This is from the Nation of Islam.

CB

FCN Editorial - Is America’s attitude changing?
By FinalCall.com News
Updated Jan 14, 2008, 04:21 pm  Email this article
 Printable page
 

It is fundamentally implausible that a Black man could ever be President of the 
United States. 


 

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Our hope is that America will take the best of the Obama message, commit 
herself to and begin the long and arduous journey to reverse her present 
course, which cannot be done without justice for the children of her ex-slaves 
and all who still yearn to breathe free.
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And yet, a Black man, a first-term U.S. senator from Illinois with a name from 
Kenyan descent, has electrified the country and captured international 
attention with his bid to become the Democratic Party’s 2008 White House 
nominee. His political success in almost “lily White” Iowa and potential 
success in upcoming primaries, have boggled the minds of political scientists, 
pundits, and informed observers alike. Even the GOP candidates are asked to 
explain “Obamania” and react to this new phenomenon. What is happening here?

There was a time when a Black man with an African or Islamic sounding-name, 
like Muhammad Ali or Kareem Abdul Jabaar, was deeply misunderstood.

But in 2007 with Americans disgusted with Capitol Hill gridlock, distrustful of 
the man who currently occupies the White House, unsettled by an unpopular war, 
worried about escalating oil and gas prices, buffeted by home losses and a home 
mortgage crisis, hit by unemployment, fearful of loss of their middle class 
status, and generally uncertain about the future, a candidate with the name 
Barack Obama is inspiring hope for meaningful change. 

Mr. Obama has made what one commentator called a move for “vertical politics,” 
not right nor left, but politics aimed at pulling the country together across 
political and racial lines. Recent presidential elections have seen a divided 
electorate with Democrats and Republicans searching for that sliver of an 
advantage to achieve victory.

Instead of trying to slice off a segment of voters for a political win, Mr. 
Obama has called for expansion of the electorate by urging and inspiring more 
people, young people in particular, to get involved in the process.

He has risen above crass appeals based on single issues or divisive “us” versus 
“them” arguments to call on Americans to unite and embrace a willingness to 
seek common ground for the good of the country.

While Sen. Hillary Clinton was surrounded by the faces of the political old 
guard when she spoke after Iowa Caucus results were final, a sea of 
enthusiastic young, old, middle-aged and multi-racial Americans roared their 
approval of Obama and his call for a new age in U.S. politics. 

In this presidential campaign, Sen. Obama “has been groomed, and wisely so, to 
be seen more as a unifier, rather than one who speaks only for the hurt of 
Black people. In this, he has tapped the dissatisfaction of many Whites, 
Blacks, Hispanics and Asians across the spectrum, because who cares what color 
you are if you can save them from the mess that they find themselves in,” 
observed the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan in a recent interview with The 
Final Call.

It appears that American voters are generally fed up with the deceit, the lies, 
the corruption, the war, the fear-mongering, and the cronyism of the Bush 
administration. After eight years of ruinous policies perpetrated by the 43rd 
president, Blacks, Whites, young and old, seem to want fresh, new ideas and 
thinking in leadership.

While Sen. Obama does not drape himself in the mantle of the nationalist Red, 
Black, and Green flag of Marcus Garvey, he is acutely aware upon whose 
shoulders he stands—Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Rep. Shirley Chisholm, 
the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sen. Carole Mosley-Braun, the Rev. Al Sharpton, Dick 
Gregory, and others.

Sen. Obama had just graduated from Columbia University when the Rev. Jackson 
launched his historic 1984 Presidential campaign and, according to published 
reports, once told the Rev. Jackson that watching him debate Walter Mondale and 
Gary Hart, inspired him.

Rep. Chisholm, a Black congresswoman from New York, made the bold move in 1972 
to seek a major party nomination for president. “Catalyst for Change. Chisholm 
for President ‘72” read one of her campaign buttons. The first Black woman 
elected to Congress ran as someone who was “unbought, unbossed” and ready to 
represent all Americans. “I ran for the presidency, despite hopeless odds, to 
demonstrate sheer will and refusal to accept the status quo,” she once said. 
She wanted change.

Once Rep. Chisholm smashed the glass ceiling, Rev. Jackson further inspired 
Blacks and others with presidential runs in 1984 and 1988. With his signature 
themes of “Keep Hope Alive” and “Our Time Has Come,” the civil rights leader 
stressed the need to expand the base of the party and registered millions of 
new voters. He was a voice for the voiceless in politics and campaigned against 
corporate and divisive interests, and for dialogue with the Palestinian people 
in their quest for justice against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and 
Gaza Strip. 

He spoke to the hurt of the Black community but forged a Rainbow Coalition to 
seek justice for all. He called for justice for the Palestinians, endured death 
threats and argued America could be better, stronger and more progressive if 
everyone had a fair shot at success, and equal opportunity. 

Rev. Jackson strode through Iowa cow pastures in overalls, demanded a fair 
shake for family farmers, better access to health care and economic policies 
that favored everyday people.

“Leadership must heed the call of conscience, redemption, expansion, healing 
and unity, for they are the key to achieving our mission. Time is neutral and 
does not change things. With courage and initiative, leaders can change 
things,” he said in his 1984 speech to the Democratic National Convention.

Black candidates for president have never tried to take the country back to the 
“good old days,” like Ronald Reagan, their call has always been for more 
justice, more freedom, true equality, for change. 

Mr. Obama’s call is inspiring greater hope and increased grassroots activism. 
People are starting to believe in the promise, or the potential, of what 
America could be as a Nation, if she would live up to the true meaning of her 
creed.“We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal. 
And endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, the right of 
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” 

Still, as Sen. Obama has talked about “One America,” “the United States of 
America,” the country’s reality is sadly different. America still suffers from 
segregation in housing patterns and schools. Blacks and Latinos still lag 
behind when it comes to income, education, jobs and healthcare. Racial 
profiling remains a problem and poverty continues to grind away at the lives of 
those stuck in the ghettos, barrios and trailer parks of America.

In a trade-off for his change and unity message, Sen. Obama has run a race 
neutral campaign in a year with increased racial violence and high-profile 
cases of Blacks targeted by law enforcement. That says something about the 
reality of America.

Even a man who inspires millions and who is described as transcending from an 
individual into a movement must tread lightly, or not at all, when it comes to 
matters of race and justice. The pain, the problem, the strife is too deeply 
rooted in 400 years of the American experience to simply be uprooted by a 
single political campaign or a lone presidential candidate.

It is in fact up to Black thinkers, leaders, activists and all of us to remind 
the presidential candidates, senatorial candidates, congressional candidates, 
gubernatorial candidates, and state legislative candidates, and even mayoral 
and city council candidates of the need to address the long-unsolved problems 
in this country.

We must not let down our guard because of a friendly face, or even a face that 
looks like us that may reside in the White House. We must press our cause and 
our issues, just as others put forward issues candidates should address. We 
must forge a Black United Front, organize and galvanize support for our cause 
and do all that we can to help ourselves. 

We must also remember these insightful words from Min. Farrakhan: “There are 
forces which Sen. Obama may see, or may not see, and these are the forces that 
kill U.S. presidents when the presidents don’t act as they think the president 
should act to further their ends; thus the killing of Abraham Lincoln and John 
F. Kennedy.

“The forces of racism in this country are still very strong. Even though there 
is strong mass appeal, if the racist elements in this country thinks that 
Barack Obama really will be our next president, they may come out of the 
woodwork if they can’t bend him, and hurt our Brother, and therefore show the 
country though the masses may say, ‘We like him,’ the forces may say ‘He is not 
one of us.’ ” 

Our hope is that America will take the best of the Obama message, commit 
herself to and begin the long and arduous journey to reverse her present 
course, which cannot be done without justice for the children of her ex-slaves 
and all who still yearn to breathe free.

FCN is a distributor (and not a publisher) of content supplied by third 
parties. Original content supplied by FCN and FinalCall.com News is Copyright © 
2008 FCN Publishing, FinalCall.com. Content supplied by third parties are the 
property of their respective owners.


 
 


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