*Like most of the Liberal-Left that fawned over the election of Obama unlike
myself and real socialists, in fact Alice Walker liken Obama at the time to
the second coming of Nelson Mandela and I am sure now they realize the error
of their ways.*
**
*Cort*


  Opinion   Hope lost, audacity found
Obama's administration has pursued a multi-track effort to prevent Americans
from participating in the flotilla.
 Paul 
Rosenberg<http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/profile/paul-rosenberg.html>Last
Modified: 03
Jul 2011 13:35
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     *In his younger days, Barack Obama called for a more even-handed
approach from the US on the Israel- Palestine conflict; today he warns
activists not to sail to Gaza [Reuters]*

Despite the campaign hoopla, it was never in the cards for Barack Obama to
be a transformational leader, an FDR (Franklin Delano Roosevelt) or even an
LBJ (Lyndon Baines Johnson). The bold new programmes that they introduced to
help transform America into a more just and broadly prosperous land were not
his style, as should have been clear from a 2006 interview in *The
Nation *magazine
conducted by David Sirota. Still, it did seem possible Obama might stumble
into being a bit of a JFK, someone whose skillful, inspiring rhetoric raised
people's expectations and aspirations, leading others to go out and make
history far beyond the bounds of what he himself dared to imagine. This was
certainly the impact Kennedy had on civil rights, which helped set the tone
for entire decade of the 1960s.

Things did turn out that way in exactly one case: the repeal of the
military's anti-gay "don't ask, don't tell" policy. But in virtually every
other instance, Obama's influence has been much more reminiscent of the
"practical", if not paranoid side of Kennedy, who spent a good deal of time
and energy trying to restrain the Civil Rights Movement, ever mindful of the
negative impact that headlines of racial conflict would have around the
world. Still, Kennedy clearly wanted progress on civil rights, both because
he believed it was right, and because it was vital for gaining Cold War
support in the Global South in the long run. He just wished the struggle was
not so messy, even as his flamboyant spirit helped fuel that struggle,
almost in spite of himself.

In 2008, at least, it could plausibly be hoped that Obama's election would
unleash a similar dynamic across a wide range of issues, encouraging
idealistic pressure from below, even while struggling to contain it. But
things have not turned out that way, as Obama has repeatedly undercut,
sidelined or opposed the more idealistic enthusiasms of his base with a
determined seriousness he rarely, if ever, displays against Republicans.

*Civil rights in Gaza*

I was reminded of that lost hope once again this week, as Pulitzer
Prize-winning author Alice Walker and fifty other American citizens aboard a
ship called The Audacity of Hope prepared to take part in the second Freedom
Flotilla attempt to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza - even as Obama tried
to stop them from sailing with the rest of the international flotilla.
  <http://english.aljazeera.net/Indepth/spotlight/gazaflotilla2/> **

Walker - who married a Jewish civil rights lawyer in 1967 - was moved by a
lifetime of activism and reflection, beginning with her own childhood
experience of suffering under segregation, much like the children of Gaza
suffer today.  The underlying continuity she sees is obvious, which is why
Israel knows it must remain hidden at all costs - no matter how impossible
that may be. And so, just as the American South tried to defend the worst of
its institutions with brutal violence against peaceful activists during the
Freedom Rides of 1961, Israel is pursuing the same sort of madness against
the Freedom Flotilla today.

Yet, as Bradley Burston, Senior Editor of *Haaretz.com*, so simply
explained: "There is nearly nothing which more effectively delegitimises
Israel - and makes Israel look more like an uncaring blockhead state -than
does the siege of Gaza. The siege benefits Hamas in a thousand ways and
Israel in none. But there is one thing that does the work of
delegitimisation even better: attacking civilians in order to protect the
siege."

These should have been the words of Obama as well, if he actually were the
"true friend of Israel" he now robotically proclaims himself to be. After
all, we have a saying here in America, "Friends don't let friends drive
drunk". Israel has no such friends in America today. Certainly not Obama.

*Alice Walker*

Unlike JFK with the Freedom Rides, Obama has not simply tried to restrain
the Freedom Flotilla for the sake of their own safety. His administration
has pursued a multi-track effort to prevent Americans from participating,
and is even implicitly threatening to imprison those who participate, making
himself more like George Wallace than JFK.

Accustomed as Walker was to red-baiting from her early years in the Southern
civil rights struggle, the standard hysterical attempt to terrorist-bait the
civilian activists rolled off her like water off a duck. When *Foreign
Policy* magazine asked her, "Are you concerned at all that your trip could
be used as a propaganda tool for Hamas?" Walker simply answered, "No,
because we will never see those people. Why would we see them?"

*Foreign Policy* continued to press. "You don't think you're going to see
anyone from Hamas?"

"No. I don't think we would," Walker replied. "If we manage to get through
with our bundle of letters we will probably be met by a lot of NGOs, and
women and children, and schoolteachers and nurses, and the occasional
doctor, if anyone is left."

*Foreign Policy *took one last stab. "But doesn't Hamas control the security
apparatus of Gaza?"

"They may well control it, but we're not going to see them," Walker replied
patiently, almost as if explaining things to a grandchild. "It's like
everyone who comes to (Washington) DC doesn't see the president."

Walker was similarly prepared for the violence that might lie ahead, should
Israel attack the Freedom Flotilla as it did last year, when nine activists
were killed.

"Sometimes I feel fear. And the feeling that this may be it," Walker
replied, when this possibility was raised.

"But I'm positive - I'm looking at it as a way to bring attention to these
children and their mothers and their grandmothers, and their grandfathers
and their fathers, who face this kind of thing every day."

"I grew up in the South under segregation. So, I know what terrorism feels
like - when your father could be taken out in the middle of the night and
lynched just because he didn't look like he was in an obeying frame of mind
when a white person said something he must do. I mean, that's terrorism
too."

*From JFK to Obama*

In the 1960s, Walker was one of those youths who made the most of the
opening Kennedy provided - though she came from a tradition that had never
depended on outsiders for validation. She was one of those who made Barack
Obama's Ivy League and White House futures possible. Half a century later,
she is still a generation ahead of him - or more - in terms of action and
understanding. She knows the struggle for freedom from the marrow of her
bones, something that Obama can only try to imagine, and evoke with words
whose flowery surface he can never hope to penetrate.

It did not seem that way more than a decade ago, when Barack Obama - then a
rising young Chicago politician - was an outspoken advocate for Palestinian
rights as part of his balanced approach to Middle East peace. At the time,
"Obama was forthright in his criticism of US policy and his call for an
even-handed approach to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict," recalled Ali
Abunimah, co-founder of The Electronic Intifada, writing about Obama's
political devolution in 2007.

Obama was also pro-gay marriage at the time, a position he now denies ever
holding. Obama's backward movement on these and many other issues reflects a
much deeper conservatism and cynicism on Obama's part than anything seen in
JFK.  Kennedy, at least, clearly believed in his progressive values. His
caution - sometimes even paranoia - was distressingly real, but it generally
remained confined to the realm of strategy and tactics. Not so for Obama,
who has accommodated himself to - if not fully embraced - conservative
paranoia on the very substance of issues ranging from immigration to energy
policy to budget-slashing to war-making and "national security".

On this last point, Obama has not only firmly closed the book on examining -
much less prosecuting - Bush Era crimes, such as taking America to war
illegally, or massively violating American's rights, much less the human
rights of others. He's now enthusiastically committed to continuing, even
expanding on these same practices.

Obama's FBI is now actively investigating 23 anti-war, anti-intervention
activists, on the theory - recently upheld in Holder vs Humanitarian Law
Project - that almost anything counts as "material aid to a terrorist
organisation", even working with organisation members on non-violent
alternatives to put an end to violence.  It has been pointed out before that
under this same policy Obama himself could have been charged for "aiding
terrorists" because of his anti-apartheid activism in the 1980s, since
Nelson's Mandella's African National Congress was then designated as a
"terrorist organisation".

Now, a veiled warning in a state department document suggests that Alice
Walker and her compatriots could be similarly charged for taking part in the
Freedom Flotilla. I cannot imagine that Alice Walker would relish that
fight. Why should she wish to humiliate Obama, whose very possibility she
helped to create? But there's no way on earth she would flinch from it.

She has, after all, the audacity of hope.

*Paul Rosenberg is the Senior Editor of Random Length News, a bi-weekly
alternative community newspaper.*

*The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not
necessarily represent Al Jazeera's editorial policy.*
  Source:
Al Jazeera


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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