Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Barack Obama Is Not My Brand of Hope - Dr. Marc Lamont Hill


From the beginning of his presidential campaign, which unofficially began with the release of his second book The Audacity of Hope, Senator Barack Obama has been positioned as an underdog against the Clinton machine. Now, with polls showing him in a virtual dead heat with Sen. Hillary Clinton, the media has constructed his early success as a David-over-Goliath narrative that proves that ordinary people have the power to slay the beast that is Washington through a radical politics of hope. Unfortunately, the Obama campaign has perverted the concept of hope by wedding it to a dangerous politics of compromise, concession and cunning.

Within the black faith tradition that Obama appeals to, hope is the belief that, in spite of all evidence to the contrary, our circumstances can be transformed into something previously unimaginable. It is this notion of hope—coupled with organized resistance from the people catching the most hell—that led to the end of slavery, Jim Crow, and apartheid. In Obama's corporate-sponsored universe of meaning, however, hope is not the predicate for radical social change, but an empty slogan that allows for a slick repackaging of the status quo.

After Obama's recent success with white voters, particularly his win in Iowa, many have announced America's transition into a post-racial moment. Even Obama himself has claimed that race will no longer prevent the fair-minded citizenry from supporting his bid. In reality, however, an Obama presidency is already being treated as a racial talisman that would instantly heal the scars of a nation wounded by racism.


For whites, an Obama victory would serve as the final piece of evidence that America has reached full racial equality. Such a belief allows them to sidestep mounds of evidence that shows that, despite Obama's claims that "we are 90 percent of the way to equality," black people remain consistently assaulted by the forces by white supremacy. For many black people, Obama's success would provide symbolic value by showing that the black man (not woman!) can make it to the top. Although black faces in high places may provide psychological comfort, they are often incorporated into a Cosbyesque gospel of personal responsibility ("Obama did it, so can you!") that allows dangerous public policies to go unchallenged.

Despite its convoluted racial logic, the election of Obama would still be acceptable if his policies were properly aligned with a leftist agenda. Unfortunately, Obama has clung to a rigid centrism that is incompatible with full-scale social change. Despite his claims of being a peace candidate, Obama has repeatedly expressed a commitment to ramping up military and continuing the presidential legacy of using war as an instrument of foreign policy. Although he opposes the war in Iraq, Obama refuses to vote against its funding.

While Obama supports health care for all Americans, he does not embrace a universal single-payer system that would effectively undermine private corporate interests. At the same time that he bemoans the loss of jobs and expansion of global poverty, Obama fails to denounce free trade agreements and extols the virtues economic globalization. In addition, Obama has been conspicuously silent on topics such as the prison industrial complex, the Zionist occupation of Palestine, and the economic underdevelopment of Africa.

In the face of a black electorate that still craves messianic leadership, Obama has skillfully positioned himself as the Martin Luther King of his generation. Unlike King, however, Obama does not aim to disrupt the fundamental structure of society. Rather than dismantling the triple threat of global racism, poverty, and militarism that King warned against, Obama has promoted a doctrine of compromise that is self-serving rather than strategic, milquetoast rather than pragmatic. As opposed to Dr. King, whose legacy has been promiscuously appropriated by his ideological opponents after his death, Obama has freely offered himself up to the enemies of the Left by attaching few material stakes to his grandiose moral and political vision.

Many people, including some of his critics, have come to Obama's defense by claiming that his progressive half-stepping is an inevitable part of national politics. Others have argued that, despite his shortcomings, Obama is still the best choice among the remaining democratic field. While such claims may be true, they prove that Obama is merely the most attractive in a group of political siblings rather than the revolutionary outsider that he's portrayed to be. Unfortunately, Obama isn't selling himself as the best of the pack, but as an entirely new breed of candidate.

To believe that Obama is a Kucinich leftist rather than a Clinton centrist is to ignore his own expressed positions. To believe that the world will be markedly improved after an Obama presidency is to ignore the structure of corporate-controlled politics. To believe that Obama is prepared to address the fundamental structure of our political system is to ignore his own investment in it. Unfortunately, this is exactly what Barack Obama is asking us to do: vote for him as a change maker against all evidence to the contrary. That sounds more like the hope of audacity than the audacity of hope.

Marc Lamont Hill is assistant professor of urban education and American studies at Temple University.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

The broader question is whethe Obama is going to change his tune once he is in the White House. He might just be playing the game to get elected. But then again, black people also said that about Clarence Thomas.

Anonymous said...

I totally agree that Obama is much closer to Clinton than he is to Kucinich. And I totally agree that many whites fantasize about the "end of racism" with a Obama presidency, much like the fall of the Berlin Wall was to be the "end of history." Clearly, the world is more complex than that, and history continues. Racism will continue with an Obama presidency.

But I plan to vote for Obama not because of "hope"--which I recognize as a campaign strategy--but because I think he's thoughtful and personable, and the least removed from the population. When I heard him here in Seattle, I didn't perceive him as using "hope" to "end" racism or other divisions. Rather, "hope" must be restored to the political process, and if he can mount a following with that message alone, I think that's "hopeful."

Anonymous said...

Dr. Hill,

No Black man nor white person of either gender in America could realistically seek the presidency of the United States by extolling the policies which you have mentioned in your critique of Candidate Obama. That would be political suicide. He dared to mention Palestine early on in his campaign while the female candidate met with Jewish leaders to ensure her candidacy. His victories, thus far, do not reflect an erasing of America's history of racism, but there is a new generation of Americans whom he has inspired, and the future belongs to them, not us. Step aside and let them lead us into a future that will not repeat the mistakes of the past. Comparisons to Dr. King are not appropriate since Dr. King was not running for the highest elected office. You could make the case that the presidency is not the place for radical, progressive thought to reside. But, do not challenge a brother for wanting to be an effective insider who has also been on the outside as an activist. He could be a forceful bridge between the White House and those of us who work diligently to hold our elected representatives accountable. As Audre Lorde has said, "the master's tools cannot dismantle the master's house", and surely one election is not going to do that either, but I am more than willing to lend Barack Obama my hammer for justice to do some serious renovating.

Lynn Roberts, PhD

Anonymous said...

Dr. Roberts,I am a 59 year old black woman and have nothing close to your education, but I can still spot a con when I see one. This was a plan, a master plan by Mr. Obama and the insiders who put him out front to draw the black votes away from Clinton.

It is ashame that a person of your statue, has missed out on an important part of life, called motherwit.

Motherwit is what keeps up from being made a fool out of. The ability to reconize that what we see isn't always what we see. And Obama had sponsorship, we just don't know who or where. You don't turn your back on the people that help you

No Dr. King didn't run for president. But he did something, Obama or anyother man or woman has failed to do since. He woke up a nation and in doing that, HE WOKE-UP THE WORLD.

DRICH

Anonymous said...

To Mr. Mark Lamont Hill:

Contrary to some people, I am not surprised by your attitude toward Mr. Barak Obama. He is a threat to people like you, who want to keep black people believing that we are an inferior race and need to sit around and keep complaining about things instead of making things happen and therefore, we will need people like you to stand up and negotiate for us.

It is time for all you mindless, arrogant, self righteous hustlers,and pimps to crawl back in your holes and shut the fuck up.

Black people have been listening and following Idiots like you,Tavis Smiley,Jesse Jackson,and let us not forget the great Charles Rangel-(chairman of the house ways and means committee),(whose district includes Harlem with the highest unemployment rate for black males in the country)for too long.

There's a new black leader in town, and no matter how much you all try to disparage him, it will be to no avail.

Anonymous said...

The truth of the matter is that progress in our nation has always occured after some radical change. The catylyst for that change has and always will be someone very dynamic and atypical of those who so call work with and around the system. Systems often fail us and there has to be a defining moment when that rare someone sticks his neck out and inspires from the bottom to the top, the willingness to change. We all are aware that change will not happen the moment one takes office but the overwhelming support that is coming from the descendents of those who enslaved people who look like you, me and mr. obama is the 1st step in expunging a country from a dark and sinful legacy. What you, the experts, and the self appointed black leaders fail to understand, is that it is Obama's time. Hillary and Co. feel that it's her Turn but America and the world have summoned Obama for this Time.
It is a blessing for Obama that the gate keepers of Black America are not on his side. The Clinton Campaign honestly underestimates the progress that many of us have made and thinks that we listen to these people. Just think back to Jena. Organized via internet.. word of mouth and college campuses. Sharpton, Jackson, Tavis , Shelia, and Maxine were all trying to catch the train that had left the station and so will the rest of you when Mr. Obama becomes president.
Remember in other defining moments of American history, there were always some of us who were bringin'up the rear!

JohnnyB said...

"Unfortunately, this is exactly what Barack Obama is asking us to do: vote for him as a change maker against all evidence to the contrary. That sounds more like the hope of audacity than the audacity of hope"

Your thundering conclusion Dr.Hill. I say; here we go again with another "educated" negro trying to prove to the less informed, they don't know what they are doing. It is you Dr. Hill who doesn't have a clue! And your severely flawed conclusion above illustrates it. Any minimum amount of scholarship and research by you would have revealed the truth. And the truth is; Every single candidate who has ever sought the Presidency, could be described that way. Even Old "Honest Abe" and "W". Some deliver on the promise. Others don't. You sir, are intelectually lazy, or disingenious in singling out Senator Obama, or at worst, a completely dishonest fraud masquerading as a light-giver. Just be honest, and say you don't personally like Barack Obama, for whatever reasons are lying aroud in your lazy,self deluded mind. And please spare us the laughter of taking your weak and flawed analysis seriously. Surely an illuminated and degreed "Temple" person like youself can rise higher than ridiculing hope. What's your alternative Obama's message to your people and all others? Despair! Continue on with our servile and depressing existence forever, while I preserve my crumbs? Get real 'Bro'. You are woefully out of touch with reality. Just like Tavis Smiley; Your message belongs in the 1970's and 1980's.

Anonymous said...

Dr. Hill,
Thanks for your sober assessment of Mr. Obama's candicacy. I have been so dismayed wondering what are people listening to and what on earth are they hearing. It appears that we are so desperate that the tables have turned, we hear whatever we want to hear even in the face of reality. On what occaisons has he spoken to isues that concern our community. To speak to issues that affect African Americans does not require that one excludes the American people as a whole. It says to me that we are in greater pain than I knew. It appears we are looking for hope at any cost. But, what is even more disturbing is the way we have turned on each other.

Shame on us for attacking John Lewis, Tavis Smiley and others. It has been shameful and a total embarassment. We are suppose to revere Obama, but not n Lewis. I don't always agree with Lewis, but I respect his contributons. We have no reespect for each other. We are so busy trying to move away from the past with no acountability that we will probably end up repeating it.
If Barack doesn't have to earn our vote, why should anyone else. To support Barack does not mean you have to attack those who disagree, and yes that includes Hilary.
Dr. Hill, I agree with your assessment completely., many others do as well. I hear it in whispered conversations everyday.

Anonymous said...

Obama, is using his BLACK SIDE to get where he want to be. WAKE UP PEOPLE! his name alone says who he really is and what he stands for. Why not look up Ben Laden and make him President of this great nation? Obama just might become Presient his wife IS NO FIRST LADY.

Anonymous said...

To Marc Lamont Hill
Thank you so very much for saying so eloquently what many Black Americans are thinking! I am emailing your article to many of my friends and family...hopefully it will make them feel better. This whole election thing is so disheartened. This is the most devisive election situation I've witnessed and Obama espouses peace and love and fairy dust. Give me a break...Black people, wake up please and take your minds back.

Anonymous said...

In reference to the above comment: What would you have him promote? War, hate and soot? That's what we are living in now. That's what the Bush administration has given us for far too long. There is nothing false about hope(that's what Sen. Obama has said about people like you grouching and grinching about him giving the PEOPLE of America false hope). What is the problem with us? It's not about black or white. It's not even about who is qualified. What makes Hil(who, by the way, I respect and admire greatly) so much more qualified to run this country than Obama? Because she was married to a President? I don't think so. Also, why is it that every time one of us gets somewhere, there are several of us waiting to comment, critique and criticize? Where are your children or grandchildren at this time? Both physically and consciously? And, Hillary, the great woman she is, is not at all clear on her policies and objectives. So, what's next people? What will you say next to discount a Black man who had the courage to do in front of the world what most of you will not even attempt to do at your own little rinky dinky jobs? When will you stand up and be heard? Whether it pans out or not, when will you have the nerve to march into your BOSS' office and say, "I've been doing your job for the last 15 years. It's time for me to move onward and upward. I want what you have and I'm going for it." I can guarantee that at that point you'd better be very well versed in selling peace, love and fairy dust to your wife/kids. Who will either be right there every step of the way or ready to dog you and say, "I told you so. You're no good and I knew you would fail." How does that feel? Ivy 30 year old Black Female

DJPHOENIX said...

Yes, that is why Barack has been voted as being the most liberal voter in the Senate. According to researchers and reporters Mr. Obama has consistently supported the Democratic party line and is considered by Rebublicans as being one of the most liberal Senators with respect to his policies and voting record. Don't believe the hype! The blogger has really misrepresented the intent and impact of Mr. Obama's policies.

DJPHOENIX said...

THE CLINTONS EXPOSED
This link to a recently released documentary about the Clintons will blow your mind. There is a film preview, and you can click the link below the screen to access the full documentary movie.
Look at it soon, as I am sure that this will not be available on the Internet for long. It starts out kind of slow, but stick with it.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid+7007109937779036019
______________________________
It is true that Barack has not spoken about the state of the Industrial Complex during the election, nor has he spoken on Zionism in Palestine or the Underdevelopment in Africa.

I am unhappy about the fact that none of the candidates have spoken about the industrial complex in terms of what changes they would make. I am equally disappointed by the lack of response from citizens, and from local and state politicians. Barack at least has some history of changing unfair criminal sentencing laws in Illinois. This took a great deal of courage and commitment, and was no easy task, but he accomplished it. Secondly, no one has addressed Zionism. Perhaps in the next debate someone will ask them this question. The topics are said to have come from the people who log in and submit their questions. Perhaps the blogger can investigate how to submit his questions. Finally, Africa is actually moving toward economic development more than ever at this time, even though most of the media is focusing on the attrocities in the Sudan and places like that. These people in the Sudan need the coverage, as getting the word out is the only way that they can get sufficient help. Media coverage of Afican, however,could be broader so as to include more of the good news coming out of the continent. There have been a series of articles over the past year about contemporary development in Africa. African governments are establishing collaborative projects with foreign companies in exchange for benefits. The companies get a huge burgeoning market-share and lower production costs, and African nations get investments in infrastructure (i.e., roads, electrical power systems, hospitals, buildings, schools, training centers, etc.) As with all new or start-up collaborations there are ups and downs, turns, stumbles, and things put to rest. There is also a lot more that needs to be done. The same is true with Africa and its partners. At least an increasing number of African countries are moving in the right direction. This is a good start.
__________________________________
To state that African Americans are looking for some messiah for president shows how out of touch you are with our community. It also conveniently ignores the overwhelming favorable response to Obama from white intellectual and affluent communities. This is an old claim that people used to throw at African Americans back in the day, but it no longer sticks. The diversity in our community is too great, particularly after the elimination of restrictions formerly placed upon our community by past segregation laws and the rapid spread of technology. The blogger's statement is insulting. African Americans, like any other group, is evolving along with society. When it made sense to us to use messianic leadership we did so, and it worked. That is what was needed for those times and prior to that period. Past leaders were effective and delivered for my, my parents and my grandparents generations. They delivered substantive things too, i.e., jobs, fair housing policies, equal rights, Social Security, voting rights, and access to equal education. Messianic leaders like Martin Luther King had passionate followers of all races, again, a fact that the blogger conveniently overlooked when trying to put forward his thesis. He and other Messianic leaders like Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. Dubois and Garvey each gave African Americans something to stand up with, and knowledge of how to move the political agenda. They impacted our nation and propelled it forward morally and ethically. They delivered, so what is the continual running joke about our leaders who have come in this traditon? Our community, like many others worldwide, has moved to a more individualistic style of thinking. We still bond around core interests, but people ultimately do what they have to do to raise their children and to keep their heads above water. A purple dinosaur could run for election, and if he could demonstrate as Obama has, that he would deliver, he'd get many American's votes. African American people are suffering economically right now and they, like many white folks, Latinos and Asians, who are also suffering, are looking for a viable solution. They want change. The blogger can poo poo this, but it is real.

Many African Americans would have supported Clinton, but she has shown herself to be a self-indulgent, thug, who is also a liar and a racist. It has nothing to do with Barack. Hilliary and her husband brought this upon themselves when they played the race card, and then messed in Americans lives, serving to undermine the change agenda, with the politics of distaction that she is running on. They are the masters of spin.

Anonymous said...

Why do we attack each other? We are entitled to our own assessment of the candidates.

I for one think that Obama is all game. This is my personally view and I think the past few weeks gives credit to my opinion. For example, he knew about his pastor's comments a long time ago and the potential problem it may cause him. In the beginning he deny any knowledge of the comments. Yet in is "race speech" he came clean about knowing. That makes him a liar by anyones standard. It shows that he is also willing to do anything in order to get elected. If he was willing to throw his pastor and his white grandmother under the bus, what is he going to do to us?

We have attacked Clinton and held her accountability for her husband comments, people in her campaign, and the negative media coverage of Obama. So why do we make up excuses for him. A lie is a lie and wrong is wrong.

Anonymous said...

Sadly, we have a tendency to hold one person or group to a higher standard than another and trample on a dream when it is not our own. It seems even in 2008 most who post comments and express their opinion still won't find the time to vote when their turn comes.

I happen to be a 41 yo AA woman who has managed to serve 20 years in the military and retired, but more importantly I am a Christian. And yes, I have an audacity to hope because it is a part of who I am.

40 years ago Dr. MLK Jr. suspended a thought in the atmosphere of a dream, but even greater I see it as a prophetic vision. A vision that resonated when Americans of every ethnicity stood to say YES WE CAN!

Maybe Senator Obama has not covered every issue important to every individual in America, but that's where we all come in. What I appreciate is I finally feel that someone is challenging all of us to get involved and help to improve the process. He had to start somewhere. And let the truth be told, in all actuality the nominee was expected to be determined on Feb. 5th., simply put name recognition and popularity would have been the determining factor and the race would have been over... BUT...

For too long many have sat back and waited for someone else to do the work or tell us what we ought to say, do or believe. Well it's time for all of us to unite to bring unity to pass. As a soldier, I understand that you plan for the entire race. No one said it would be easy, but he has the audacity to believe in the American people, not the status quo or the powers that have been.

I respect everyone's right to vote for the candidate that they believe in. What continues to disgust me is the belief that we have to tear one person down to lift another person up.

We all must take the time to make our vote count, no matter who we decide to support. Bottom line up front, when it is all said and done, we each only get ONE vote and a new President will be elected in November 2008, good, bad or indifferent!

When I hear all of the rhetoric of why not Sen. Obama, it let's me know that that he was born for such a time as this. This season reminds me of Moses' transition to Joshua...

I'm grateful that as an American I have the audacity to believe that in my lifetime I can participate in a process that may cause the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States to truly grant access to the highest office in these United States of America to every American, regardless of the color their skin. I began to believe in hope when I watched a tar ladened, railroad track cross burning at the age of 12 in my Mississippi neighborhood and yet five years later I signed up to defend these United States of America at the age of 17.

Now make no mistake about it, for this dream to be realized no ethnic group will be able to fulfill this promise alone, but it will take a collective effort across racial, gender, social and economic lines to unite America and select our next President.

For too long we have sat back and talked about what we ought to be doing. I believe many are afraid of the prophetic season we are in because it will take all of us working together to accomplish the task. And... just maybe our audacity to hope will be satisfied with a true United States of America.

It's time for each of us to take accountability for our own actions, our own voice and our own vote.

I'm not looking for an African American President; I'm not looking for a female President and I'm not looking for a President who happens to be a veteran. I believe my demograghics qualify me to have a partiality toward all three, an evaluation that I have taken very seriously.

Actually, I'm voting for a President who I truly believe will represent my beliefs and what is best for this ONE NATION UNDER GOD.

I pray that you will do the same!

Lesley in Atlanta