Ginning up racism: its winners and losers

http://peoplesworld.org/ginning-up-racism-its-winners-and-losers/
by: Sam Webb
September 29 2010

tags: racism, ultra-rght, Obama, African Americans, elections

Two years into the Obama presidency it is fair to say that racist
ideology is the main mobilizing discourse of right-wing extremism. In
subtle and crude forms, it has become the main poison to draw white
people into the theater of politics on the side of the most
reactionary sections of corporate capital.

Its amplifiers are many and well positioned to spread this poison to a
national audience. More and more, the discourse of racism has become
shrill, threatening, and dangerous.

In this discourse based on sheer invention, the president is a Muslim
(as if there is something wrong with that). His birthplace is Kenya,
not the U.S. He is Hitler in "blackface," and at the same time a
closet socialist (a terrible thing in their view). Stealth and
deception were his path to the White House. He hates private
enterprise and loves intrusive government. He is tearing up the
Constitution.

The latest instance of the right wing's racist imagery of Barack Obama
appears in a Forbes magazine article. Authored by Dinesh D'Souza, a
well-paid literary pimp, the article's thesis is simple: the president
is channeling the anti-colonial, creepy, evil mentality of his
"tribesman" father into the Oval Office.

"[I]nstead of readying us for the challenge," D'Souza writes, "our
President is trapped in his father's time machine. Incredibly, the
U.S. is being ruled according to the dreams of a Luo tribesman of the
1950s. This philandering, inebriated African socialist, who raged
against the world for denying him the realization of his anticolonial
ambitions, is now setting the nation's agenda through the
reincarnation of his dreams in his son. The son makes it happen, but
he candidly admits he is only living out his father's dream. The
invisible father provides the inspiration, and the son dutifully gets
the job done. American today is run by a ghost."

Wow! Is this guy for real? How can anybody believe this
pseudo-psychological pulp fiction? The rest of the article is no
better, full of smoke and mirrors, cobbled together from innuendo and
falsehoods.

Truth is the first victim of D'Souza's right-wing extremism. If
anybody is a "ghost," it's not Obama, but D'Souza - not of his father,
but of the Nazi propagandist Goebbels.

But here's the rub: If it were only a few angry white men, sitting in
a coffee shop, who took this stuff seriously, it wouldn't matter much.

But that's not the reality. This racist garbage is resonating with a
much larger audience, cutting across class, income, religious and
regional lines. It strikes a chord among some wealthy and middle-class
people, but it penetrates into white working class neighborhoods
(urban, suburban and small town) too. Yes, class-consciousness is
growing among white workers as evidenced by the massive labor
mobilization for the One Nation rally and the November elections. But
its growth is an uneven, contradictory and contested process in which
anti-racism among growing numbers of white workers cohabits with a
resurgence of racism among some others.

To ignore or minimize the impact of this racist offensive is
exceedingly dangerous. Nor should we think that a vigorous response to
it is a diversion from "more pressing" economic issues.

If left unchallenged, this ramped up and revamped ideological racist
counteroffensive could throw the country back to days long thought
gone by or into a future that we long thought could "never happen
here."

Many commentators, myself included, have pointed to the role of
right-wing extremism in fomenting racist rage in all its versions
(Obama is a Muslim, un-American, socialist, father channeling, etc.),
but what goes unexplained and needs to be explained is why do so many
white people embrace this poison that is so harmful to their well
being, why are so many so strident, why are so many so ready to accept
the most far-fetched racist pronouncements?

What is the triggering mechanism for this new wave of racism?

One answer is that a stagnant economy and harshly competitive job
market have increased racist tensions and divisions between white
workers and workers of color as well as between native-born and
immigrant workers.

Another is that it is natural to blame the president, no matter who or
what color he is, for the nation's ills.

Still another is that the top layers of our society - Wall Street, Big
Energy, the military industrial complex, etc. - dismayed with the
president's agenda, have turned loose the dogs of racism and political
extremism.

Yet another explanation for the surge of vile racism is the power,
reach, and spin abilities of right-wing mass media.

Each of these explanations contains a measure of truth. They are part
of the mix.

But, I would argue that they are not at the heart of matter. To
understand what set into motion this surge, we have to turn our
analytic eye to the election of Barack Obama to the highest office in
our land and the racial dynamics surrounding that historic event.

The election of an African American president was rich in symbolic
meaning and far-reaching in impact on white Americans (and Americans
of other races and nationalities), but not in the same way for every
white person.

For many white people it was an exhilarating and transformative
moment. When the president and his beautiful family walked onto the
stage in Chicago's Grant Park on election night, tears of joy poured
from their eyes. It felt like an insuperable barrier had been
surmounted and a new era worthy of our nation's best ideals and
promises was commencing.

But for many other white Americans the president's election was
traumatic; their world was turned upside down; their way of life and
values were not reaffirmed, but challenged. What was symbolically
liberating for some white people was perceived as symbolically a
disaster by others.

If an extremely smart, magnetic, young, democratic-minded African
American is to sit in the highest position in our land, many must have
wondered, what's next?

The election of Barak Hussein Obama to the foremost position in our
country was, for a not insignificant minority of white people, an
intellectual, emotional and existential challenge to a set of social
arrangements and attitudes that assigned African Americans to an
inferior and subordinate status on the basis of skin color and
nationality.

It upended what seemed like a natural order in which their own status
and sense of well being was heavily invested.

More than most of us appreciated at the time, it signified for some
the closing of one era and the beginning of another, in which "the
last will be first."

Thus I believe that the election of Barak Obama was a powerful
psychological blow to a section of white people, triggering an
immediate spike in their racial anxieties, insecurities and
resentments. Without any prompting from right-wing extremism or a word
from the president's mouth, the moment Barack Obama was declared the
winner he became in their minds illegitimate, a menace, someone to be
brought down "asap."

In this atmosphere, right-wing extremism - ranging from numerous think
tanks and foundations to the Republican Party leadership, to radio
talk and Fox News, to the tea party, to personalities like Sarah Palin
and Newt Gingrich (with the mainstream media sometimes an abettor) -
had (and is still having) a field day. It gave voice to this
disaffected and angry grouping of people, repeated ad nauseum its
vicious racist lies, and organized this scattered mob into shock
troops to obstruct the president's agenda and re-tilt the balance of
political power in favor of the most backward elements of the ruling
class and its closest allies.

What is more, this racist upsurge and its right-wing enablers combined
to aggressively promote and further amplify the whole panoply of
right-wing ideological notions that are designed to cause division,
hatred and the dumbing down of the American people. If we unpack
right-wing ideology - an exceedingly nasty variant of capitalist class
ideology - we find multiple, mutually reinforcing, and connected
strands (immigrants steal jobs and feast on government benefits;
government is too big and out of control; taxes kill jobs and
incentives to work and invest; private is better than public; a
culture of dependence shapes communities of color; the Democrats,
liberal elites, and the left are soft on terrorism, hostile toward
religious, and contemptuous of America; gay culture is corrosive of
marriage and family values, and so forth). But at its core and winding
their way into and giving credibility to each strand are racist
ideology and practices, and especially anti-African-American racism.

That there would be this dynamic should have been anticipated. Only a
quick glance at some earlier episodes in our history - the Civil War,
the Reconstruction period, and the civil rights revolution of the
1960s - tells us that white ruling elites and their supporters were
first shocked by their loss of privilege, power and wealth to
multi-racial egalitarian movements, but then regrouped and went into
overdrive to restore their former unrivaled dominance and
re-subordinate the African American people and allied groups. Their
weapon of choice was terror combined with a fierce ideological
counterattack.

And in another instance of "the more things change the more they stay
the same," the Black-led Reconstruction governments in the 19th
century and Dr. Martin Luther King and his supporters in the 20th
century were also considered illegitimate, inferior, arrogant and
incapable of judicious self-governance, much like President Obama is
today.

So history repeats itself, but in a new era and with new forces, new
obstacles, and new possibilities and dangers.

While the jury is out as to who will win this irrepressible conflict,
the political imperative for the broad labor-based coalition that
elected this president is clear. The fight against racism has to be
the property of every democratic-minded person, and, in the first
place, workers in the "white skin" as Marx would say, not as a favor
to their brothers and sisters of color, but in their own interests.

The class and democratic struggle is hanging in balance and only a
sustained struggle for anti-racist unity will tip the pendulum of
power in the direction of progressive change.

A point of departure in this struggle is to rebuff the fierce racist
assault on our nation's first African American president.

For anyone to affix to the president singular or even the lion's share
of the blame for the present impasse reveals an incredible ignorance
of class and, especially, racial dynamics.

To sit on one's hands and make pithy critiques of the administration
while the president is the target of racist discourse that we thought
was forever buried away in our historical memory gives license to the
worst racists as well as opens the door for the extreme right's return
to political power.

In earlier periods when racism gained ascendency over anti-racism, the
only real winner, regardless of what some historians of "white
privilege" claim, was the white ruling classes, slavery-based and
capitalist, and their closest allies.

Racism strikes people of color the hardest. About this there is no
question. But at the end of the day working people of all colors are
scarred. It is an ideology and practice that denies equality to people
of color, heightens exploitation of all who labor, and destroys real
democracy.

It remains, as the Communist Party has said for decades, the most
dangerous and formidable barrier to progress. It has to be contested
on every front - none more immediate than the November elections.

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