TNR BLOGS

July 04, 2009 | 11:58 AM
July 04, 2009 | 11:32 AM
July 04, 2009 | 8:16 AM

March 09, 2009 | 5:19 PM
March 09, 2009 | 5:16 PM
January 07, 2009 | 12:20 PM

July 01, 2009 | 10:33 PM
June 30, 2009 | 8:42 AM
June 29, 2009 | 9:09 AM

July 26, 2008 | 2:24 PM
July 23, 2008 | 1:55 PM
July 17, 2008 | 3:56 PM

July 03, 2009 | 10:13 PM
July 02, 2009 | 12:57 PM
July 01, 2009 | 7:02 PM
COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
18.03.2008
What Obama's "Race Speech" Won't Say

I confess some small disappointment that Barack Obama has decided to give a speech on race in America this morning. No doubt he will touch both intellect and emotions, highlighting his ability to provide spiritual reparations for all the Americans whose racial nerves have been rubbed raw by this campaign season. But I'd prefer something more constructive. Unlike "faith," or "a new politics," when we talk about "race" in the abstract, we often gloss over the more pertinent subject areas in which social capital--which, for the child of color, is always lacking--dominates outcomes in the US.

As a bit of a counterpoint, I'd like to share some detailed informatics about black women today. I don't like to entrench myself as a race-writer, but I fear the needed progressive conversation on race and policy is being lost in the slurry of identity-based campaign meta-narratives we've seen to date (including the canard that electing a half-black man President will ease America into a  "post-racial" future). Three hot-button policy topics illuminate inequalities that are, of course, an enormous problem in a plural society.

Health Care

A study released earlier this month by the National Urban League says it all: Black women are in a bad way in 2008, especially when it comes to public health. Disproportionately affected by common killers like diabetes and heart disease, black women are also well-known to be at genetic risk for breast cancer at an earlier age, and in more aggressive forms. They also fall prey to uncommon killers like HIV/AIDS, with which black women in America are 23 times likely to be diagnosed than their white counterparts. This intranational crisis recalls the 2004 Vice Presidential debate between John Edwards and Dick Cheney, wherein, presented with that statistic, Cheney grumpily conceded that he "had not heard those numbers with respect to African American women." Edwards clammed up in equally unimpressive fashion, riffing on the trendy non-sequitur of AIDS abroad. Neither used their full time in making a response; neither was prepared to address the public health or social ramifications of such an epidemic (cycling mainly from black men to vulnerable women) within the black community.

The urgent need for comprehensive health care reform is painfully clear; more so given the triptych of poverty, poor education and inadequate access to treatment that I've encountered firsthand as a health instructor in communities of color. Last weekend, news reports detailed how 3.2 million young women--one in four--have some sort of STD (most commonly, chlamydia, herpes or HPV, which we know can cause cervical cancer). Black women were infected at twice the rate of other subgroups--with over half reporting at least one infection. Why this is not more of a national emergency I will sincerely chalk up to selective racial caretaking. Hillary Clinton rightly echoed the point in a January debate: "If HIV-AIDS were the leading cause of death of white women between the ages of 25 and 34 there would be an outraged, outcry in this country." There is not--but piecemeal, preventative solutions (better nutrition education, subsidizing the $360 HPV vaccine, promoting mammograms and condom use) are within reach, and well before January 2009.

The Mortgage Crisis

The home foreclosure crisis is hitting women of color harder than any other demographic group in the United States; not only did Black and Latino women sign more bad mortgages in 2006 than any other American subgroup, but these women were five times more likely to be offered a subprime mortgage, even if they had good credit. Much like the "free market evacuation" of New Orleans in 2005, predatory lending, so racialized, is a disgrace. In a nation where 49 percent of young women of color are the heads of households, recent market failures are undercutting the stability of lower- and middle-income black families with impunity. Communities with an 80 percent minority population account for 65 percent of home forclosures. During the housing boom, home equity had become a "last resort" for single female breadwinners (forget welfare queens) needing to deal with unforeseen health care, heating or educational expenditures. Today, such credit--that flawed but basic American tether--is in ruin for thousands of black families without a margin for error. As critics of Monday's bailout of a blue-chip financial provider have well-noted, no such gesture is forthcoming from an administration that has plainly broken all the homeowning families struggling with the market downturn, regardless of race.

Criminal Justice

In late February, while politicos were busy making hay of Ohio and Texas polling data, the Pew Institute released a shocking report detailing the uptick in incarceration rates and incarceration costs to taxpayers-without a proportional increase in crime over the last year. Simply, our nation is locking up offenders at an unprecedented rate, especially when they are black, though it makes little sense from a budgetary or deterrence standpoint. Today, one in 100 Americans--that's 2,319,258 people--is in jail. One in fifteen black adults is in jail, and one in nine black men between 20 and 34 (one in 100 black women in that age group) is also incarcerated. States are dropping an average of seven percent of their budgets on corrections, with no meaningful matching expenditures on prisoner reentry programs or job training to reduce the rate of recidivism. Countless inmates-again, mostly minorities-are therefore set down in the same neighborhoods where they were scooped up, hardened, virtually unemployable, and trapped in the prison outside jail walls.

No matter the root cause of disproportionate criminality in black communities, it is not hard to see the apocalyptic effect of mass black male incarceration on the lives of the black women and children who might otherwise comprise a traditional family unit. Though it spreads violence, disease, and has increasingly robbed prisoners of basic rights like freedom from bodily harm, state and federal governments continue to swear by the blunt object of incarceration-because it is politically expedient to throw the bad guys under the bus. To wit: criminal justice is one area in which Clinton has sought to distinguish herself from Obama, tacking right against his "liberal voting record on criminal defendants' rights" in the wake of her Iowa loss. I take this to mean the bill he passed regarding the taping of police interrogations in Illinois--an admirable attempt to repair the juggernaut, highly-racialized incompetence of our criminal justice system. Other such reforms are imperative.

*

I suppose the prior is no different from any laundry list of grievances, like those mounted on Obama's back here. But unlike "Jim Crow," or "the three-fifths clause," these are not problems of our past. These structural imbalances are current, real, and why some blacks, including intellectuals like Jeremiah Wright, feel no compunction about being very angry in America.

But many find it is neither anger, nor victimhood, but anxious tolerance that characterizes the experience of most minority cultures in America. Michelle Obama, when asked directly about the "race thing," tends to respond with a discussion of shared values-suggesting that black Americans are not so different in their wants and needs. Obviously that's quite true. But it's important to contemplate the fact that minorities are, definitionally, the integrators of American society. We know more of what is labeled as different from us--and have long internalized the idea that, without overt effort, majority culture may not return the favor.

Perhaps this is why two-thirds of whites say that blacks have achieved racial equity, or soon will--while eighty percent of black Americans are skeptical that day will ever come. And why it's fascinating that this week's political storm centers on perhaps the most hidden, yet integral part of black America--the church. Never mind that Trinity Church is the only majority black congregation in the white, liberal United Church of Christ. Of course Wright sounds "radical" (here, a synonym for the unfamiliar); Americans are likely nowhere more segregated than in their places of worship. Black Baptist, Pentecostal and mainline protestant churches have been running their own dialogues on race since before the civil rights era. White churches--or, "churches," full stop--have done likewise.  Turning back the curtain on this political schism has been a body blow to much of the American public. It's hard to lay blame for that.

But I do believe the principle of advocacy for the disenfranchised is the distinguishing feature of domestic liberalism--and as a Democrat, hope that Obama's speech today will not wholly avoid the earthbound, race-based ways in which inequalities fester in America.

--Dayo Olopade

Posted: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 9:10 AM with 11 comment(s)

Comments

You must be logged-in to comment.

Not a subscriber? Click here to get a digital or print and digital subscription to The New Republic!

purcellneil said:

Dayo,

It might be expecting too much - even of a man as wise and skillful of speech -- to hope for him to educate a willfully ignorant and indifferent white majority to the continuing challenges of race in America, even as he works mightily to assuage the concerns of that same majority over the raging rhetoric of Reverend Wright.  I hope he doesn't even try such a mission.

You raise issues that deserve to be addressed by President Obama and the Democratic Congress -- but we need to win the election first.  When he has the bully pulpit, I do hope Obama will take on the issues you have described above, and I hope in doing so, he may open some eyes among the white majority to see, to understand, and  to act.  

Neil

March 18, 2008 10:04 AM

roidubouloi said:

Nope, Obama isn't going to say these things.  Because then the same people who want to tar him with Wright would say, "See, we told you that Obama was just another "angry black man" all along."

Mr. Olopade, tepulukhin complains bitterly about the failure of the candidates to explain how they will solve enormous domestic and foreign problems.  He is right and you are right.  There are cultural rules for election campaigns.  Many things must not be spoken of, or spoken of only in code, or openly lied about.  So it goes.  

March 18, 2008 10:05 AM

PeteBeck said:

The existence of wrongs does not mean that any and all offered remedies are ipso facto acceptable.

Jeremiah Wright may  more or less correctly see the problems currently and historically faced by African Americans.  

But that is no reason to endorse anti-semitism and engage in reverse race baiting.

If he doesn't want others to judge him and his followers by their ethnic and racial identity, it is wrong to judge me (white Jew) by mine.

Obama showed a colossal lack of political judgment when he did not distance himself from Wright at the beginning of the campaign.  Maybe he's not as savvy as he likes to say he is.

March 18, 2008 10:08 AM

lymon1 said:

Dayo -- too much for one post!  

Dare I suggest that the best cure for all these problems is what we saw in the 1990's: demand for unskilled and low skilled labor, which coincided with the first time since Reconstruction that African-Americans rose faster economically than white America.  A good case can be made that Obama (and Clinton's and McCain's) "green card amnesty" plan to bring tens of millions of illegal immigrants "out of the shadows" is the single worst move the next President can make as far as "helping" African-Americans (I realize this is a great oversimplification, but I also think there's a "trickle-up" effect for middle class African-Americans as well).  National civil service is another bold idea whose time may have come, but our society may be too soft for it now.  

PS:  The cartoon is insane -- Ferraro's comments can be fairly (and I think correctly) criticized for being tinged with racism, but this cartoon strikes me as an attack on anyone who opposes affirmative action (wouldn't Bakke have said this to Patrick Chavis?)

March 18, 2008 10:15 AM

Gavriel Meir-Levi said:

Amen, as a White Jewish male living in NYC I had NO IDEA regarding the incredible burdens being carried by people of color, especially women, until a girl I was dating explained to me how her parents have had to move in with her aunt in order to avoid selling the family home at a loss... this was the home they bought as a family after being violently pushed out of a white neighborhood in upstate New York in the 1960's.

Maybe there's some symbolic truth to the folklore that Abraham Lincoln's ghost still walks in the White House late at night.

March 18, 2008 10:40 AM

johnalthousecohen said:

You refer to "the uptick in incarceration rates and incarceration costs to taxpayers-without a proportional increase in crime over the last year." This is implying that when incarceration goes up, crime SHOULD go up. Isn't that kind of...backwards? Ideally, if you're going to put more people in jail/prison, the crime rate should go DOWN! That would imply that the policies are working.

Now, I know there's a correlation/causation problem here, so I don't know whether or not the data really show that increased incarceration is reducing crime. But your critique reminds me of the New York Times' infamous headline, "Crime Keeps on Falling, But Prisons Keep on Filling." As Jonah Goldberg pointed out, this is a little like saying, "I keep eating pizza, but my belly keeps getting bigger."

March 18, 2008 10:47 AM

miceelf said:

Umm, am I the only one who's read the text of the speech, which is up on drudge and on ben smith's blog on politico? He focuses on the historical frustrations of African Americans and ties it to the anxieties and frustrations of middle-class and poor whites.

March 18, 2008 10:51 AM

lymon1 said:

miceelf -- I broke the embargo and read it.  Probably sounds better than it reads, not that it reads bad (I give it a B).  When he said that some will see this as an attempt to excuse the inexcusable, to an extent, yeah -- there are certain things hateful enough to disown a person and the "AIDS as genocidal white conspiracy plot" is one of them.  But nobody said you have to agree with your candidate on everything.  

March 18, 2008 11:09 AM

tkozal said:

But Rev Wright has made Obama toast now...he will never win the general I fear....

Why no discussion about the racism of Hillary's "working class white voters?"

March 18, 2008 11:12 AM

roidubouloi said:

I thought it was a beautiful speech.  I would have to hear it read to judge just how effective it is likely to be, but if it isn't enough for Obama to run on his merits, or lack of them, rather than the views of associates that he doesn't share, then so be it.  We will all pay for it, because, of one thing I am certain.  He will be the nominee of the Democratic party.  Effectively, he already is.

Lymon, go disown McCain for Falwell's claim that 9/11 is God's vengeance for homosexuality.  You'll feel better.  

March 18, 2008 11:28 AM

r-ennis said:

Race has not impeded very many people of color from escaping poverty since the 60's. In fact, it may be fairly argued that affirmative action has made it easier for blacks than whites to so escape. Poor whites, not rich whites have mainly paid the price for affimative action. They are justified in their anger.

Not only poor whites, but educated whites as well have paid the proice. My wife worked as placement director at a community college. The pecking order for promotion was (1) black women, (2) black men, (3) white women, (4) white men. The result in her department were unqualified career counselors, unfortunately counseling to a mostly black student body, thereby compounding the damage.

A spiritual leader of a potential Presidentl placing the blame for most of the problems in the black community on racism shows that he too is still fighting the battles of the 60's, a charge that Obama, ironically has hurled at Hillary.

March 18, 2008 12:57 PM