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  • Obama's impact on "masculinity" and "power" in American culture
















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  • Report: Obama working daily behind scenes, pitching ConservaDems for public option


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Welcome to Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K.

Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. is a Pan-African Blog with an acronym that stands for Building Leadership Awareness and Cultural Knowledge.

The goal of this blog is to become a "Blog of Black Thought" focusing on matters of social, economic and political awareness through education (re-education), self-affirmation and cultural expression. Above all, this blog will DEMAND respect and appreciation for one another as black men and women.

In addition to this blog, I am also a member of the team over at Jack and Jill Politics. Be sure to swing by and check me out!

Got something to say? Feel free to visit and comment on past posts or Email me at: reachblackblog@gmail.com

Be Somebody

B-Serious

Words of Wisdom

“[T]rust your experience. Know whence you came. If you know whence you came, there is really no limit to where you can go. The details and symbols of your life have been deliberately constructed to make you believe what [other] people say about you. Please try to remember that what they believe, as well as what they do and cause you to endure, does not testify to your inferiority but to their inhumanity and fear. . .[T]here is no basis whatever for their impertinent assumption that they must accept you. The really terrible thing, old buddy, is that you must accept them. And I mean that very seriously. You must accept them and accept them with love. . . . We cannot be free until they are free.”

(James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time)

Thursday, January 31, 2008

A Progressive Being Consistent

Very interesting opinion piece by Bob Cesca on Huffington Post:

"If a Republican said something like "Jesse Jackson won here twice" or pledged to grab delegates that don't exist we'd be choking on our own tongues as we convulsed and gasped in shock-horror. There's no excuse for forgiving the Rovian games or the DLC calculation. Just because they're The Clintons doesn't make it forgivable."

So true.
Read more!

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Obama Rude? Not So Fast!

Let's see if the women on The View talk about this.

In her latest column, Maureen Dowd cuts through the b.s. Thank you Ms. Dowd for calling foul . ..

"Their relations have been frosty and fraught ever since the young Chicago prince challenged Queen Hillary’s royal proclamation that it was her turn to rule.

Last winter, after news broke that he was thinking of running, he winked at her and took her elbow on the Senate floor to say hi, in his customary languid, friendly way, and she coldly brushed him off.
It bothered him, and he called a friend to say: You would not believe what just happened with Hillary.


Again and again at debates, he looked eager to greet her or be friendly during the evening and she iced him. She might have frozen him out once more Monday night had he actually tried to reach out. . . .

Why had it taken so long for Obama to push back against Hillary? 'He respected her as a senator,” [an] adviser replied. “He even defended her privately when she cried, saying that no one knows how hard these campaigns are.' "

Doesn't sound like the heartless misogynist that some have made him out to be, does it?
Read more!

Big News . . .

Edwards is Dropping Out of the Race

This is huge news - News that I think will solidify the Democratic Nomination for either Clinton or Obama.

My take, it will benefit Obama. Why? Because I honestly think this race is a matter of ideas, not identity politics. If Edwards supporters vote their conscience, they're more in line with Obama. It's my view that Edwards supporters don't like Clinton for the same reasons Obama supporters don't.

The media is trying to spin it the way of identity politics. It goes something like this: Obama can't get white voters, therefore white Southern voters will flock to the only white candidate, Hillary Clinton. I don't see that happening.

Will Edwards endorse a candidate today? I think he will. I think he endorses Obama. That would be huge.

Obama/Edwards '08!
Read more!

The Pity Wars Continue

Once again, with the Clinton camp, it's always a matter of "us vs. them."

Exhibit #2

Now, I always take the NY Post with a grain of salt. But this story provides actual quotes, so I'll run with it.

Today's New York Post discussed "the snub" and "stare-down" heard 'round the world. This has nothing to do with anything that Obama's said, but everything to do with ascribing motivations where there are none, putting words in a candidate's mouth and thoughts in a candidate's head. Once again, Hillary supporters want to feed off of divisiveness, or, in the words of Pat Buchanan, make this about the "sisterhood" vs. the "brotherhood":

"Some female leaders, in fact, are calling the apparently contemptuous stare-down - which took place before the State of the Union Address Monday night - downright sexist.

'In general, they've been disrespectful, and I think that women voters are going to get very tired of seeing that,' said Marsha Pappas, who heads the New York chapter of the National Organization for Women."

How has Obama been disrespectful? I'll tell you what's disrespectful. Sending your black surrogates out to trash a black candidate. Having surrogates call your opponent a drug dealer, closet Muslim, a magical black friend. All in your name, Senator Clinton. What's disrespectful is trying to marginalize Obama's campaign as a campaign about race.

The article notes further criticisms lobbed at Obama.

"Comedian Whoopi Goldberg criticized Obama on yesterday's episode of 'The View' on ABC, saying, 'That's a hard room if you're Hill Clinton on that day . . . because everybody knows that you've been exposed in a way, you know, like somebody's snatched off your clothes.
'I was very proud of her for walking up and shaking hands, and going to take Barack's hand, and I have to tell you, I think he was wrong to turn away.'
"


What is Whoopi talking about? Hard room? You mean the same hard room where Hillary leads in super delegates? The same hard room where Hillary has more support amongst the most vocal members of the Congressional Black Caucus than Senator Obama, one of its own members? Senator Clinton is the establishment candidate. Her and her husband have been cashing in on political favors since the beginning of her campaign. Trust me, Hillary is not a victim. She was more than comfortable in that room.

Let's get something straight. The fact that some people have the audacity to back Obama over Clinton is not a matter of sexism. Maybe . . . just maybe . .. they like Obama more than they like Clinton. Maybe they see a chance for the Party to grow under Obama whereas the Clintons might have more selfish reasons in running for office.

Whoopi, I apologize if I missed it (which is entirely possible), but I watch The View on a regular basis (yes a black man can tivo The View if he wants to . .. lol) and I heard very little from that show when the Clintons were trying to marginalize Obama's campaign. I didn't see Whoopi criticize Hillary for any of the racial comments these past few weeks. I didn't see any of you guys criticize Hillary for sitting by while her attack dog, Bob Johnson, went after Obama on her behalf. Any criticism at all (and it has been almost non-existent) only mentions Bill Clinton - as though Hillary is some innocent bystander.

So let's get this straight. Two straight weeks of race baiting; a couple month's worth of veiled comments; and your show gives the same tired response . . . it's the media's fault . . . people are reading too much into things. But Obama happens to turn the other way (while Hillary is speaking to someone else!) and he's somehow being disrespectful?

You know, it's one thing to read into an actual statement (especially when those statements reveal a pattern of behavior); it's another thing to try and read into someone else's body language. Obama has been more than cordial to Hillary. He's been given opportunity after opportunity to call Clinton on her mess (Hillary never condemned Bob Johnson's statements). But he's taken the high road. When asked about Bill Clinton being the "First black President," at CNN's South Carolina debate, Obama said the following:

"Well, I think Bill Clinton did have an enormous affinity with the African-American community, and still does. And I think that's well earned.

Like John, one of the things that I'm always inspired by -- no, I'm -- this I'm serious about. I'm always inspired by young men and women who grew up in the South when segregation was still taking place, when, you know, the transformations that are still incomplete but at least had begun had not yet begun. And to see that transformation in their own lives I think that is powerful, and it is hopeful, because what it indicates is that people can change.

And each successive generation can, you know, create a different vision of how, you know, we have to treat each other. And I think Bill Clinton embodies that. I think he deserves credit for that.
"

He didn't say, "Stop picking on the black man. Black people should be outraged at his conduct. Bill Clinton is disrespectful to black people." Once again, he had the chance to do so, but he chose to take the high road.

Did Hillary take the high road with this whole "snub" mess? Let's see . . .

"Speaking Tuesday on Fox News, Clinton said, 'I reached out my hand in friendship and unity and my hand is still reaching out. . .'"

Just what I thought . . . she didn't take the high road. She chose to play off of the division. Typical.


Read more!

Part of the Problem

One of the things that drove me away from the Clintons was an ever present zero-sum reasoning; a myopic approach to problem solving whereby someone MUST win and someone MUST loose.



Well, it's not always that simple. Indeed, your gain does not have to come at my expense.



This zero-sum argument also feeds an unsettling intrigue in competitive victimology that I've seen from some Hillary supporters. It goes something like this . . . "It's harder for women than men. Hillary is a woman. Barack is a man. Presto! We win the Pity Olympics. Grand prize, President of the United States!" Very Steinem-esque, this exercise of intellectually dishonesty promotes an extremely shallow, politically convenient, approach to racial and gender discourse.



All I know is this. Somewhere along the road the euphoric feeling of having two historic candidates turned into an "us v. them" mentality. And it began to turn just about the time Obama began picking up support. Just about the time his candidacy started looking like it could really happen. Just about the time Hillary began to lose that aura of inevitability.



And no. I am not one to automatically castigate both sides just to sound "fair." True, there's often two sides to a story. But sometimes there's not. Sometimes people just start trippin.' As I stated before, at times, the Clintons and their surrogates convey a repulsive sense of entitlement to Power that is unhealthy for progressive politics.



I give you Exhibit A: The New York Chapter of The National Organization for Women (NOW) claiming BETRAYAL by Senator Kennedy for havnig the nerve to endorse Senator Obama. . .







I swear, some people think we OWE the Clintons 8 more years in the White House.



In fairness, it goes without saying, Hillary is not the one talking in this video. Additionally, NOW's national chapter has had a much more civil response, respecting Senator Kennedy's endorsement.



Still, there is a disturbing pattern at play. And it is consistent with a certain vibe coming from from the Clinton campaign - a strange phenomenon wherein enthusiastic support for Hillary quickly turns into unsubstantiated, unwarranted (and many times, unprovoked) disdain for Obama. It's very Roseanne-esque.



This is not the politics of unity, people.
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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

One More Reason to Vote For Obama . . .

John McCain just won Florida. You want electability? How about choosing someone who can compete amongst independents and moderate republicans? How about choosing someone who WON'T unite the Republican Party? Why not choose someone who hasn't already alienated a significant voting block of the Democratic base?

Don't just take my word for it. Listen to what Frank Rich had to say in his latest column, "The Billary Road to Republican Victory :"

"[John McCain is] a bazooka aimed at most every rationale [Hillary Clinton has] offered for her candidacy.


In a McCain vs. Billary [his phrase, not mine] race , the Democrats will sacrifice the most highly desired commodity by the entire electorate, change; the party will be mired in déjà 1990s all over again. Mrs. Clinton’s spiel about being “tested” by her '35 years of experience” won’t fly either. The moment she attempts it, Mr. McCain will run an ad about how he was being tested when those 35 years began, in 1973. It was that spring when he emerged from five-plus years of incarceration at the Hanoi Hilton while Billary was still bivouacked at Yale Law School. And can Mrs. Clinton presume to sell herself as best equipped to be commander in chief 'on Day One' when opposing an actual commander and war hero? I don’t think so.

Foreign policy issue No. 1, withdrawal from Iraq, should be a slam-dunk for any Democrat. Even the audience at Thursday’s G.O.P. debate in Boca Raton cheered Ron Paul’s antiwar sentiments. But Mrs. Clinton’s case is undermined by her record. She voted for the war, just as Mr. McCain did, in 2002 and was still defending it in February 2005, when she announced from the Green Zone that much of Iraq was 'functioning quite well.' Only in November 2005 did she express the serious misgivings long pervasive in her own party. When Mr. McCain accuses her of now advocating 'surrender' out of political expediency, her flip-flopping will back him up.

Billary can’t even run against the vast right-wing conspiracy if Mr. McCain is the opponent. Rush Limbaugh and Tom DeLay hate Mr. McCain as much as they hate the Clintons. And they hate him for the same reasons Mr. McCain wins over independents and occasional Democrats: his sporadic (and often mild) departures from conservative orthodoxy on immigration and campaign finance reform, torture, tax cuts, climate change and the godliness of Pat Robertson. Since Mr. McCain doesn’t kick reporters like dogs, as the Clintons do, he will no doubt continue to enjoy an advantage, however unfair, with the press pack on the Straight Talk Express. Even so, Mr. McCain hasn’t yet won a clear majority of Republican voters in any G.O.P. contest. He’s depended on the kindness of independent voters. Tuesday’s Florida primary, which is open exclusively to Republicans, is his crucial test."


Guess what guys. McCain just took that test. And he passed with flying colors.

Obama makes more sense each and every day.
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This is sad . . .

Senator Clinton is throwing a party to celebrate her "victory."

Why shouldn't she? People have been talking about this for weeks. This was a hard fought campaign. The candidates spent so much time there. This was billed as a make or break state. The state to determine the frontrunner. Didn't you see all of those candidates stumping door to door? The major campaign events? The heated debates through the local media? This is so impressive. I mean . . .

Um . . . wait . . . what was that . . . You were talking about the Republicans? The Democrats agreed to stay away from Florida? There are no delegates? No one campaigned?

Oops! MY BAD!

Those Clintons are so tricky. They almost had me fooled for a second. I mean, I almost thought she won something.

Nice try, but it looks like Hillary's publicity stunt fell flat.

Adding insult to injury, the cable stations didn't even cover Hillary's entire speech.
Read more!

Sunday, January 27, 2008

The Kennedys Keep on Coming . . .

First it was Caroline Kennedy. Now, Massachusetts Senior Senator and "Liberal Lion," Ted Kennedy, has decided to endorse Senator Barack Obama. Ted Kennedy will announce his endorsement at an Obama event tomorrow morning.

Call me crazy . . . but I've got a feeling that Al Gore might not be too far behind.

Keep 'em coming!
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"A President Like My Father"

Do not underestimate the significance of this endorsement:

"I've been deeply moved by the peopole who've told me they wished they could feel inspired and hopeful about America the way people did when my father was president . . . Sometimes it takes a while to recognize that someone has a special ability to get us to believe in ourselves, to tie that belief to our highest ideals and imagine that together we can do great things. In those rare moments, when such a person comes along, we need to . . . reach for waht we know is possible . . . I have never had a president who inspired me the way people tell me that my father inspired them. But for the first time, I believe I have found the man who could be that president - not just for me, but for a new generation of Americans."

- Caroline Kennedy,
Daughter of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy
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Thank You South Carolina!!!

Score one for the good guys! I felt so happy . . . so proud watching Barack Obama ROUT the competition in last night's South Carolina Primary.

A few things that stuck out to me:

• The Clinton smear campaign BACKFIRED:

This was a pleasant surprise. As I said in my last post, the Clintons are running things straight from the 90s playbook on politics - smear now, apologize later. I also noted that Barack had to defend himself, even if it meant taking a slight hit to his image in the short run. I think Obama got the message:

“But if there’s anything, though, that we’ve been reminded of since Iowa, it’s that the kind of change we seek will not come easy . . . We are looking for more than just a change of party in the White House. We’re looking to fundamentally change the status quo in Washington . . . And right now that status quo is fighting back with everything it’s got, with the same old tactics that divide and distract us from solving the problems people face . . .”

- Senator Obama, South Carolina Primary Victory Speech

• Black folk came to represent:

Now, don’t mistake me here. I am not suggesting that black people just came out to vote for the black guy. Far from it. Black people voted their conscience despite conflicting endorsements from the Black Democratic Establishment (black clergy, congressmen/women, etc.).

I had been wondering whether Black folk would think for themselves or follow the flock. This could have major implications regarding the black leadership in this country. Many black leaders (or, as Al Sharpton might say, “leading blacks”) have personal and political motives behind the support for the Clintons. But they won’t be in office much longer if they can’t reconcile their positions with their Black constituencies. This might signal a changing of the guard; new ideas and a fresh approach to black politics. I hope so.

Finally, I heard so many stories predicting divisions amongst black voters. The media seemed convinced that our past infatuation with the Clintons would prevent us from giving Obama a chance. Black women were supposed to vote for Hillary because of gender. Older Blacks were supposed to vote for Hillary out of some nostalgia for the Clinton 90s. Surely, many probably thought that Black people might not even show up to vote. Guess what . . . the media got it WRONG! So wrong! This was a solid, united show of support for Obama. Blacks comprised 55% of the South Carolina Democratic Primary Electorate. Look at the exit polls:

- Barack got 77% of the Black vote;

- Barack won 82% of Black voters ages 30-44; 77% of Black voters ages 18-29; 79% of Black voters ages 45-59; and 73% of Black voters ages 60 and over. There was NO age gap in the Black community;

- 8 out of 10 Black women voted for Barack Obama. It was the same ratio for Black men. There was NO gender gap in the Black community.

And, for the naysayers who’d suggest that Blacks just voted for one of their own, I pose the following question: Is it possible . . . is it beyond the realm of imagination . . . to conclude that Black people realize that the best person for the job might also happen to be African-American? For the first time in our history, after centuries of voting for white men, many African-Americans relish in the prospect of reifying through a Black candidate. Black voters identifying with a black candidate . . . (Gasp) . . . shudder the thought.

• Newsflash: Black Women are women too! The media has no concept of intersectionality. Hillary Clinton’s “sisterhood” doesn’t necessarily include the sistas. No one has discussed this yet. However, South Carolina was the first opportunity where Black women were given a chance to speak. They did. And they did so in a resounding fashion. They picked Senator Barack Obama. Obama won the female vote over Senator Clinton, 54-30%. Black women are women too!

I’ve got an idea. Why don’t we appreciate Black women as entities in-and-of themselves rather than as means to some greater end? As a black man, I try my best to be a feminist . . . a Black feminist. As such, I understand that there are many issues concerning black women that do not get discussed in a feminist movement that is dominated by White, middle-class women. Just the same, I also realize that many civil rights organizations would be better served by highlighting Black women’s issues (domestic violence, AIDS, single-parent households, breast cancer, etc.) as well as acknowledging the leadership/stability that sistas provide to the Black Community on a daily basis. Stop acting like Black women are invisible. As a Black man, I’m happy to see that Black women spoke up in South Carolina on Saturday. Get the memo: Black women are women too!

• No (well, maybe less) White-Flight:

After polls showed Obama slipping in White support, Obama got a healthy and respectable 24%. That number includes 52% of young white voters, ages 18-29. This is the future of America that we’re talking about. Add those numbers to Obama’s strong showings in Iowa, New Hampshire and rural Nevada (as accurately noted by the punditry) and there’s no reason to suggest that Obama can't continue to build an interracial coalition of supporters to give him the nomination.

• Finally . . . the Clintons still don’t get it! Everyone knows that the Clintons are trying to downplay this Obama victory. They can spin all they want, but it won’t make much of a difference. Sure, the Clintons might have expected a defeat in South Carolina, but they certainly didn’t expect get trounced by 28% of the vote. I’m sure Hillary didn’t think she’d lose women, 54-30%. And I’m sure they didn’t think Obama would pick up as many as 25 delgates.

And, for anyone who doesn’t understand the racially-coded language of the Clinton campaign, look no further than Bill Clinton’s comparison of Obama to Jesse Jackson. Hey Bill, you could have compared Obama to Edwards in 2004 and Gore in 2000, but you didn’t. Why not? You know, there’s another person who won a couple of South Carolina primaries and went on to win the Presidency. Yeah, some guy named BILL CLINTON. But don’t worry. We can read the coded language just fine. Out of all the people to win a South Carolina primary you choose the one person with a 28% favorability rating among White people . But I’m sure you didn’t mean to highlight the racial baggage many Whites have when discussing black leaders like Jesse Jackson. No, that’s not injecting race into the campaign, is it? That’s not playing a southern strategy, is it? Yeah right. In your words . . . “Give me a break. This is the biggest fairytale I’ve ever heard.”

In closing, Obama's overwhelming victory was a pleasant respite from the bickering and finger-pointing of the Clinton campaign. South Carolina sent a big message to America: This is not a fairy-tale, this is the future!

I’ll leave you with the words of last night’s winner, Senator Barack Obama:

So understand this . . . The choice in this election is not between regions or religions or genders. It’s not about rich versus poor, young versus old, and it is not about black versus white . . . This election is about the past versus the future.

So true. So true.

Be somebody,

B-Serious.
Read more!

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Losing My Religion

Clinton Condescension 2008

Life is bigger. It's bigger than you. . . (REM, Losing My Religion)

Could someone please say this to the Clintons?

Senator Clinton keeps saying that "[Democrats] will all be united in November." Both Senator Obama and former Senator Edwards have also said as much in the past week (although with much less enthusiasm).

It smacks of a certain level of arrogance; this idea that, regardless of what gets said, Democrats will line up, like good little boys and girls, and vote for whoever the Democratic nominee is, especially if that nominee is Bill . .. excuse me, I mean Hillary Clinton.

But why should I be surprised. The Clintons are banking on the belief that we'll always come back. After all, we don't know any better, right? I mean, how could we live without the Clintons? Where would we be without the Clintons? How could life go on without the Clintons back in the White House? Indeed, if you buy into the spin of the Clinton campaign, you’ll slowly but surely start to believe that there is no other way. We love our Clintons like a child loves his parents . . . LIKE REPUBLICANS LOVE BUSH! We love the Clintons UNCONDITIONALLY. And that’s the problem.

Campaigns rarely focus on the power ordinary Americans have to be agents of change. No, that’s always someone else’s job. Likewise, Hillary Clinton’s campaign has promoted the notion that the capacity for change is an external phenomenon. The problem is that the major appeal of the Clinton Campaign is the Clintons themselves. It is an appeal that, by definition, is inherently and exclusively Clintonian. At least that’s how the Clinton camp portrays it. Senator Clinton provides a resume to the American people and asks us to embrace where she’s been whether than anticipate where we’re going.

And this is where "politics as usual" rears its ugly head...where "conventional wisdom" overshadows idealism; where the "reality check" trumps hope; and where we end up with the exact same type of politician that we claim to despise.

It’s always too good to be true isn’t it? It’s never the right time, is it? In truth, we’re compelled to postpone "change" for some other time. That’s what we call the inevitability factor, a factor that plays predominately throughout Senator Clinton’s campaign. Rank and file Democrats know their marching orders . . . it's time fall in line and wait for your crumbs (umm . . . I mean piece) of the Democratic pie. Save hope for some other day.

This “kiss and make up” attitude is a disingenuous ploy to serve the betterment of one person and one person only. It has NOTHING to do with the sake of the Democratic Party, but EVERYTHING to do with staving off a significant DEMOCRATIC backlash against one would-be nominee, Hillary Rodham Clinton.

It doesn't make any sense, but who are we to question the Clinton orthodoxy? The Clintons work in mysterious ways. They giveth political power and they taketh away. Sorry Democrats, it's not your place to question. Just have faith that Mamma and Pappa Clinton know best.

Like overbearing parents, the Clintons have demonstrated that they will smother their precious creation before they ever let someone else take it from them. The paternalistic tirades of President Clinton over past few weeks evoke images of a father fighting his son for the title, “Man of the House.” Even more disturbing, Bill’s unapologetic antics; his willingness to ignore the concerns of loyal, black voters; and his complete disregard for the future of the Democratic Party, suggests a well known paternal foreboding to anyone who thinks they’re big enough to test Pappa Clinton . . . “I brought you in this world, and I’ll take you out!” Save hope for some other day.”

Senator Clinton’s tone is slightly different. Though equally condescending, her approach is more maternalistic. Her warning to baby Democrats who’d dare challenge her entitlement to the White House: "Wait till your father gets home!" Hillary would rather not show her teeth in this primary campaign. So, rather than take Obama head on, Hillary chooses to raise warning flags at every possible turn. She doesn’t attack Obama because she hates him. She attacks him because she’s scared of what the Republicans might do to him in the Fall. She calls his hope false hope because . . . well, baby Obama just doesn’t know what he’s getting himself into. Her condescension of Senator Obama is just as clear as her husband’s. She’s proud of her little baby Obama. He gets a pat on the back for making Democrats feel good about themselves. Even more, Senator Clinton probably thinks it’s cute that Obama has ambitions of being President when he grows up. But he’s just not ready. Obama’s adorable when he dresses up and plays President. But this is just not his time. No. Mama Clinton isn’t ready to let baby Obama out of the nest just yet. Once again, save hope for some other day.

Fat chance of seeing “some other day” materialize any time soon. Try getting anything done in 20016 when partisan Republicans, through Clinton backlash, regain control of the House and Senate beginning in 2010. Eight more years of 90s partisanship and Clinton fatigue will surely handicap whichever Democrat finds him or herself as the Democratic nominee once Bill and Hillary have had another stay at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. But hey, by then maybe Jeb Bush will be ready to assume the Presidency. Gotta keep that Bush/Clinton dynasty going!

The divisions within the Party are getting deeper and more personal. It’s the idealists vs. the pragmatists; young vs. old; hope vs. experience; those who want to change vs. those who want to win; and women vs. Blacks vs. Latinos. It spells doom for the Democrats come November. But Bill and Hillary could care less because the Clintons are only concerned about winning. Damn the consequences.



But, once again, Mommy and Daddy Clinton know what’s best for the rest of us. As New York Times Columnist, Maureen Dowd, accurately notes,

"If Bill Clinton has to trash his legacy to protect his legacy, so be it. If he has to put a dagger through the heart of hope to give Hillary hope, so be it. If he has to preside in this state as the former first black president stopping the would-be first black president, so be it."

But to this day, many progressives continue to look the other way; knowing fully well that if Bush, Giuliani, Huckabee or some other conservative were spouting the same garbage, they’d be the first to organize the next March on Washington.

But I guess that’s the power of unconditional love. The Clintons are a religion to many rank-and-file Democrats. They’re favorite commandment: Obey thy mother and father. Their second favorite commandment: thou shalt have no other gods before me. Thus, an Obama candidacy (or any other Democratic candidacy for that matter) is more than a fairy-tale . . . it’s BLASPHEMY.

But I, for one, am losing my religion. I will not be voting for Hillary Clinton, whether now or in the general election. Their increasingly condescending and paternalistic relationship with the African American community is unhealthy. Their (legitimate) fear of losing this nomination has made their selfish motives even more transparent. In the 90s the Clintons said “we feel your pain.” Now, the Clintons are quick to tell us to just get over it.

And, make no mistake about it, the Clintons know exactly what they are doing. Of all people, President Clinton, having based much of his legacy in a familiarity with African-American culture, should be more than empathetic to sensitivities of race and the Southern strategy that he claims to be ignorant of today. Senator Clinton is no better. Nor is she innocent. Her role in this good cop/bad cop melodrama is just as calculated and divisive. Remember that Bill campaigns on behalf of his wife. He is not some rogue surrogate; he is Hillary’s chief advisor. Bill is the agent and Hillary is the principal. As such, I hold them both equally accountable.

But, after all of this, Hillary is confident that the Democrats will be united come November. Don’t count on it. A smack in the face is a smack in the face. It doesn’t matter whether it’s coming from a staunch conservative or a fair-weather liberal. This bruise will not heal easily. It certainly won’t heal by November. And maybe that's not such a bad thing after all. The terms "progressive" and "Democrat" have become more and more distant over the past few years. As such, I, like many other proud progressives, find myself in the strange position of being a liberal who doesn't like Bill or Hillary Clinton.

This primary might fracture the Democratic Party. However, it might also force a critical mass in the progressive wing of the Party to rethink their allegiance to a spineless Democratic politic. Who knows, we might have enough time to promote a change, third-party candidacy. Gore/Obama '08 anyone?

But, sadly, I'm done with the Clintons. I’ve defended them for years. But, unlike previous generations, I never pledged my unyielding devotion to the Church of Clinton. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton . . . life is bigger than you. The Democratic Party is bigger than you. Progressive politics is bigger than you. I lose my religion when I see such divisive politics, especially when race plays a central (although deliberately subtle) part in the attacks. I’m sorry Senator Clinton . . . with all due respect President Clinton . . . the Black community is not a rung on your ladder to success. And I, for one, cannot ignore your racial politics even though you happen to have a "(D)" at the end of your name. Barring the nomination of an extremely crazy Republican hell bent on blowing up half the globe, I will not cast a vote for the politics of fear and division that I see in the Clinton campaign.

Bill and Hillary Clinton: Your inability to accept responsibility for your words and actions; your willingness to blame other people for your shortcomings while never looking at yourselves; your lack of foresight; your refusal to acknowledge past mistakes; your God-complex; your extreme paranoia; your repulsive sense of entitlement; your legion of apologists; and your mastery of double-speech are all eerily similar to that of another "leader" . . . the present BUSH ADMINISTRATION. I didn't vote for Bush and I’m not voting for YOU.

Be Somebody,

B-Serious
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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Major South Carolina Paper Endorses Obama

Something to consider when discussing electability . . .

"The restoration of the Clintons to the White House would trigger a new wave of all-out political warfare. That is not all Bill and Hillary’s fault - but it exists, whomever you blame, and cannot be ignored. Hillary Clinton doesn’t pretend that it won’t happen; she simply vows to persevere, in the hope that her side can win. Indeed, the Clintons’ joint career in public life seems oriented toward securing victory and personal vindication.

Sen. Obama’s campaign is an argument for a more unifying style of leadership. In a time of great partisanship, he is careful to talk about winning over independents and even Republicans. He is harsh on the failures of the current administration - and most of that critique well-deserved. But he doesn’t use his considerable rhetorical gifts to demonize Republicans. He’s not neglecting his core values; he defends his progressive vision with vigorous integrity. But for him, American unity - transcending party - is a core value in itself. "

- The State editorial board's Democratic presidential primary endorsement
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Mr. Obama . . . You Did What You Had To Do

Senator Obama finds his voice . . .

It echoed from New Hampshire to Nevada . . . it grabbed hold of women voters . . . Hillary had found her voice. Speak to many Clinton supporters and you’ll get the sense that some (including the Clintons themselves) feel an entitlement to the Presidency. They’ll rave about 35 years of experience, glancing over the fact that Ms. Clinton spent roughly twenty of those years as the first lady of Arkansas and then as the first lady of the United States. Hillary has been the clear front runner ever since rumors of her run began circulating back in 2004. But for one moment, perhaps a strand of four or five days after Obama’s historic Iowa Caucus victory, Hillary Rodham Clinton got to feel what it’s like to be the underdog. The pundits considered her dead. Ms. Clinton was old news and the media seemed poised to pass the political torch to Barack Obama.

But campaigns are fickle by nature. You can be riding a wave of excitement one day only to crash and drown the next. So when all seemed lost; when rumors said the Clintons were due to shake up their staff, concede Nevada and South Carolina and try to resurrect their campaign in time for Super Tuesday, Hillary Clinton did something that turned the race on its head . . . she “found her voice.”

Of course, Senator Clinton’s newfound introspection came at the prospect of seeing her political aspirations go down the drain. Her near-tear moment in New Hampshire supposedly showed a softer, more sincere Clinton who wept out of exhaustion for a country she loved so dear. At least that was the spin. However, read the actual text of what she said behind those "tears." "I have so many opportunities from this country, and I just don't want to see us fall backwards."

Well, what did she mean by "falling backwards"? One only had to listen just a few more seconds to get a clearer understanding of Clinton’s disposition. “Some of us are right some of us are wrong . . . Some of us are ready, and some of us are not. Some of us know what we’ll do on day one and some of us don’t.”

In the tradition of hardball politics Ms. Clinton “found her voice” by realizing an effective strategy to attack the hope and inspiration of the Obama campaign. Hillary laid the seeds of doubt while her surrogates (chief amongst them being her husband, PRESIDENT Bill Clinton) proceeded to define Barack Obama as too good to be true. And a good dose of coded, racially charged language never hurts now does it? In essence, “falling backwards” meant "rolling the dice" for a man (a kid/boy), perhaps an “imaginary hip black friend,” who's trying to "shuck and jive" his way to the White House. And don’t forget Obama’s history with drugs . . . I mean, one might ask if he was ever drug dealer, right? P.S. Obama might really be one of them Muslim people. But hey, Hillary never played the race card did she? In the words of her husband, “Give me a break. This is the biggest fairytale I’ve ever heard.”

Hillary’s tears were tears of frustration. It was almost as though she wanted to say, “It’s not fair, this is MY TIME. How could I be loosing to this rookie?” Yes, despite the spin, Hillary got emotional BECAUSE SHE THOUGHT SHE WAS GOING TO LOSE.

Senator Clinton successfully changed the storyline of the 2008 Presidential Race. If Obama was going to give us hope, the Clintons were going to give us a “reality check.” Senator Clinton found her voice alright. And that newfound voice came in the form of former president, Bill Clinton. That newfound voice came in the form of the same tired, regurgitated, predictable gotcha politics that we’ve grown so accustom to over the last two presidencies. The word splicing; the double speech; and the coded language came back like a time warp to 1998. Gutter politics. Say something long enough and people begin to believe it out of habit. The strategy was clear. Say whatever you have to say in order to get elected now . . . apologize profusely later.

But campaigns move in ebbs and flows. And, amidst the low blows and unsubstantiated accusations of the Clinton campaign, Obama just might have found a way to take back some much needed momentum to get the electorate to view Senator Clinton in a new, less favorable light.

In a political world driven by media perception and spin; where a solid one-liner is often five times more affective than a solid stump speech, Barack Obama finally “found his voice.” Not a voice of passion or conviction – that was never his problem. Obama’s message of hope has resonated with voters from the beginning. No, the voice that I speak of is his voice of frustration.

Defending himself against charges and implications of everything from being a closet Regan supporter to allowing the sexual victimization of women (yes, Ms. Clinton did go that low), Obama repeatedly ran into the same wall that has thrown his campaign off message for the past two weeks – Hillary’s plausible deniability. Obama would bring up a misstatement (umm, lie) by the Clinton campaign. Senator Clinton would simply smile and deny accountability, saying that she was her own person and, therefore, could not be held responsible for the words of her husband.

But it finally happened. Perhaps scripted, perhaps a sincere cry of frustration, Senator Obama finally spoke out at Monday night’s debate and said what many of us have been thinking for a long time now. “I can’t tell who I’m running against sometimes.”

For a man of many words with a professorial background, Obama finally found that illusive five second sound bite that sticks. That one statement speaks both to the need for change as well as the hopes millions of people have for something different in Washington.

Just who is Barack Obama running against? Make no mistake about it, Barack is running against the Brand X of the Democratic Party. The fact of the matter is that the Clintons have been selling a two-for-one blue light special ever since Hillary decided to run. Therefore, it is disingenuous for Senator Clinton to claim a vast array of experience on one hand while ignoring her husband’s influence on the other. Even more, if Hillary speaks of the successes of the Clinton Administration, then she’d better be prepared to accept fault for the emotional, psychological and political inertia that came with every Clinton scandal; every policy shift to the right (e.g., DOMA, Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, Welfare Reform, etc.). And it is Obama’s duty, as an agent of change, to remind the voters of just how TIRED the alternative truly is.

This was discussed today on MSNBC’s Tucker Carlson (yeah, not normally my cup of tea, but insightful nonetheless). Obama has found the pitch, now he needs to go door to door and make the sale. If Senator Clinton tries to trumpet the success of the Clinton 90s then Obama must also force her to take blame for CLINTON FATIGUE. Obama began to tap into this with his statement at last night’s debate.

It’s time for Obama’s endorsers to take a stronger stance in his campaign. Too often, Obama gets portrayed as an ideal. We’re missing the mark. If I were running his campaign, I wouldn’t portray him as an ideal (that was accomplished in Iowa), I’d try to portray him as the future of the Democratic Party. A future that only Bill and Hillary Clinton want to keep from happening; and they’re willing to hurt the Democratic Party if it means winning. I’d trot out every disenchanted Democratic congressman and congresswoman who ever got the Clinton cold shoulder. I would stake Obama’s campaign, not only in the hope for change, but also in the fierce urgency of now (what ever happened to that anyways?). Old habits die hard and, for many disaffected Democrats, the Clintons are an old habit that needs to be broken.

So with that bit of frustration, Obama reminded many of us that he is not just running against Hillary Clinton. He is running against a former president of the United States . . . he is running against that president’s legacy . . . he is running against that very Democratic establishment, which the Clintons built and solidified over the past 15+ years. Obama is running AGAINST a brand name. Juxtapose that to Senator Clinton who is running ON a brand name.

Ms. Clinton gets a boost from name recognition. She gets a boost from her husband’s popularity. She gets a boost for nostalgia’s sake. She gets a boost from the Clinton machinery. She gets a boost from the Democratic establishment. Indeed, Senator Clinton likely goes to bed every night comforted by the fact that her name and image is probably worth at least 20% of the Democratic vote right off the bat.

So, in closing, I pose the following questions about the Clinton campaign:

If you had one vote to make, would you rather vote for Bill Clinton OR Hillary Clinton?

If her supporter/surrogates had but one candidate to back, would they back Bill Clinton OR Hillary Clinton?

Would the vast majority of Hillary Clinton’s supporters still support her if they only knew her as Hillary Rodham INSTEAD of Hillary Rodham CLINTON?

What special privileges, access and influence will Bill have as a former President that are not afforded to your average first spouse? And how will that affect communication between the White House and the American people?

Are we supposed to believe that Bill will be sitting around the White House all day? What happens if Bill, as a former President with deeper connections, has more influence than Hillary? What happens if they disagree on foreign policy? Will Hillary be able to get foreign leaders to ignore Bill and listen to her?

What purpose would our Vice President and Secretary of State have if everyone knows that Bill has more sway and control than either of them? What good is having a chain of command when everybody knows that Bill is second (if not first) in command? How might that power be abused?

Are we ready for 4-8 more years of a secretive Administration that thrives off of plausible deniability? I can see it now . . . I didn’t say we should bomb Iran, my husband did.

Are we ready for 4-8 more years of the exact same partisan fighting that we’ve had for the past 2 decades?

Can we do better than Bush/Clinton?

Finally, how democratic is it . . . how inspiring is it . . . how inclusive is it to have the United States of America run by two dynastic families? I am 26 years old. My entire political life has been run by Bushes and Clintons (I was too young to remember Reagan – thankfully). I am sick and tired of the Bush/Clinton Whitehouse. It is precisely this routine, politics as usual reality that turns people away from the voting booths and convinces millions of people that we can only be spectators in our democracy.

I guess I’ll leave on that note. Mr. Obama did what he had to do last night. Did he take a hit on his squeaky clean image? Perhaps. Did John Edwards do a better job at rising above the frey? Absolutely. But if Obama is to take that next step towards defeating the establishment (a step that insurgent candidates rarely ever see), then he must first give voice to the frustration of change. He must articulate the exact reason why so many of us want change. In a world of consumer politics Obama must ask whether a vote for Hillary is a vote for her or a vote for Brand Clinton? There are other choices on the shelf.

Be Somebody,

B-Serious.
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Sunday, January 20, 2008

Welcome to Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K.

Let me be the first to WELCOME all of you to my slice of the blogosphere, the place I call home, Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. The name means a lot to me. It is more than a title; it’s a state of mind. Even more, Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. is a PHILOSOPHY, which claims that being Black in America is a constant evolution; a process by which Black people wrestle with and strive towards reconciling conflicting identities. It is the challenge to define oneself . . . to redefine Black culture through our vision rather than through the looking glass of mainstream America. Far too often we see ourselves through someone else’s eyes. It is this reification, this constant scrutiny, which speaks to the heart of our racial bipolarism. This is the double-consciousness of which W.E.B. Dubois once spoke . . . this compulsion to both love and hate oneself at the same time. It plays itself out in our daily lives. As famed poet, Bassey Ikpi, so eloquently noted,

“What will I teach my children? What will I tell them of where I’ve been? . . . What will they call home and will they here it if and when it calls them? . . . I can’t stomach the reality of this, my divided culture, African/American. I am everything and I am nothing . . . [my ancestry] quietly begging me to remember; while America slowly urges me to forget.” (Bassey Ikpi, “Homeward”).

Though we wear the mask (as Paul L. Dunbar once wrote), there is nothing more beautiful than those rarer moments of self-determination and cultural pride. Yet, for many, the idea of Black pride remains a mere aspiration rather than an alternative lifestyle. We must begin to think outside of the box.

Indeed, given our long history of racial turmoil; this nation’s inherent sin of slavery; and the color line of the 20th (and now 21st) Century . . . to be both Black and proud in America is a concept that remains solidly outside of the box. Certainly, Black pride remains outside the status quo. It remains a constant threat to “our” comfort, as the Black community has been conditioned to identify with any culture but its own. We are conditioned to believe that success comes via acceptance from someone else . . . to achieve someone else’s standards . . . to be TOLERATED by some other group. Consequently, Blacks are burdened by an inner turmoil that suggests the terms “African” and “American” must persist as mutually exclusive identities.

Let me make this clear. This is NOT a matter of us versus them. Nor is this an exercise in zero sum reasoning. On the contrary, Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. will serve as a means to provide voice (authentic and sincere) to the ongoing, ofttimes nebulous, discussions of “Diversity” “Multiculturism” and, yes, “American Identity.” The true gift of America is its diversity; different colors, languages, ideas and experiences. Furthermore, the glue that keeps this great experiment together is a firm understanding of PLURALISM . . . to agree without being disagreeable . . . to learn from and embrace our differences rather than abandon them.

Thus, I am NOT color-blind, I am color-conscious. I appreciate differences in cultures and experiences. I look forward to learning from others and enjoy the fact that different groups and ethnicities provide various perspectives to the human experience. For that reason, this blog will look to celebrate BLACK life, not in some twisted form of reverse racism, but as a valuable, indispensable, piece of the human puzzle. America is a salad bowl, not a melting pot.

“BLACK” is more than a state of being. Indeed, “BLACK” is a way of life, a level of consciousness, an understanding of one’s history and a plan for one’s future. Like any other identity “BLACK” must be given the freedom to grow and develop as an end unto itself and not as some subset of some greater hegemony. “BLACK” is a goal, an ideal, that we’ve struggled to attain ever since our ancestors first stepped shackled foot on foreign land.

Therefore, my home is Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. . . . the mission to Build Leadership Awareness and Cultural Knowledge. Unapologetically, this must be done by first acknowledging the intellect and determination of Black men and women to think critically for themselves and collectively strive towards a better understanding and appreciation of being Black in America. As such, I wholeheartedly believe in the capacity for Black men and women to do for themselves. I am comforted by the fact that history has shown Black people to be of the most resilient, innovative, gifted and politically savvy race of men and women that this world has ever seen. It is time that we realize our strengths and trust in our ability to make the change that we wish to see. A strong Black community is a good thing, not just for African-Americans, but for Americans at large.

So WELCOME. To all who may visit, whether you are Black or White, young or old. I offer my home as a place of love and respect. I encourage us to challenge each other so that we may have a greater understanding of our circumstances and a stronger conviction in our direction. We must begin to challenge the status quo; bringing a solid appreciation of “Black” life to wider discourses on race, religion, politics, education and economic achievement. In the illustrious words of James Baldwin, it’s time to think for ourselves:

“[T]rust your experience. Know whence you came. If you know whence you came, there is really no limit to where you can go. The details and symbols of your life have been deliberately constructed to make you believe what [other] people say about you. Please try to remember that what they believe, as well as what they do and cause you to endure, does not testify to your inferiority but to their inhumanity and fear. . . . [T]here is no basis whatever for their impertinent assumption that they must accept you. The really terrible thing, old buddy, is that you must accept them. And I mean that very seriously. You must accept them and accept them with love. . . . We cannot be free until they are free.” (James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time, 7-10)

Yes, my brothas and sistas, Black pride remains a revolutionary concept.

Be Somebody,

B-Serious
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What is Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K.?

Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K.
The Blog of Black Thought

Living a Dream and Dreaming to Live!

Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. is a Pan-African Blog with an acronym that stands for Building Leadership Awareness and Cultural Knowledge. The goal of this blog is to become a "Blog of Black Thought" focusing on matters of social, economic and political awareness through education (re-education), self-affirmation and cultural expression. In doing so, it will invite a cross-reference of black intellectuals to grapple with historic and contemporary black issues. Above all, this blog will DEMAND respect and appreciation for one another as black men and women.

This blog focuses on Pan-African issues, however, it also welcomes and anticipates the participation of activists regardless of color, nationality or religion. Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. is born of a grassroots, bottom-up, philosophy of political engagement whereby ordinary people are encouraged to do extraordinary things. Therefore, Operation Reach B.L.A.C.K. strives for unity, understanding and empowerment in the hopes that the black community may overcome its petty differences to work together for upward mobility.

© 2008
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