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Today’s Washington Post had what appears to be a no-brainer on the front page: “Blacks forming Rock-Solid Bloc Behind Obama”. Of course we are. We tend to vote democratic anyway, and the current GOP ticket leaves much to be desired for a liberal democratic leaning demographic that believes in merit. If it was Edwards, or [...]
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9 months ago
Where do I get my registration form for that?
9 months ago
Admittedly, that's a huge 'if'. That which usually represents Black political dissent amounts to chaotic shouting and militant posturing after the fact. But while the exercise of dissent is central to Progressivism/Liberalism and most Blacks vote (ostensibly) left-of-center, very, very few Blacks are Progressives. I'm less sure it's correct to equate Black political dissent with Progressivism. Or any 1 political ideology, for that matter.
9 months ago
As much as I think Obama has collected the last bushel of cherries to be picked for 'first blacks' there are still several trees left on the Right side of the political spectrum and perhaps for Blue Dogs as well. It leaves open the question of what the average hard working activists, pundits and other politicos are to do whether or not Obama wins the White House.
An underlying assumption that I have here is that the past two decades of CBC legislation has been all about nothing and the reason that there is no national black political agenda. That is to say no agenda other than spreading racial fear and distrust of the GOP - in the face of the destruction of Trent Lott, Ron Paul and George Allen over racial remarks. The reality is that Jena has little to do with anything other than Jena, and the journalistic coattails of any major media editor who decides that 'the blacks' need a little more coverage. The incredible success of Obama demonstrates how little has been articulated as a black political agenda.
Tavis Smiley deserves credit here in highlighting by Obama's dismissal of his Covenant with Black America how unconnected are the real political games at the national and local levels. But this also brings to light a deeper issue that as far as I know only Lani Guinier has the temerity to address - as little as she counts nowadays. That is that the creation of majority minority districts as a consequence of Civil Rights agitation has created the net national circumference of black political action. If Maxine Waters isn't whispering in the ear of the Clintons, then nothing is happening for South Central, and this monopoly of black political power established a generation ago has yet to be updated and reformed. Except by the GOP which has dynamically attacked those districts for partisan gain. In other words, black national political representation is deadlocked and moribund in the Democratic party because the same incumbents and their designees have had a deathgrip on minority voting districts since their inception. Hell, I was DJing for Maxine Waters receptions when I was 19. I'm 47 years old.
9 months ago
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9 months ago
Just wondering, because it seems like every time I turn on CNN and the like there is a new black republican on there.