Obama Has Failed Victims of Racism
and Police Brutality
The president and his cheerleaders
refused to engage deeply with systemic
problems facing our country. That came
back to haunt America last week
By Cornel West
July 15, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Guardian"
-
A
long and deep legacy of white supremacy
has always arrested the development of
US democracy. We either hit it head on,
or it comes back to haunt us. That’s why
a few of us have pressed the president
for seven years not to ignore issues of
poverty, police abuse and mass
unemployment. Barack Obama
said it very well, following the
shootings of Philando Castile and Alton
Sterling, that some communities “have
been forgotten by all of us”.
And now – in Dallas, Baton Rouge, Falcon
Heights and beyond – this legacy has
comes back to haunt the whole country.
Obama and his cheerleaders should take
responsibility for being so reluctant to
engage with these issues. It’s not a
question of interest group or
constituencies. Unfortunately for so
much of the Obama administration its
been a question of “I’m not the
president of black people, I’m the
president of everyone.” But this is a
question of justice. It’s about being
concerned about racism and police
brutality.
This November, we need change. Yet we
are tied in a choice between Trump, who
would be a neo-fascist catastrophe, and
Clinton, a neo-liberal disaster. That’s
why I am supporting Jill Stein.
I
have deep empathy for brothers and
sisters who are shot in the police
force. I also have profound empathy for
people of color who are shot by the
police. I have always believed
deliberate killing to be a crime against
humanity.
Yet, Obama didn’t go to Baton Rouge. He
didn’t go to Minneapolis. He flew over
their heads to go to Dallas. You can’t
do that. His fundamental concern was to
speak to the police, that was his
priority. When he references the
Black Lives Matter movement, it’s to
speak to the police. But the people who
are struggling have a different
perspective.
The very notion that Dallas is the
paragon of policing is something that
needs to be interrogated. The Dallas
mayor said we have done nothing wrong,
but look at your history. Ask people in
southern Dallas about the police. Ask
Clinton Allen, an unarmed black man
fatally shot by the Dallas police in
2013. I was with his mother, Collette
Flanagan, the founder of Mothers Against
Police Brutality, last year. Countless
people came up and told us about all the
struggles black communities are having
with the Dallas police.
Unfortunately, Obama thrives on being in
the middle. He has no backbone to fight
for justice. He likes to be above the
fray. But for those us us who are in
the fray, there is a different
sensibility. You have to choose which
side you’re on, and he doesn’t want to
do that. Fundamentally, he’s not a love
warrior. He’s a polished professional.
Martin Luther King Jr, Adam Clayton
Powell Jr and Ella Baker – they were
warriors.
Obama’s attitude is that of a
neo-liberal, and they rarely have
solidarity with poor and working people.
Whatever solidarity he does offer is
just lip-service to suffering but he
never makes it a priority to end that
suffering.
The American empire is in deep spiritual
decline and cultural decay. The levels
of wealth inequality and environmental
degradation is grotesque.
Obama has power right now to enact the
recommendations made after Ferguson.
Better training, independent civilian
oversight boards, body cameras. But he
has not used executive orders to push
any of these changes through.
This November, we need change. Yet we
are tied in a choice between Trump, who
would be a neo-fascist catastrophe, and
Clinton, a neo-liberal disaster. That’s
why I am supporting Jill Stein. I am
with her – the only progressive woman in
the race – because we’ve got to get
beyond this lock-jaw situation. I have a
deep love for my brother Bernie Sanders,
but I disagree with him on Hillary
Clinton. I don’t think she would be an
“outstanding president”. Her militarism
makes the world a less safe place.
Clinton policies of the 1990s generated
inequality, mass incarceration,
privatization of schools and Wall Street
domination. There is also a sense that
the Clinton policies helped produce the
right-wing populism that we’re seeing
now in the country. And we think she’s
going to come to the rescue? That’s not
going to happen.
The American empire is in deep spiritual
decline and cultural decay. The levels
of wealth inequality and environmental
degradation is grotesque. The correct
response to this is: tell the truth
about what is going on. Bear witness. Be
willing to go to jail to fight for
justice if need be.
When the system is declining, it can
bring despair. That’s why Black Lives
Matter – and all other young people of
all colors who are mobilizing – is a
beautiful thing. We are having a moral
and spiritual awakening. It gives us
democratic hope. Its not about having
hope but being hope. It’s time
to move from being spectators, to being
actors.