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WORD COUNT
660
MAY 20, 2008
PRESIDENT
OBAMA AND THE HARSH RACIAL REALITY – by Dedrick Muhammad
The black
love affair with President Barack Obama is stronger than with any figure
in the post-civil rights era. According to a recent “New York Times”
poll, President Obama enjoys a 96 percent approval rating among African
Americans. As an African American myself, I too feel pride and joy in
seeing one of us succeed and attain so much respect and acclaim in the
United States, a country with such a strong and recent history of racist
oppression and alienation.
I also
appreciate having such a positive black male role model on constant
display to the entire world. To have a black man with a loving black
family in the White House is the most positive coverage on television
since the Huxtables from “The Cosby Show” ruled the airwaves. Yet, as
happened during The Cosby Show’s run, it’s important to not confuse the
success of a black family on TV with the reality of African-American
families across the country. During the 1980s, as Americans and others
around the world watched the wealthy, professional, two-income Huxtable
family, blacks were recovering from a recession that saw their
unemployment rate reach 20 percent. They were feeling the effects of the
U.S. manufacturing decline, the rise of the single-parent family, and a
war on drugs that quickly became a new reason to incarcerate en masse
poor black males.
Today,
black Americans are in the midst of another recession, and this one
promises to have depression-like effects on the community. Economic
Policy Institute President Lawrence Mishel estimates that 40 percent of
African Americans will have experienced unemployment or underemployment
by 2010. According to this analysis, the rise in unemployment will
disproportionately affect the community, increasing child poverty from
one-third of African-American children to slightly over half.
In light
of such disturbing numbers, it truly is incredible that blacks give such
high ratings to the president. Nearly 90 percent of African Americans
are generally optimistic about the next four years with Obama, and 86
percent approve the way he’s handling the economy. As part of my work at
the Institute for Policy Studies, I contributed to a “report card” on
Obama’s first 100 days in office. I was asked to give a grade between 1
and 10 on Obama on racial equality, particularly as it relates to
economics: a 5 represented no improvement from the Bush administration
and a 10 represented change you can believe in. I gave President Obama a
6. As African Americans enter the worst economic times in over a
generation and disparity grows between black and white America, I
couldn’t find a way to give a higher ranking — regardless of how great
it feels to watch him on television.
In spite
of such strong support and the precarious socioeconomic position of the
African-American community, Obama hasn’t addressed the challenge of
growing racial inequality. I don’t believe this is due to a lack of
concern on his part, but rather the recognition of a harsh political
reality. Apparently, much of the United States is ready to have an
African-American president, but isn’t willing to confront racial
inequality as a whole. It will be an ironic and sad commentary on the
nation if the first African-American president presides over the worst
socioeconomic decline of blacks in decades.
In dealing
with the disenfranchisement and alienation of African Americans, the
United States has a long history of viewing the end of one particular
form of discrimination (such as Jim Crow segregation or the election of
an African American president) as reflecting socioeconomic equality of
opportunity for the entire marginalized group. The sad truth is that the
long history of racial inequality appears to be deepening rather than
coming to an end, despite Obama’s election. So although black, white,
indigenous, Asian, Arab, and Latino Americans may come together to
support Obama, no change we can believe in — at least as it relates to
racial inequality — is on the horizon. However, just like in the 1980s,
it certainly can be found on TV.
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Dedrick
Muhammad is the senior organizer and research associate for the
Inequality and Common Good Project of the Institute for Policy Studies
in Washington, D.C. –
www.ips.org
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