Talking about Race in a New World

As Obama was elected to the United States Senate and with talk about his Presidential prospects going beyond our family circle, my wife, Naomi, and I became early and enthusiastic supporters. He made us believe that there was an alternative, another, better America which he could represent and lead, and in which we wanted to be active. We made early modest financial contributions to his campaign, and in turn the campaign identified us, and recruited Naomi in December of 2007to go to the city of White Plains, New York, near our home, to collect signatures to put Obama’s name on the ballot for New York Democratic Primary. She spent an afternoon and collected around 20 signatures. It was hard work. A cold afternoon, people were not yet focused on the election, and those who were did not think that Obama had a chance, nor was he their choice.

Remember Hillary Clinton was our popular Senator. Naomi particularly remembers one African American man who practically laughed in her face that she thought Obama had any chance. Although she did good hard work, I thought I could more easily get as good results at a nearby community center where I swim, and I did.

Our county, Westchester, is a residentially segregated. Renown for wealth, it is actually quite diverse (40% of the population is non white), with significant immigrant neighborhoods and concentrated African American sections, one of which is served by the Theodore Young Community Center. Most of the staff and the patrons of the center are African American, but many other people, Latino, Asian and white, also use the Center, for many different activities. For years, I went to swim. I didn’t socialize. I would put in my mile or two, two or three times a week, without making friends and barely having acquaintances. I worked out and went home, that is, until I decided to try to match Naomi’s collection of signatures, doing so in less than an hour before and after a mid day swim.

In a way, it wasn’t as easy as I had expected. Many of the staff . . .

Read more: Talking about Race in a New World

What, when, how: Democrats make strides in policy and process

March 23, 2010: But it is not only what has been substantively accomplished by Obama and the Congressional Democrats, very much led by Nancy Pelosi. It is also how it has been accomplished that most impresses me. Clichés abound: the making of this major piece of legislation is as ugly as making sausages. Obama’s mistake was to let his opponents and the tea party movement to define the debate in August. He over learned the lessons of the Clintons in the 90s. They were too secretive and dogmatic concerning their plans. He was too open and let the Congressional leadership. He was either to meek in his approach (the view of the democratic left) or he was arrogantly authoritarian in enforcing his vision of a policy that Americans clearly did not want (the view of the republican right). Yet I see something else. I see a political leader who in principle respects the separation of powers, recognizing the legislative role of the legislature, while he does not turn away from his responsibilities as the leader of his Party, Chief Executive and the Head of State. He let the legislature do its work for pragmatic reasons, assuring the support of Congress by giving it responsibilities to form the program, seeking support of the opposition Party and clarifying their negative role when the support was not forthcoming, but also for principled reasons. Obama is trying to do politics in a different way. Just as in his campaign for office, in his campaign for healthcare reform, key advances were connected to intelligent argument, to his political eloquence.

Barack Obama: Deliberately Considered

Barack Obama is a revolutionary, though not as the “Tea Party Patriots,” the “Birthers,” Glenn Beck, et.al. imagine. He is a revolutionary in a much more sober sense, which, let’s understand, feeds their paranoia. He is turning things around. In his speech and his actions, he has disrupted and seeks to reconfigure the order of things, making the formerly impossible the given. It all starts with the most obvious of facts: An African American President.

In the day to day focus on who’s up and who’s down, in the relentless rhythms of the 24/7 news cycle, the deep nature of the change in our times have been overlooked. In BarackObama.DeliberatelyConsider.com, I will present an alternative. We will examine the Obama Revolution as it develops. To support my contention that these indeed are revolutionary times, I frame the blog by making four observations gleaned from the speeches and actions of Presidential candidate open. As the blog progresses, we will deliberately consider the actions of President Obama, the debates about his actions, his successes and failures, and the future of American democracy.