Clinton is condescending to African-Americans. Which one? Billary.
Translation: Both of them – Bill and Hillary. I am sick of it and even
sicker over how Blacks respond to what should be perceived as a
slap-in-the face. I suspect much of this nonsense began with Toni
Morrison proclaiming that Bill Clinton was the first Black president.
Lesser lights in the ‘hood put it another way: “He messes around on his
wife, he plays a saxophone and he’s always late. He must be a brother.”
Come on, don’t act like you haven’t heard that. And in a meeting
in Las Vegas with the Trotter Group, an organization of Black
columnists, Hillary joked that she is involved in “an interracial
marriage.” White woman, P-l-e-a-s-e (We can’t say that other word anymore). It’s
time to call a halt to this foolishness. Granted, Bill Clinton looked
great after four years of attacks on civil rights by George Herbert
Walker Bush, who appointed Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court. But he
wasn’t and isn’t The Great White Hope. We should not forget that Bill
Clinton was a key player in the Democratic Leadership Conference, whose
main purpose was to nudge the Democratic Party to the right (they
called it the center). Clinton got elected by taking the issues
of crime and welfare away from Republicans and portraying himself as
tough on both issues. At the same time, he somehow convinced
African-Americans that he was their best friend, a contention that does
not square with his record. I’m not saying Bill Clinton was a bad
president. I am saying he was not a great one on civil rights. If
any president deserves to be called Black – and that’s a big if – it
was Lyndon B. Johnson. Working with Congressman Adam Clayton Powell,
more progressive legislation was passed during Johnson’s presidency
than under any other administration. John F. Kennedy is the one who got
his photograph hung in Black living rooms next to pictures of a
blue-eyed Jesus, but it was Johnson, assuming the office upon the
assassination of JFK, who did the most for African-Americans. This isn’t my only complaint against the Clintons. Whether
it was Bill Clinton singing all stanzas of “Lift Every Voice,” known as
the Black National Anthem, or Hillary speaking in Selma to observe an
anniversary of “Bloody Sunday,” it was clear that they were no
strangers to Black America. But where were they when the
original civil rights battle took place? Bill not only dodged the
draft, he dodged the Civil Rights Movement. And so did Hillary. With
that record, why does Bill Clinton think he can attend the grand
opening of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s new
headquarters in Atlanta and lecture SCLC officials on what their agenda
should be? “America needs the SCLC as much today as it did 50
years ago,” he said. “The agenda for the next 50 years is to marry
civil rights with a campaign against poverty and for peace.” If
he had not been a Billy-come-lately to civil rights, Clinton would have
known that there is no need for SCLC to marry civil rights with a
campaign against poverty and for peace because there was never a
separation, let alone a divorce. At both the National Urban
League convention in St. Louis and the National Association of Black
Journalists (NABJ) convention in Las Vegas, Hillary Clinton announced
her program to empower Black males. I hope it becomes more successful
than her original plan to reform health care. The truth is that while
it’s laudable that Hillary is sensitive to the plight of Black males,
she should listen to solutions African-Americans propose rather than
providing us with what she thinks are the answers. While I am dealing with presidential candidates, Barack Obama also deserves a swift kick in the butt. Playing
off the stupid non-question as to whether he is “Black enough,” Obama
arrived late at the NABJ convention in Las Vegas and quipped, “I want
to apologize for being late, but you guys keep asking whether I am
Black enough.” That was a funny line but racial stereotypes are
nothing to laugh at. Considering that Obma is going all-out to defy
stereotypes of African-Americans, it was unwise for him to dignify,
even in a joking manner, the notion that African-Americans have a
monopoly on being late. To illustrate just how this “are you
Black enough” ridiculousness has gotten out of hand, during one NABJ
session, CNN Anchor Suzanne Malveaux asked Hillary Clinton, “Are you
Black enough?” The real question isn’t whether a presidential
candidate is Black enough. The question is: Will he or she do enough to
help Black people?
Next Column:
A Revealing Look at Bob Johnson
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