 
+1 # billy bob 2011-06-20 17:49
By the way, i have a lot of respect for BOTH Cornel West and Melissa Harris-Perry. They're both known for getting to the heart of the matter in any political debate as far as I'm concerned. That's the problem. The President's allies and his most threatening enemies BOTH come from the left. He doesn't need to worry about being beaten by romney or pawlenty as much as being taken on or ignored by his own party.

This is a debate among people who have a great deal of respect for each other and are frustrated by the fact that we can't seem to work together as a team. President Obama does that to us.

As much as the right hates him and wants to see him assasinated, the left is PASSIONATELY tepid and unimpressed at this point. I can think of about three things he could do within the next week that could completely win me over for the next election without any reservations. They're ALL things he could have done, or atleast attempted to do, his first week in office.
 
 
-3 # jon 2011-06-20 17:56
All of this disagreement plays quite handily into the fascist/republicans intentions.

Divide and conquer.
 
 
-4 # RICHARDKANEpa 2011-06-20 19:12
The truth of the matter is that the West is in decline. Greece and Ireland more than the US. There is limits to what any country can do.

Maybe if Obama called for Blood, sweet and tears. Maybe if he really cracked down on the rich and arrested any who engage in capitol flight, but it might only make the economy worse.

Meanwhile Sarah Palin from an oil bubbly Alaska can promise a lot more.
 
 
-1 # billy bob 2011-06-20 21:30
What exactly do you mean by "oil bubbly". Are you refering to champagne?
 
 
-2 # BettyFaas 2011-06-20 19:52
What a lot of distressing comments, not up to the usual stimulating RSN comment discussions! I don't know which to be more depressed about, Obama or his "supporters."
 
 
+1 # Avon J. Bellamy 2011-06-21 05:57
I have said this many times - Obama is a president and not a king; everything he wants to do as president requres a consensus that involves the votes (one way or another) of 550 POLITICIANS! Some of whom should be sent to hell for selling out the American people to be petted on their heads by a group of greedy b's who control our economic and thereby our political system. Breaking this down to racism and politics is misleading at best - WE THE PEOPLE are controlled by THEM THE RICH and the lapdogs they have sent to Congress. Obama is as much a cooperating entity in this games as ignorance has made the rest of us.
 
 
0 # Hina 2011-06-21 11:25
These are not really a race issues (that's more a GOP problem)...these are progressive issues. West and Harris-Perry don't disagree that much. West has a way of telling-it-like it is..often dramatically. So this is more style than substance. As for black leaders as part of the mainstream...they feel they have to be hyper-sensitive to their white counter parts to work for broad-based issues and not call out the imbalances. Change is mostly instigated from the outside. Once you are in an institution, company, government, you become part of the culture. One voice in the many.

The USA is in a political culture clash..from economics to race/integration/immigration,wom en's issues, defense/offense and on. We've lost that lovin' feeling toward each other in some sectors.

We are creating the culture we want to live in...Let's make one where everybody wins and has a good life.
 
 
+2 # smallcityview 2011-06-21 11:53
"After the collapse of the Black Panthers and black power in the '70s," Putting that in the passive seems wrong to me. The Panthers and other black power centers were deliberately demolished, by assassinations and some other less dramatic methods, by the U.S. government. If the assimilationist trend has become dominant, it may be because any kind of real resistance attracts violent reprisal.
 
 
+4 # tomo 2011-06-21 17:39
Cornel is right. Obama is a yuppie in the White House. Just as being black was no barrier to getting to the White House, so it should not provide a shield against criticism now that he's there. It does not earn a free ride. Not a free ride from blacks or from whites. Not from white collar or blue collar. Not from poor or middle class. Not from gays or straight.

He is an utter opportunist. Opposition to Obama from the Right--where we must think some are too dull-witted to recognize their own most loyal servants--has distracted many on the Left from looking at Obama's appointments of the non-taxpaying stooge of Goldman-Sachs at Treasury, and his endorsements of Bush's appointments for the Federal Reserve and for management of Defense--as well as Bush's appointments for the conduct of our never-ending wars in the Middle East.
 
 
+5 # annualoath 2011-06-21 19:12
i've not read all of the comments by the readers, but here's what's always been obvious to me. the vast majority of us that voted for him really think we put him in office. but, the money of the wealthiest men on the planet who have no allegiance whatsoever to EITHER political party or to the USA as a sovereign country put him in office to do their bidding. he is just a manifestation of their continuation to loot the treasury, further the chasm between the super rich and the poor, pretend to spread democracy around the world but actually spread u.s. imperialism at the expense of you and me, people of color, and poor people in general and women. and as you can see these men are playing for keeps. just like it's nothing to them that our grandparents, parents, or children go without medical care, they have no care for any of us. as far as obama, he may or may not know what he's gotten into, but one thing he knows for certain is that he dare not deviate from there plans
domestic or foreign or "THEY WILL KILL HIM"!

to many of you, i know, this sounds drastic to say the least. you can go on fooling yourselves it you like, but these are the same world class criminals who've been seeking world domination for centuries. and they are closer than they've ever been.
 
 
+6 # sparmonio 2011-06-21 21:37
I agree with Dr. West. Obama has been a let down ever since he recruited Wall street onto his cabinet. I guess when he was campaigning and yelled "ENOUGH" to the corruption and pro-wealthy, pro-corporate stance of the disgraced Bush administration, I guess he was playacting, saying what he knew his supporters wanted to hear, but he knew that once elected, he would run his presidency not much different than George Bush. Obama hoodwinked us, how shameful given the state of our nation, our world for that matter. He was a Manchurian candidate created by the powers that be...can you say, Primary Challenge in 2012!!
 
 
0 # mia 2011-06-21 21:38
Um - isn't he just as white as he is black?
 
 
-4 # mtbanjo 2011-06-23 15:36
ms. harris-perry has the west style nailed, and shes no doubt offended at his pompous self promotions= which culminated in his "obama ain't takin my calls" diatribe, wherein he also noted that other lessor folk had gotten inaugural passes... where was his? harris-perry is herself a black progressive and has many points of agreement with west- but who can blame her for not getting around west's pomposities ..the guys another gates.
 
 
-3 # S.Carman 2011-06-24 06:18
Does anyone seriously believe that Gitmo would have been the detention center of choice had Obama been president before Iraq? Or that we'd even be in Iraq? Or that Osama Bin Laden isn't really dead now? Or that health care doesn't have a better direction now and a better impact on all poor including those in the Black community than prior to Obama?
What about DADT? Does anyone dispute that pragmatism on this issue helped get him elected and yet the country is evolving and more progress can be made on the gay issues if instead of slamming the president who is trying to manage such diverse opinions and still get legislation passed, we instead allow him more space to discuss next steps instead of "last steps". West's comments are well taken as an oversight to our progress as a people but I must take issue with the Obama criticisms insofar as the detailed implementation of that progress is not being made in a dictatorship but in as we all are a part of a contentious and struggling democracy. In that regard I much rather have Obama whom I believe to be a consumate diplomat, "At the Helm" (thank you aunt) than any, spelled A-N-Y other candidate. Frankly, I find it absurd to wish for the failure of this candidate even briefly...it is counter productive, and helps to squander a chance that we may not see again in our lifetimes, although I hope I'm wrong.
 
 
-1 # USA2012??? 2011-06-28 08:57
The reality of President Obama's term thus far is no, he isn't in control any more than any president during my lifetime. The one undeniable fact that can be leveled at his administration is that he has had to compromise his campaign promises in order to appear to be in charge. However, the stark reality of politics has once again shown the American populace that you can only lead those who will follow.

In order to promote a facade of being in control many presidents throughout history have had to buy into the opposition just to maintain what appears to be a leadership position. The GOP with the direct help of most American major media has proven that they can in fact effect political direction by subverting the power of the presidency by simply not agreeing.

The sad fact is "We The People" don't control squat, but are placated under the illusion of being self-determining in what we think are our own decisions: a time honored strategy that works every time. In roughly the words of Noam Chomsky, "In order to have free society the people must above all think that they are free."

As far as what President Obama has done for Black people can only be measured according to his hue and ancestry: he is undeniably the Black President of the United States. How that specifically helps Blacks is yet to be determined from my perspective.
 
 
0 # S. Wolf Britain 2011-06-28 20:10
It's much more than what you say. It's "the crazies", as people like Ray McGovern, former "al-CIA-duh(!)" analyst, and others have called them, the neo-lib/neo-cons, including ObamaCON, who run everything in the U.S. and the world now, the multinational corporate-fascist, globalist psychopaths and sociopaths who don't even bat an eye, or miss a wink of sleep, over mass-murdering millions of innocent people (which they hope to soon be billions). They, as that Machiavellian witch Madeleine Albright said, "...believe it's worth it..." (speaking of the slaughter of 500,000 babies and children by the Iraq sanctions from 1991 to 2003).

U.S. presidents since JFK have all been "al-CIA-duh(!)" puppets. Each one, successively, carries out the next parts of the globalist game plan for the crazies, instituting more and more of the steps cementing the destruction of U.S. independence and sovereignty, and the creation of their "New World Order (NWO)", the "Novus Ordo Seclorum" on the back of the dollar bill, one-world government.

The god in "In God We Trust" on the bills, is Lucifer/Satan, oftentimes fraudulently in the guise of "Jesus the Christ". They also have symbols of fascism, including the fascii and the eagle, on the bills, as well as the fascii on both sides of the dias of the Speaker of the House of Congress, in the Capital Building. Right in our faces!
 

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