
Correction: Is Barack Obama Black Enough?
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Correction: Is Barack Obama Black Enough?
Is Barack Obama Black Enough?
Thursday, Feb. 01, 2007
For all the predictable outrage Joe Biden's recent comments about Barack Obama elicited, the gaffe put a spotlight on one of the more unfortunate forces fueling Obamania. Ever since Barack Obama first ascended the national stage at the 2004 Democratic convention, pundits have been tripping over themselves to point out the difference between him and the average Joe from the South Side. Obama is biracial, and has a direct connection with Africa. He is articulate, young and handsome. He does not feel the need to yell "Reparations now!" into any available microphone. 

But this is a double-edged sword. As much as his biracial identity has helped Obama build a sizable following in middle America, it's also opened a gap for others to question his authenticity as a black man. In calling Obama the "first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy," the implication was that the black people who are regularly seen by whites ? or at least those who aspire to the highest office in the land ? are none of these things. But give Biden credit ? at least he acknowledged Obama's identity. 

The same can't be said for others. "Obama's mother is of white U.S. stock. His father is a black Kenyan," Stanley Crouch recently sniffed in a New York Daily News column entitled "What Obama Isn't: Black Like Me." "Black, in our political and social vocabulary, means those descended from West African slaves," wrote Debra Dickerson on the liberal website Salon. Writers like TIME and New Republic columnist Peter Beinart have argued that Obama is seen as a "good black," and thus has less of following among black people. Meanwhile, agitators like Al Sharpton are seen as the authentic "bad blacks." Obama's trouble, asserted Beinart, is that he will have to prove his loyalty to The People in a way that "bad blacks" never have to. Obama, for his part, settled this debate some time ago. "If I'm outside your building trying to catch a cab," he told Charlie Rose, "they're not saying, 'Oh, there's a mixed race guy.'" Obama understands what all blacks, including myself, know all too well ? that Amadou Diallo's foreign ancestry could not prevent his wallet from morphing into a gun in the eyes of the police. 

For years pundits excoriated young black kids for attacking other smart successful black kids by questioning their blackness. But this is suddenly permissible for presidential candidates. Beinart's good black/bad black dynamic is the sort of armchair logic that comes from not spending much time around actual black people. As the New Republic points out, Sharpton has an overstated following among black people. In 2004, when Sharpton ran for President, his traction among his alleged base was underwhelming. In South Carolina, where almost half of all registered Dems were black, both John Kerry and John Edwards received twice as many black votes as Sharpton. But this hasn't stopped media outlets from phoning Sharpton whenever something even remotely racial goes down. And it hasn't stopped writers from touting Sharpton's presumed popularity among black people, as opposed to "palatable" black people like Obama. 

The black-on-black argument seemed to be bolstered by recent polls showing Obama significantly trailing Hillary Clinton among black voters. But reading into poll numbers that way is a clever device, hatched by mainstream (primarily white) journalists who are shocked ? shocked! ? to discover that black people aren't as dumbstruck by Obama as they are.
What they fail to understand is that African-Americans meet other intelligent, articulate African-Americans all the time. In almost every cycle since 1984, at least one of these brave chaps has run for President. Forgive us if we don't automatically pledge our votes to Obama and instead make judgments based on things besides skin color ? like, heaven forbid, issues. Joe Biden may have misspoken ? and in the process probably destroyed any remote hopes of winning the nomination ? but he spoke truthfully for a lot of his ilk; Obamania is rooted in the belief that 50 Cent, not Barack Obama, represents the real black America. 

Back in the real world, Obama is married to a black woman. He goes to a black church. He's worked with poor people on the South Side of Chicago, and still lives there. That someone given the escape valve of biraciality would choose to be black, would see some beauty in his darker self and still care more about health care and public education than reparations and Confederate flags is just too much for many small-minded racists, both black and white, to comprehend.
Barack Obama's real problem isn't that he's too white ? it's that he's too black.
Correction from Bana2166: I want to apologize to thoses who read the previous story about claims that where made by Reverend Jesse Jackson towards Barack Obama.... It turn out that the claims where not true .... That is why I want to apologize to previous readers of this article and correct the mistake immediately (Sorry Al Saqr, Tilezanj and Etc)
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Jessie Jackson est le chien chien d'Aristide, un vrai sal*pard. Un arriéré mental, un corrompu, un type qui profite des largesses d'Aristide, et donc qui tue des enfants en Haiti, qui favorise la prostitution, le crime, la drogue et le kidnapping.
Je pourrais même penser que c'est dommage que le KKK ne se soit pas occupé de lui.
En plus c'est un raciste pour oser dire ce genre de chose. Un blanc dirait ça, on le mettrait en prison.
Vive Barack Obama !
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Yoji Cole Opinion of Diversityinc: Is Barack Obama "Black Enough"?
Is Obama 'Black Enough'?
By Yoji Cole
Even before Barack Obama announced his candidacy, the media marveled at his rock-star status, a moniker heaped on public personalities when crowds gather in the thousands to see or hear them. For Obama, those crowds have mostly been white.
At first I thought Obama's crowds were mostly white because black America was collectively reserving its excitement for fear that whites would be turned off if too much of Obama's support was from blacks. After listening to black columnists, politicians, ministers and everyday black people question Obama's "blackness," however, I'm dismayed to hear how many in the nation's black community question his allegiance based mostly on his education and lack of a direct link to the civil-rights era or an inner-city background.
"Other than color, Obama did not - does not - share a heritage with the majority of black Americans, who are descendants of plantation slaves," wrote Stanley Crouch in his New York Daily News column.
How troubling. I remember a time when black America's tent was wide open because America's "one drop" rule huddled the nation's caramel-skinned to dark-skinned people, basically any person with one drop of African blood, under that big top. "What to racist whites was a stain of impurity became a badge of pride," writes Orlando Patterson in Time magazine. Patterson adds that black America welcomed leaders who were immigrants themselves or whose parents where immigrants, such as W.E.B. DuBois, whose father was Haitian; Jamaican Marcus Garvey, one of the most influential black leaders of the early 20th century; or others, such as Malcolm X, Shirley Chisholm, Stokely Carmichael, Harry Belafonte and Sidney Poitier, all of whom were either immigrants or whose parents were immigrants. 

Black leaders today must be more than civil-rights leaders or black Horatio Alger characters. The diversity of the nation requires that, and while some black Americans question his blackness, other black Americans and immigrant Americans see his ability to unite the nation.
African-American voters wonder why white America loves him so much, said Melissa V. Harris-Lacewell, a Princeton University professor who has followed Obama's political ascent, in an NBC Nightly News report.
Obama, whose black father was from Kenya and whose white mother was from Kansas, has dealt with such questions before. Recent public challenges came from black Republican Alan Keyes, whom the GOP recruited to run against Obama for the U.S. Senate seat for Illinois. Obama won. But the fact that the GOP put Keyes against Obama says everything about race's place in American politics?it's like moths to a light. Keyes, who is from the southeastern United States, was sent to Illinois to run against Obama. With no connections to Chicago, it appeared the move was for no other reason than that Keyes is black.
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Al Saqr ... You could boooo me all you want - Thats your opinion
But Al - I do not make the news, I just post it .... But just because I post it - That does not mean I believed in it ...
its news (Good or Bad) and I'm just the messenger .....
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When he was a candidate himself, a reporter asked him: Reverend Jackson, what are you planning to do for defense?
He replied:
Well, brother, it depends how big the yard is (thinking it was the fence)
He is jealous because he never enjoyed Obama's popularity with the white people.
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Obama's Wife Rips His Foes
OBAMA'S WIFE RIPS HIS FOES
By GEOFF EARLE
February 13, 2007 --
Barack's blunder / Editorial
WASHINGTON - Michelle Obama has lashed out at her husband's 2008 rivals for peddling "baseless claims" against him - including charges that "he is not black enough, he is not white enough," according to a transcript of her surprising remarks to supporters.
Michelle, a Harvard-schooled lawyer, took on the role of campaign hatchet woman against Sen. Barack Obama's political opponents when she introduced her husband to 1,000 donors at a $1.5 million fund-raiser Sunday night in Chicago.
"Don't be fooled by people who claim that it is not his time. We are all too familiar with those baseless claims," she fumed.
"We've heard this spewed from the lips of rivals . . . every phase of our journey: He is not experienced enough, he should wait his turn. He is too young, he is not black enough, he is not white enough . . . he is too articulate, he can't raise the money."
"Don't be fooled by these claims, because they are mere distractions," she said. "Distractions that keep us mired in fear so that we are unable to focus on the real issues that are dragging us down as a nation."
Only in the world of politics, Michelle Obama said, "would insiders dare to look at those accomplishments and dare to have the audacity to say he is not ready."
The unusually harsh comments - delivered the same weekend that Obama officially launched his campaign - appeared to be tough shots at other Democratic White House hopefuls.
Last month, after Obama announced his presidential exploratory committee, his rival Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) called for a "spirited debate . . . about experience" - a dig at Obama's short time in the Senate.
Clinton also has repeatedly refused to say whether she believes the Illinois Democrat is qualified to be president.
Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.), another presidential contender, apologized to Obama after saying in an interview, "I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man."
Another presidential rival, Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), said recently on CBS: "I think experience matters to people. The stakes are very, very high right now. This is not a time for on-the-job training."
Obama spokesman Bill Burton, said Michelle Obama was only making a "lighthearted comment" that was warmly received. Asked which "rivals" she was referring to, he responded in an e-mail, "more than one candidate has made such allusions."
The comments were recorded by a newspaper pool reporter whom the Obama campaign had barred from entering the room when Michelle Obama was speaking.
The reporter listened to her speech through the wall of an adjoining room and then distributed quotes from the speech to other media. The Obama campaign didn't dispute the remarks attributed to Michelle.
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lol @ Al Saqr!...I agree, fck Jessie.
Sexy handsome Obama got my vote!
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Bana, I know, I didn't want to "booh" you, but Jesse Jackson. You're doing a great job informing us, and I really appreciate it.
Please don't take it personnaly, it wasn't aimed at you. Au contraire, je te suis reconnaissant d'avoir partagé cette info avec nous.
Madan Azibé, héhéhé, alors c'est ça ton type d'homme
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