Is Obama Black enough ?

By Grace Lee Boggs ( formerly of the Johnson-Forrest tendency with Raya D and 
____)
Special to The Michigan Citizen

This is a good question because it challenges us to stop glossing over the huge 
changes that have taken place, both positively and negatively, in Black 
leadership over the last 50 years.

In the 50s and 60s we may not have called it “Black leadership” but there was 
no doubt what we had in mind. We were talking about “the movement.” Southern 
Blacks, rising out of obscurity, determined to rid their communities and this 
country of Jim Crow, risking their lives by sitting in front seats on buses, 
sitting down at lunch counters, registering to vote. Small groups of 
deeply-committed and highly-disciplined individuals engaging in non-violent 
actions that forced millions of white Americans to look at themselves and 
recognize the crimes that have made possible the rapid economic development of 
this country. SNCC students transforming themselves and humanizing this country 
by simple acts that raised the fundamental question of what it means to be a 
human being, thereby inspiring women, Latinos, Native Americans and Asian 
Americans to challenge patriarchy and racism. 

In the North men like Malcolm challenged us to look into the mirror by 
transforming themselves from hustlers into community leaders and searching for 
new ideas when those which had initially inspired their transformation tuned 
out to be too narrow. Students inspired us by walking out of schools demanding 
Black history and Black administrators.

Between 1965 (the year Malcolm was killed) and 1968 (the year Martin was gunned 
down) B lack leadership was taken to a new level by King. Agonizing over the 
twin crises of the Vietnam war and the urban rebellions, he called for a 
radical revolution in values, not only against racism but against materialism 
and militarism. Warning against integration into the “burning house” of U.S. 
capitalism, he emphasized the need for two-sided transformation by and of 
Americans, both of ourselves AND our institutions, a transformation that would 
take us and the world beyond both traditional capitalism and communism. 

King was killed before he could put this new revolutionary/evolutionary 
transformational vision of revolution into practice and make it widely known to 
the world. 

After his death civil rights leaders, ignoring King’s warning, seized upon the 
opportunities that had been opened up by “the movement” to enter the “burning 
house” of U. S. capitalism. Instead of calling upon the American people to 
confront our consumerism and militarism, instead of challenging corporate 
globalism, these opportunists became a part of the system, evaluating B lack 
progress by how much they and other Blacks were catching up with whites.

In 1977, with the support of the civil rights establishment, Maynard Jackson, 
Atlanta’s first Black mayor, used scabs to break the garbage workers strike. In 
the late 70s civil rights leaders turned Blacks into a special interest group 
inside the Democratic Party, just as the Democrats were becoming 
indistinguishable from Republicans in their dependence on corporations for 
campaign funds 

As a result, the word “black” has lost all its movement meaning. So Bill 
Clinton, the man who sponsored NAFTA, who got rid of Aid to Dependent Children, 
who bombed Iraq, and who now suggests that Hillary’s first act as president 
would be to send him and George W’s father around the world, can be called this 
country’s “first black president”!

Meanwhile capitalism has morphed into corporate globalization, the materialism 
of the American people has skyrocketed, inequality is mushrooming inside the 
United States and between the global north and the global south, violence 
continues to escalate both at home and abroad, and the planetary crisis is 
reaching the point of no return. 

Had it not been for the movements of the 50s and 60s, Obama and Hillary would 
not be front runners in the presidential race today.

But neither Obama’s ethnicity or Hillary’s gender is enough to earn my support. 
Neither is calling on the American people to confront our materialism and 
militarism or challenging and proposing alternatives to corporate 
globalization. At this critical period in human history that is what we should 
be requiring of ourselves and of any presidential candidate, whatever their 
race, gender or religion.

Fortunately new leadership is emerging out of obscurity, at the grassroots 
level, building community instead of running for office. 




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