SYNDICATED COLUMN: Obama: The Other White Meat


Wright Fuss Weakens Dems, Squanders Chance to Get Serious

I argue with my friends. Some of them thought invading Iraq was a good idea. Almost all believed that Afghanistan was “the good war,” the one from which Iraq distracted us. (They’re starting to come around.) A few are even bigots. We disagree about these issues, often vehemently. But we’re still friends. I would never diss a friend in public (or, in politicalese, “distance myself”). Even a former friend deserves respect.

Crisis reveals character. In politics, it reveals judgment.

Barack “Uniter Not Divider, This Time We Really Mean It” Obama was praised for dumping (“distancing himself from”) Reverend Jeremiah Wright. (“What Barack Obama did was a profile in courage,” said the Reverend Al Sharpton.) But the McCain campaign’s silence indicates that it is quietly editing its fall attack ads. Obama’s apology, they’ll say, came too little, too late. Obama has fallen for one of the hoariest old tricks in the political playbook: guilt by association.

Republicans are smart. They close ranks behind a senator caught trolling for gay sex in an airport restroom, ignoring the homophobic platform of their own party. Mr. Wide Stance keeps his job; they keep his vote. In contrast, when New York’s governor hooks up with a prostitute, the Dems–whose politics, after all, are sex-positive–sell one of their brightest lights down the river.

You’d think Democrats would have learned a big lesson in 1972. It seems quaint in this age of Zoloft, but when it came out that vice presidential nominee Thomas Eagleton had been treated for depression (with electroshock treatment, standard care at the time), the media went nuts. If George McGovern had stood by his running mate, the issue would soon have died. There were, after all, plenty of other stories to talk about–say, Vietnam and Watergate. But McGovern got spooked. He dumped Eagleton. Voters asked themselves: If a guy throws his own running mate under the bus, how will he defend the United States? McGovern lost by a landslide.

Rule One of political survival: Never, ever apologize. Even when you’re wrong. Especially when you’re wrong. Rule Two: Don’t comment. Defending yourself keeps the story going. Corollary One to Rule One: Stand up for your friends. Especially when they’re wrong.

But what if they’re right?

“You cannot do terrorism on other people and expect it never to come back on you,” Reverend Wright said in his appearance at the National Press Club.
Pronouncing himself “offended” by such “ridiculous propositions” as “when [Wright] equates the United States’ wartime efforts with terrorism–there are no excuses,” Obama said the next day.

What is truly ridiculous is that, six and a half years after 9/11, many Americans still think the attacks were motivated by crazy freedom-haters out to forcibly convert them to Islam. The rise of radical Islam resulted from what Chalmers Johnson termed “Blowback”–CIA jargon for the unintended consequences, in this case of arming and funding Islamist fighters against the Soviet Union. But Wright was right. “America’s chickens are coming home to roost,” the Reverend said after 9/11.
It wasn’t an original thought. Ward Churchill said the same thing. So have countless analysts in other countries. Only in the U.S. is it prohibited to say something so obvious–particularly in a public forum.

Osama bin Laden and the 19 hijackers didn’t think flying planes into buildings would make Americans join the local mosque. They were motivated by a desire to bring America’s wars home to its people, to ensure that it would suffer the consequences for having “supported state terrorism against the Palestinians and black South Africans,” as Wright said. Like Wright, bin Laden has referenced these issues.

The Al Qaeda founder has also talked about the atomic bombs dropped on Japan, one of the greatest war crimes in history.

“Bin Laden has said several times that he is seeking to acquire and use nuclear weapons not only because it is God’s will, but because he wants to do to American foreign policy what the United States did to Japanese imperial surrender policy,” the Washington Post noted in 2005.

9/11 wasn’t an attack on a legitimate target. It wasn’t justifiable. Except for the Pentagon, the victims were civilians: clerks, cooks, office managers and bike messengers, the vast majority of whom probably opposed such foreign policies as the trade sanctions that killed 100,000 Iraqi children during the 1990s. But pretending that the killers of 9/11 were driven by motives other than to avenge American foreign policy in the Muslim world further delays a conversation we needed to have ages ago, and increases the likelihood of more attacks.

One of Wright’s most bizarre statements concerns his “suggestion that the United States might have invented H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS,” in the words of The New York Times. There is no evidence to support this accusation. Yet paranoia can reveal truth.

“Based on this Tuskegee experiment and based on what has happened to Africans in this country, I believe our government is capable of doing anything,” Wright told the NAACP last week. (In Tuskegee from 1932 to 1972, illiterate sharecroppers with syphilis were left untreated so that white doctors could observe the progress of the disease.) “In fact, one of the responses to what Saddam Hussein had in terms of biological warfare was a non-question, because all we had to do was check the sales records. We sold him those biological weapons that he was using against his own people. So any time a government can put together biological warfare to kill people, and then get angry when those people use what we sold them, yes, I believe we are capable.”

It shouldn’t come as any surprise, given what the U.S. government has done and continues to do to African-Americans–a recent study shows, for example, that blacks are 12 times more likely than whites to be sent to prison for the same drug offenses as whites–that many of them consider it “capable of doing anything.” What is surprising is that African-Americans–or anyone else–still believes the government.

The Wright controversy offered us an opportunity to talk about the need to create a government that tells the truth, that doesn’t torture or kidnap or wage unjustifiable wars–a government worthy of its people and its trust. What we got instead, courtesy of Mr. Change We Can Believe In, was the usual pablum. “They offend me,” Obama said of Wright’s comments. “They rightly offend all Americans.”

Let us all hold hands and be offended. Whatever it takes to stop us from thinking.

COPYRIGHT 2008 TED RALL

57 Comments.

  • Shinsengumihunter
    May 12, 2008 12:22 PM

    You didn't acress my questions, the most important of which remains; if they were "preparing to accept surrender" why did they still wait three days after Hiroshima with such an acceptance? They should have signaled their surrender the same day as Hiroshima, or (at the very least) the next. Not to do so, it seems to me, negates the whole "they were fairly panting to give up" scenario. Maybe (MAYBE) we have to accept the blame for Hiroshima, but the Japanese Imperial Government must take the brunt of Nagasaki.

    Answer that.

  • Just because their leaders did not to put into words what we already knew, does not mean we get to nuke them. They posed no threat. MacArthur, Eisenhower and Nimitz knew that at the time, and the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey confirms it.

    Not only was nuking unneccesary, but so was the remaining 80% of the incendiary bombing campaign and planned invasion.

    Why do you expect Japan's government to be any quicker at assessing facts than out own?

  • Dana Seilhan
    May 12, 2008 5:04 PM

    Re: the Spitzer scandal, what the hell does a married man paying a prostitute for unsafe sex have to do with being sex-positive?

    I'm sick of this crap. It is not liberal enlightenment to cheat on your wife and spread disease around and perpetuate the meme that women are just dirty sluts and hand 'em a dollar and they'll open their legs for you. If you think that is liberal and that is enlightened and that's "feminist" and that's "sex-positive" then you've got a problem.

    HE CHEATED ON HIS WIFE. HE BETRAYED HIS FAMILY. He has three daughters and do you suppose he ever hopes they have a high-powered prostitution career like the woman he was boinking on the side?

    I'm GLAD the Democrats backed away from him. I mean, did you not notice while you were admiring the solidarity of the Republican Party that they also happen to be the biggest bunch of scumbags and losers this country has ever seen? There's a reason for that! Because they give the reprobates a free pass!

    This is not to say I think Wright deserved what Obama did to him. I think we need more like him in the party, actually. So what if he doesn't march in lockstep? There's a difference between cookie-cutter thinking and tolerance of behaviors that destroy humanity, never mind the party. While Spitzer's off merrily spreading God knows what everywhere he goes, Wright's tending to people who are dying from the diseases that people like Spitzer spread around. No freaking comparison.

  • Shinsengumihunter
    May 12, 2008 11:24 PM

    Angelo,

    Okay. Those are all fair points. I'm not quite willing the yield the field though.

    They were in as bad shape before we hit Okinawa and they still turned the place into a blood bath for both sides.

    I'm just not at all convinced that worse wouldn't have happened if we'd invaded.

    And how long were we to have waited for them to surrender?

    I get all "het up" about this issue because, as much a Japanophile as I am, one of the most infiriating and heartbreaking things in the world is the willful amnesia the Japanese educational system has about the war. but, bad and disgusting as that denial is, worse from my point of view is Americans who seek to aid them in that effort, and only to score points against their own country.

    Specifically, until they acknowledge their own atrocities, they are less of a nation.

    As, by the way, are we (or most of us) when it comes to the current war in Iraq.

    Again, I don't know if bombing was the right thing to do, but I'm not going to blatantly say otherwise either.

    Still, a few good points there and we'll just have to agree to disagree at this point.

    Sorry if this rambled. I'm sleep.

  • angelo,

    So you believe that Japan should not have been occupied? they should have been left alone so that they could rise again 20-30 years later as Germany did after WWI? Wow, great plan!

  • I'm GLAD the Democrats backed away from him. I mean, did you not notice while you were admiring the solidarity of the Republican Party that they also happen to be the biggest bunch of scumbags and losers this country has ever seen?

    They also win elections.

  • owen,

    Tell me what kind of counter attack they might have launched after a few months of no food or fuel. What would they do, convert their planes to biodiesel and run them on leftover tempura oil?

    Surrender is a piece of paper I think we could have waited a little longer for. Occupation was something they were going to hold us to. Invasion and Firebombing were not even needed by August because they had no supply lines, do to the blockade and b-29 mining.

    Of course, I can't take credit for any of these findings. There is a valuable lesson here for the rest of the world though: Be unpredictable, merciless and nuclear!

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