The Bible is filled with characters who started out on shaky ground – Paul, David and Solomon, among them – before being transformed into epic figures. But it seems that Black leaders who dare to criticize President Obama don’t get second chances. Instead, they are the object of widespread ridicule and condemnation.
I spent
some time last week with two such leaders – Cornel West and Jesse Jackson – at
the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) national convention in
Chicago. Although their standing
among African-Americans has slipped, their analysis of where Blacks have been
and need to go is as incisive as ever.
Neither
Jackson nor West should be viewed in isolation. The Black community does not
want to hear anything bad about Barack Obama, even if it’s true. If a White president had been as
dismissive of African-Americans’ interests as Obama has been, Blacks would have
been ready to march on the White House. As Michael Eric Dyson says, “This president runs from race like a Black
man runs from a cop.”
Even so,
Blacks treat him like royalty.
My friend
Roland Martin is quick to insist that guests on his television program refer to
the man who occupies the White House as President Obama. I refuse to play this game. Obama –
yes, I said it – is a president, not head of some monarchy. I have called Carter, Reagan, Clinton
and Bush by their last names. I am
not going to say President Obama every time I refer to him. Sometimes he is President Obama,
sometimes he is Obama. I refuse to
treat him like King Obama.
The
problem with West and Jackson is their critiques, however valid, were wrapped
in language that was offensive to many African-Americans. To call Obama the
Black mascot of Wall Street oligarchs – a term most people hadn’t heard since
their last high school civics class – is over the edge in this instance. Don’t get me wrong: there are some
Black Anglo-Saxons who deserve to be called mascots and worse – and I’ve called
them that. But Obama is not in
that category.
When I
gave Cornel West a chance to soften his description of the president during a
discussion I moderated at the NNPA convention between him and Al Sharpton, he
declined. He could have said, “I
stand by everything I said about the president but not how I said it.” That would have gone a long way toward
refocusing the discussion on real issues, not the Al Sharpton-Cornel West
sideshow.
In Jesse
Jackson’s case, he has been largely excommunicated from the race for a comment
that reeked of envy. After an
interview on Fox News in 2008, he told a fellow guest that he wanted to cut
Obama’s private parts off. He also
used the N-word in a conversation that he did not know was being picked up by
the microphones.
Jackson
later apologized, saying his comments were “hurtful and wrong.” By then, however, the damage had been
done. At the time, Obama was
making a credible bid to become president of the United States. And Blacks did not want to hear
anything disparaging about the man who went on to win the nation’s highest
elected office. Many, if not most,
Blacks haven’t forgiven Jackson for his crude remarks.
Notwithstanding
Jackson’s expressed desire to dismember Obama or West’s deeply personal attack
on the president, each made valid critiques of President Obama. Jackson was correct to point out that
sometimes Obama speaks down to African-Americans. That is particularly true when he lectures Blacks on moral
responsibility but does not make similar speeches to White audiences. Cornel West is correct in stating that
the administration does not pay enough attention to the needs of the poor and
African-Americans.
Despite
overwhelming evidence of disproportionate Black suffering during this
recession, Obama refuses to target the specific needs of
African-Americans. His response
is: “It’s a mistake to start thinking in terms of particular ethnic segments of
the United States rather than to think that we are all in this together and we
are all going to get out of this together.”
Yet, it
was not a mistake to address the specific needs of Wall Street. He can speak to the specific agenda of
gays and Lesbians without it being considered a mistake. It was not a mistake in Obama’s mind to
speak to the specific needs of the automobile industry. It was not a mistake to speak to the
special interests of banks. But
when it comes to the needs of African-Americans, we are supposed to wait for
progress to trickle down to and upon us.
Yes, he
is president of all of America. But all of America includes Black America.
The sad
reality is that most civil rights leaders have given Obama a pass. If the unemployment rates and economic gap
had widened under a White president, Al Sharpton would have been in the streets
chanting, “No Justice, No Peace.” Instead, the ultimate outsider has become the ultimate insider,
defending the administration with the vigor of a cabinet member.
As a
group, today’s collection of civil rights leaders are ineffectual and out of
touch. For example, with all of
the problems facing us, the NAACP chose to spend part of its limited national,
state and local resources to make sure Black motorcycle riders were not
discriminated against on the Memorial Day weekend in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
We have
far more serious issues facing Black America. And we need the voices and analysis of all of our national
leaders, even after they have put their foot in their mouth.
George E.
Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is
a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his
Web site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him atwww.twitter.com/currygeorge.






