Why Jesse Jackson Hates Obama

by Dean Esmay on July 22, 2008

in Politics,Racial Issues

Quoted:

Their faith was in the easy moral leverage over white America that the civil rights victories of the 1960s had suddenly bestowed on them. So Mr. Jackson and his generation of black leaders made keeping whites “on the hook” the most sacred article of the post-’60s black identity.

They ushered in an extortionist era of civil rights, in which they said to American institutions: Your shame must now become our advantage. To argue differently — that black development, for example, might be a more enduring road to black equality — took whites “off the hook” and was therefore an unpardonable heresy. For this generation, an Uncle Tom was not a black who betrayed his race; it was a black who betrayed the group’s bounty of moral leverage over whites. And now comes Mr. Obama, who became the first viable black presidential candidate precisely by giving up his moral leverage over whites.

Mr. Obama’s great political ingenuity was very simple: to trade moral leverage for gratitude. Give up moral leverage over whites, refuse to shame them with America’s racist past, and the gratitude they show you will constitute a new form of black power. They will love you for the faith you show in them.

So it is not hard to see why Mr. Jackson might have experienced Mr. Obama’s emergence as something of a stiletto in the heart. Mr. Obama is a white “race card” — moral leverage that whites can use against the moral leverage black leaders have wielded against them for decades. He is the nullification of Jesse Jackson — the anti-Jackson.

From a great piece by Shelby Steele. It pretty much matches what I’ve thought all along. Not only will being hated by the Jesse Jacksons of the world be good for Obama’s campaign, it should be good for his campaign. Especially amongst white working class voters.

{ 6 comments }

1 Tyrone Steels II July 22, 2008 at 11:19 am

Dean,

There are a substantial number of black folks who support Senator Obama for the reasons Shelby Steele gave: tired of being a victim.

This black guy is.  Every damn day I work with white people.  And we talk about high gas prices, our children, the job, sports, movies, etc.  A few times, some of those white folks have come over to the house for a BBQ (a me to theirs).  And we talk and talk.  Why in the hell should I hang guilt over their heads?  For what?  We have WAY more in common than we don’t.  Yes, there is still racism and prejudice.  BUT it is not the over-ruling "thing" about America.  You know what is going to kick racism’s ass?  Time.  Father Time never loses.  And as time goes on and our children play and grow together thinking differently, racism will play less and less of a role.

I don’t fully support Senator Obama’s run.  But I support the symbol of his run.  He is the definitive exclamation point on the Jesse Jackson (and others) way of thinking that is SO incompatible today.  It’s not good to vote on symbols but it’s hard to deny them sometimes.

2 trellp2002 July 22, 2008 at 12:15 pm

The jealousy, yes I said jealousy, that has over taken Jesse Jackson’s ability to think properly is stemmed from the fact that Obama has done what he could not–be a legitimate leader. For years Jackson has tried to force his way into an America that is tired of someone using the race card as a crutch. As an African-American woman, I cannot believe the way this man has behaved and it is an ebarrasment to watch him make a fool of himself in front of the world.  Isn’t he a reverand?!

3 Mc Kiernan July 22, 2008 at 2:44 pm

I will not give my private political opinion about the article being slightly pompous about two apparently nearly sainted individuals. (Ugh)

What I will give is my initial, deepest intuition of some months ago.

After the phenomenal senatorial race that Obama ran against the inept Mr. Keyes and Obama’s subsequent national success, it seems profoundly apparent that Rev Jackson’s claim of any main role in any national black political leadership is over forever.

The torch hath been past to a new generation and the Rev Jesse Jackson, who expressed desires to castrate the US senator from Illinois, is no longer on the bus.

Rev Jackson seems to be getting the message.

4 Paul S. July 22, 2008 at 4:23 pm

Tyrone,

I wish you would comment/post more, I miss your perspective and writing style.  You are not a public utility of course, but I’m just sayin….

That is all.

5 Mc Kiernan July 22, 2008 at 8:38 pm

CBS News – Eye on New York interviews Pastor Manning

Re: Obama/Jackson

There seems to be some room here for some effective political evaluation.

6 jrogge July 24, 2008 at 3:25 pm

Jesse Jackson hates Obama because his meal ticket is black oppression. It gets a lot harder to claim ‘black oppression’ when a black guy is The President of the United States.  Why would he want to lose his meal ticket? I am absolutely not surprised by any of this. You see, in a free world where everyone is equal he no longer can have his job of fighting for the little guy. So, something must be wrong at all times regardless if it is a fabrication.

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