Well that’s very cool. I was featured for joke of the week with one of my Obama jokes. Pick it up at newsstands today!By the way, if you don’t yet support Obama, holla. I’m happy to spend mad time convincing you. That, or you can just read my blog over the past month and come to the appropriate conclusion.
Archive for January, 2008
Some Quick Thoughts - One Is Mean
cross-posted to Jack & Jill PoliticsI’m in a California hotel after giving a talk to students at the Five Colleges consortium in Claremont. (great students BTW).I turned on Anderson Cooper, and he had Claire McCaskill and Stephanie Tubbs Jones on talking about Obama and Clinton, respectively. Tubbs Jones tried to act like Florida was such a big deal, blah blah.Then it occurred to me what really bothers me about her:Stephanie Tubbs Jones doesn’t close her mouth when she’s not speaking. Look!
If this isn’t a sign that we are at the peak of empire, I don’t know what is
Ted Kennedy’s Endorsement of Obama (full video - 20min)
Thanks to Redlasso, I present the entire Ted Kennedy speech which you cannot yet find on YouTube.
Ice cream truck in January?
Greatest truck company ever
On north capital st in DC
From South Carolina: Canvassing and More
cross-posted to Jack & Jill Politics We’ve been fortunate to have some folks in South Carolina willing to share their experiences during the primary week. Below we have another dispatch. This one is from Hugh, and he offers some details and insights into what it’s like to canvass for Obama, the importance of election clerks and more. Enjoy, and thanks to Hugh for sharing.
All went quite smoothly here in Anderson County. Over the course of the day we had a combined total of 30 phone bankers, canvassers, and poll checkers at my house: white, black, Indian-American, young (16), old (65), male, female. Our precinct went 2-1 for Obama, both against Clinton and against Edwards, matching their combined total. The clerk of elections in our precinct was an advocate for all voters, going out of his way to assist those without the straightforward credentials, guiding them with provisional ballots, changes of address forms, etc, and spending substantial time on the phone with the county office to track down where folks needed to be if they were in the wrong place.Our election protection attorney, a law student from the University of Tennessee, supposed that about five percent (~30) of the voters might not have otherwise been counted had the clerk not been such a staunch advocate for all of them. For rural upstate South Carolina, the epicenter of neo-confederate thinking, to have such a clerk was refreshing. Of course this was not the case at all precincts in Anderson, but our election attorneys were there to fight for the voters. The law student was very moved by the day. He had only just gotten involved, and had expected to lift a finger for Obama in Tennessee, but now he will “work his ass off.”Other than a few hours of phone calls, I spent the entire day canvassing a small “turf” of about 80 houses, repeatedly hitting doors and pestering folks until they voted. The day before these same doors had received precinct-specific door hangers reminding them to stand up and be counted. They did. This turf went 4-1 for Obama, with respect to Clinton and with respect to Edwards, thus he doubled their combined totals. I suspect that about 5 folks might not have gotten to the polls had I not pushed them more than once. This is what happened all over the state in precincts the campaign targeted for the get-out-the-vote operation. By the end of the day, our supporters started to get annoyed that we were calling them so often to confirm they’d voted. Redundancy fosters robustness though, and I think they will forgive us, especially if they catch a glimpse of Obama’s victory speech.
The entire democratic party in South Carolina is ecstatic about the grass roots network now alive in South Carolina. Many of us will be spending time in Georgia and our team will remain in place to make phone calls to folks across the country. However, I do doubt this network can fully re-emerge for the general election for anyone other than Obama. In Pickens, Oconee, and Anderson counties, these new grass roots were cultivated by a 22 year old jewish girl from Maryland named Rachel Levine, who arrived at the Greenville office in June as an unpaid volunteer. I cannot overstate the credit she is due as a local field organizer — after a month she was recognized for her efforts and started getting paid. She was tireless and it was so gratifying to see her exuberance last night. She knew the 20 pt margin was possible, and she hopes to be back here for the general election if Obama makes it through. Relative to all other counties in the entire country, these were some of the most pro-Bush counties in his 2004 re-election. Despite this, she decided that she could.As I walked the neighborhoods I had a big roll of Obama 08 stickers, and I gave them out to a handful of young kids — ages 8, 10, 12 or so — who were outside entertaining themselves in front of their respective houses. One african-american kid was climbing a dogwood tree in his front yard — hands and feet each on a different branch. I offered him some stickers, gave him about ten, and warned him gently to not go too far out on the limbs because dogwood trees are especially gorgeous in the springtime. He knew who Obama was and as I walked on down the road he announced from the tree “My name is Barack Obama, and I approve of this message!”
The Clintons, Black Folk and America - A Reckoning
cross-posted to Jack & Jill PoliticsI have been sitting on this post for two weeks. Much has already been said, but seeing Darryl Fears’s article in the Washington Post has forced me to finally hit the publish button. The article begins:
For nearly two decades, Yvette Wider, an African American, adored Bill Clinton, once described by a famous black novelist as the nation’s first black president.But now, after Clinton’s “fairy tale” remark about Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) in New Hampshire and a statement in South Carolina that Obama had put a political “hit job” on him, Wider said she feels she hardly knows the former president. “I was surprised to hear him make a comment like that, because I thought he understood our people better,” said Wider, who said she will vote for Obama in Saturday’s South Carolina primary. “It made me think he’s been playing us all this time.”Wider’s sentiments are echoing across black America — on blogs, Web chats and talk radio, where Clinton is being attacked as never before.
Finally.You see, I used to love Bill Clinton as well. I’ve met him on two occasions, once at my high school, the other at the White House when was enrolled in the Washington Association of Black Journalists teen training program. Clinton evoked all sorts of wonderful feelings in me. I assumed he was a great a president as most Democrats seemed to publicly think he was. But I was in high school during his first term and distracted by college during his second. I missed a lot, and over the past few years and especially months and most especially, weeks, I’ve come to a different view.I now start with a basic assumption that he was a good, but not great president. I used to long for the days of Clinton. No more. That longing could only exist when contrasted with President Brush-Clearer. But the low standards of subsequent administrations are no excuse to lionize the past and make it something it was not.Here’s my timeline of The Clintons (yes, they are a “they” and deserve to be capitalized):Pre-Obama Conventional Wisdom - 1992 through 2006: Bill Clinton The Savior
- Plays sax on Arsenio Hall
- Isn’t physically uncomfortable around black folks
- Looks good in black church and can handle the pulpit. Claps on the beat.
- Referred to affectionately as “the first black president”
- Appoints prominent black folks to positions of power
- Expands Earned Income Tax Credit
- Presides over booming economy
- Moves to Harlem. Which is about the whitest thing you can do in New York, but the rest of America doesn’t know that.
- Gets all statesmanly with global aids initiative and tsunami recovery goodness
Transition Period - January 2007 through January 2008: Cashing in on the Race Card
- Civil Rights OGs back Hillary
- Hillary Clinton has majority of black support in polls
- Meme spreads of Obama’s lack of black cred
- Sharpton says “not a lot of black folks grew up in Hawaii”
- Jesse Jackson says “Obama is acting white” with regard to Jena
- Andrew Young says “Hillary Clinton is as black as Obama”
- Shelby Steele publishes book, “Why Barack Obama Can’t Win”
- Obama wins Iowa Caucus, spilling hope-filled egg all over Steele
- Baratunde aka Jack Turner begins his next book, “Why Shelby Steele Can’t Write”
January 2008: The Ugly Comes Out
- The Madrassa Emails
- The MLK History Lesson
- The Drug Dealer Comments
- The Shucking and Jiving of BET’s Bob Johnson
- and dozens of other offenses including blaming all of this on Obama. (see: Clinton Attacks Obama Wiki )
Post Obama Relationship
- Black folks realize they can have a real first black president. Why settle for a wack substitute
- All folks, not just black, start to publicly dig into the past and challenge the assumptions of Bill’s blackness and his greatness
Here’s what they find.
- The mass incarceration of black men, due largely to a failed “War on Drugs” which is as farcical as our current “War on Terror.” In 1995 Bill Clinton had a chance to bring crack and cocaine drug sentencing into line. He did not. A generation of black men got their education in the prison industrial complex.
- There was the deregulation of the banking industry under Treasury Secretary Rubin which created the incentives and lack of oversight that allows the current subprime crisis. Rubin came in from Wall Street and returned a hero.
- There was the expansion of media consolidation, one of the most insidious attacks on our democracy. Media ownership. Communications licensing. All sold off to the most moneyed of interests.
- There was the missed opportunity to set us on a path of a sane energy policy that would anticipate the coming supply crunch rather than wallow in the temporary glut of low prices. No energy efficiency. No investment in renewables. Just the digging of a deeper hole
- (Update: I left this out but twas on my list). There was “welfare reform” which forced mothers into the workplace with nowhere near adequate health or child care options
- There was the sitting by and watching millions of people get butchered in Rwanda
- There was the set of trade deals that lowered our standards and helped gut America’s ability to provide for itself, setting the stage for our current vulnerable position
I’m glad the ugly has come out. I’m glad Bill Clinton’s face is glowing so brightly and so red; the better to see this campaign by. I’m glad Bill Clinton is getting down and dirty and using his considerable political capital to smear a great presidential candidate. I’m glad The Clintons are calling in favors from their black beholden elected officials and power brokers. Because every time they do, we get to dig up another little nugget which has us questioning the entire premise of “The Clinton Administration.”And I’m glad Hillary keeps moving closer and closer to Bill, closer to that co-presidency. Keep running on “experience.” Just don’t get mad when we help remind people what that experience really was, and why many of us never want to see it return.
PRI’s Fair Game Will Have Me On Friday’s Show
They called up yesterday after having discovered the Clinton Attacks Obama wiki we set up and wanted to talk about it. I think the taping went well. Check your local listings :) The show is run out of WNYC in New York and airs tonight (Fri Jan 25), probably between 6pm and 9pm depending on your location. Show website. Update Jan 28: The show is now available online. Go check it out
From South Carolina: You Can’t Unplay the Race Card
cross-posted to Jack and Jill Politics
One of our South Carolina voices is blogging much if his experience on his own blog at Anderkoo, having traveled down to SC to volunteer. I found this worth sharing, as it echoes what our own dnA has been writing about.
I was waiting for the moment when the Clinton campaign would re-spin the racial dynamic of this contest, and it finally came today. I have to give them credit: they have mastered the art of sour grapes. First, they — not the Obama campaign — raised the issue of race (it is almost never to a black candidate’s advantage to go that route). After letting it stink for a good weak, attempting to inject codewords like “young man” and “frustrated” into the national psyche, today Mr. Clinton knocks over the chess board: “They are getting votes, to be sure, because of their race or gender, and that’s why people tell me that Hillary doesn’t have a chance to win here.”
All these bursts of anger are about as authentic as Hillary’s tears: genuine, to be sure, but also coldly calculated. Deploying the political equivalent of method acting, our alleged first black President now suggests that black folks will vote for someone with a dark complexion on that criterion alone, and is thereby doing his best to marginalize a group of voters who are finally, finally having their day in the national electoral sun. What’s more, it’s a one-two punch, one designed to scare white voters by labeling Obama as the black candidate. It’s a shameful moment for the Clintons and for the Democratic Party.
Read the complete post here.




















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