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    Fire and race: Jeremiah Wright puts the audacity in Obama's message of hope
    by Robert C. Koehler | April 4, 2008 - 9:29am

    article tools: email | print | read more Robert C. Koehler

    What could be more brittle than "Americanism"? What could be more tedious than the mass defense of the teary-eyed, ahistorical ignorance for which it stands?

    We are still in the toddler stage of national awareness, apparently, too young to be told how we got here. Thus the fiery Rev. Jeremiah Wright, proclaiming the bitter truths of ghetto America -- skewering the ugly and cruel side of our righteousness, challenging the saintliness of our military might, railing about slavery and poverty and Nagasaki, committing the ultimate sacrilege of uttering "God damn America ... for killing innocent people" -- is just too, too much for the purveyors of genteel know-nothingism in the media who work so hard to make sure our presidential elections are intellectually stress-free and who have denounced him en masse with the all-purpose condemnation "anti-American."

    We once had a rampant, institutionally sanctioned horror in this country that eventually acquired the label "racism," and its overt practice was condemned, deligitimized, banished to the margins of society and more or less forgotten. Shhh . . . don't wake it up. Our vestigial memory of that bad old aberration is contained in the scolding no-no of political correctness, which reduces the old sin of racism -- the massive dehumanization of a large segment of the population -- to a frowny-face infraction: the giving of offense.

    This allows aggrieved white people to nurture their own sense of victimization, and it is these folks that Wright "offends," as the media inform us, by talking "divisively" about such things as black liberation, with the implication that the African-American experience in this country remains separate and unequal and that the old-fashioned kind of racism, white against black, hasn't really gone away, just altered its form.

    To say such things bluntly is so not-PC -- especially to say it while black -- and thus, as we all know, Wright has become a big problem for Barack Obama, the leading Democratic contender for his party's presidential nomination and a member of Wright's Chicago church, Trinity United Church of Christ. Indeed, we all know as well that membership in Wright's church isn't merely a political front for Obama, but that the outspoken pastor is his spiritual mentor. (The title of Obama's book "The Audacity of Hope" comes from one of Wright's sermons.)

    So, whoops. Obama-whose-middle-name-is-Hussein has deep ties to a pastor who's a consensus anti-American. In American politics, this is called cut-and-run time. Instead, Obama gave one of the most honest -- and therefore courageous -- speeches I can ever remember hearing in the course of a presidential race.

    "Trinity embodies the black community in its entirety -- the doctor and the welfare mom, the model student and the former gangbanger. Like other black churches, Trinity's services are full of raucous laughter and sometimes bawdy humor. They are full of dancing, clapping, screaming and shouting that may seem jarring to the untrained ear.

    "The church contains in full the kindness and cruelty, the fierce intelligence and the shocking ignorance, the struggles and successes, the love and, yes, the bitterness and bias that make up the black experience in America.

    "And this helps explain, perhaps, my relationship with Reverend Wright. I can no more disown him than I can disown the black community."

    As I savor the lack of retreat in Obama's words, what occurs to me is that presidential politics really does -- or can -- have something to do with "change," by which I mean neither political buzzword du jour nor the kind of change that slips in through the backdoor via secret agendas, which is what the profoundly anti-American presidency of George Bush has brought us.

    And furthermore, it's not the elected leader who brings the change to the country, bestowing it on the populace like breadcrumbs or flower petals from the balcony window, but the electorate itself that does so, by knowingly choosing and embracing a different kind of candidate. The elected leader is himself or herself a part of some larger force, entering office not under the cover of cliche ("I'm a uniter, not a divider") but as the inescapable embodiment of that force.

    "For the men and women of Reverend Wright's generation," Obama went on, "the memories of humiliation and doubt and fear (from the years of slavery and segregation) have not gone away; nor has the anger and the bitterness of those years."

    The bitterness of the black experience the two men speak of -- Wright with a cascade of emotion, Obama coolly and in a larger context -- is not merely an accumulation of a people's hard luck and personal grievances, but something intrinsic in our national character, our "Americanism": from slavery to Jim Crow and lynching to the endemic poverty of the ghetto.

    "This is where we are right now. It's a racial stalemate we've been stuck in for years. But what we know -- what we have seen -- is that America can change. That is the true genius of this nation. What we have already achieved gives us hope -- the audacity to hope -- for what we can and must achieve tomorrow."
    _______

    About author

    Robert Koehler, an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist, is an editor at Tribune Media Services and nationally syndicated writer. You can respond to this column at bob@commonwonders.com

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    yes he did,

    he certainly did. rev wright did the unthinkable: he jumped out of the box and called out the elite who continue to run this country into the ground.

    and doing so with a slant toward the racial aspects was even more unforgiveable, because now the media is frothing at the mouth, unsure of what's the better angle to attack him from: race or patriotism.

    the fact of the matter is that in my opinion, he shouldn't be attacked at all. he told the fucking truth, as he sees it and lives it.

    you don't have to be a rocket scientist to understand that racism is still a major problem in this country. and you don't have to be eisenhower to understand that we are an aggressive, imperialist pain in the ass to most of the world, and have been for decades.

    and right here at home, how can anyone with a goddamn brain in their head believe that NAFTA, the FED and the healthcare cartel are GOOD for america?

    no. what happened is that rev wright had the balls to call out the whole system for the sham, phony ass white cape that america likes to don as it flits from nation to nation, spreading the cancerous thieving not to mention murderous philosophy masquerading as democracy.

    and i don't blame him for being pissed off about it, because it's time to be pissed off about it. does anyone.... ANYONE still believe the unmitigated bullshit that we're bringing peace, love and freedom to anyone? for chrissakes, we don't have it in THIS country, so how are we going to export it?

    Submitted by chomsky jr on April 4, 2008 - 8:09pm.

    Obama And Babies ...

    I'd worry as lot more about Obama than Wright who at least articulates the Israeli/Palestinian problem truthfully. If it weren't bad enough to read Obama's lickspittle, systemist take on our enslaved Middle Eastern policy, one gags at his disclosure in Pennsylvania this week that he regards unintended children as a "punishment". Time to throw this jackass over the side along with Hitlery and the rest of the Democratic Party. Not only does he lack passion, he lacks the most elementary good judgement.

    God help us to bring an end to this foul system and to the so-called "service" of the people that run it. When the dearest, most precious things in life are viewed as a curse by them, its time to turn things on their head.

    Submitted by John Lowell on April 5, 2008 - 2:06pm.
     
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