Does Joseph Lowery hate white people?

The major racial and ethnic communities in American life don’t talk much.  The dialogue vacuum makes it easy to assume that a generic or default American sensibility exists.  You notice the great gulf fixed between black and white America when a morally ambiguous story like Jena emerges.  Its a Rorschach test–you see what you want to see.  And white people and black people don’t see the same thing.

The Rev. Joseph Lowery’s benediction at President Obama’s inaugural ceremony offers another example of this phenomenon.

White people are outraged.  Garments are being rent in twain.  Lowery is being denounced as a racist and a race baiter.

Here’s the offending statement:

“… help us work for that day when black will not be asked to give back, when brown can stick around, when yellow will be mellow, when the red man can get ahead, man, and when white will embrace what is right.”

White people take pride in the fact that America has elected a black president.  Doesn’t this suggest that we have quit our lowdown ways?  Aren’t we already embracing the right?  Isn’t there some kind of statute of limitations on black outrage?

The Rev. Gerald Britt helps place the issue in historical context.  As is often the case, the comments section is almost as enlightening as Rev. Britt’s post.

Obama, Jena and Justice

On the 29th of September, presidential candidate Barack Hussein Obama stood before the student body of Howard University in Washington DC.  Four days earlier, I had occupied the same stage as part of a panel including several Jena 6 parents and a few other criminal justice reform advocates.  I have long been aware that then-candidate Obama talked about Jena when he was at Howard; but until today I hadn’t seen a full transcript of his remarks.

I have placed our president’s comments about Jena and criminal justice reform in bold italics below, and you might want to scroll down to that bit before reading the balance of his address.

This speech shows genuine courage.  As Obama himself acknowledges, candor on the subject of crime and justice can be bad for your political health.  The subject is so politically toxic, in fact, that candidate Obama rarely addressed the subject during the campaign and is unlikely to make it front-and-center as president.  Yet I believe these strong declarative come from the heart and reflect our new president’s genuine values and intentions. (more…)

Mental illness, crime and prevention

Over at “Grits for Breakfast” Scott Henson has a thoughtful post on the relationship between crime and mental illness.  I’ll give you the opening paragraph as a teaser:

The US Supreme Court has said executing the mentally retarded is unconstitutional, but the mentally ill are still fair game. Dr. Lucy Puryear, a clinical psychiatrist from the Baylor College of Medicine offers a thoughtful discussion at Women in Crime Ink regarding the astonishing case of Andre Thomas, a schizophrenic death row inmate who plucked out his only good eye and ate it (he’d pulled the first one out while sitting in jail awaiting his capital murder trial), adding a whole new dimension to the biblical adage, “an eye for an eye.”

Obama confronts the us-them divide

Obama

Once again the United States of America has managed a peaceful transfer of power without the shedding of a single drop of blood. 

George Washington feared it could never happen.  But it can, and it does.

When Barack Obama stepped to the microphone he wasn’t smiling.  Neither was the sea of humanity arrayed before him.  As he spoke, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was in free fall on more bad news from the banking industry and the nation was bogged down in two unwinnable wars.  What could a new president say that hadn’t been said before?

With the dexterity of a skilled seamstress, Obama wove the themes of responsibility and inclusion into a single strand.

We remain a young nation, but in the words of Scripture, the time has come to set aside childish things. The time has come to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to choose our better history; to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea, passed on from generation to generation: the God-given promise that all are equal, all are free, and all deserve a chance to pursue their full measure of happiness.

American immaturity, the president seemed to suggest, was rooted in an ancient tendency of distinguishing between “us,” (the “real Americans”) and “them,” (the folks who don’t qualify for full citizenship). 

The us-them distinction expounded formally in the dreadful DredScott decision.  For the purposes of political calculus, evern African American resident of the United States was equal to three-fifths of a person.  In the wake of the civil rights movement the full citizenship of non-whites was recognized, but there has always been an unspoken assumption that, while all are equal, some (to quote George Orwell) are more equal than others.

Instead of arguing for the full inclusion of non-white Americans, President Obama introduced an alternative assumption: all the folks who have crowded the American stage from the earliest days of our history have been full-fledged American making equally important contributions to our greatness as a nation. (more…)

A bold stride down a good road

I know this sort of bipartisan gesture stimulates a lot of eye-rolling and longsuffering sighs in progressive quarters, but Barack Obama’s willingness to honor John McCain on the eve of his own big day is a refreshing sign of hope.  We can’t sacrifice everything for unity, but we must sacrifice much if we are serious about dragging America out of the culture war quicksand.   Years will pass before we see the end of our current economic woes.  Our involvements in Iraq and Afghanistan will bring great sorrow and no glory at all.  We are spending trillions of dollars we don’t have on self-indulgent addicts to instant gratification.  No one understands the military and economic challenges before us.  Mr. Obama has no simple solutions and he knows it.

We no longer have the luxury of a culture war; the challenges we face are too grave.  And so I thank God for a president with the grace and wisdom to reach out to the people who didn’t vote for him.  By embracing John McCain, Barack Obama is making himself America’s president.  The good will soon dissipate, but moments like this come rarely and will live in memory when the petty squabbling is mercifully forgotten. (more…)

Holder: Hiring irregularities at DOJ will be investigated

Things were just as bad at the civil rights division of the Department of Justice as many of us feared.  According to a recent article in the Washington Post, “a former Justice Department official entrusted with enforcing civil rights laws refused to hire lawyers whom he labeled as “commies” and transferred another attorney for allegedly writing in “ebonics” and benefiting from “an affirmative action thing,” according to an investigation released yesterday by internal watchdogs.”

According to a report from the department’s inspector general and Office of Professional Responsibility, Bradley J. Schlozman, injected partisan politics into the hiring process.  “Over three years in which he controlled employment decisions, Schlozman favored young conservatives for entry-level jobs, transferred those he called “right-thinking Americans” into top assignments and instructed colleagues that “adherents of Mao’s little red book need not apply,” according to e-mails cited in the report. Authorities analyzed 112 career hires during Schlozman’s tenure and determined that “virtually all” of the lawyers whose political affiliations were known at the time had ties to Republicans or conservative legal groups.”

Schlozman has been accused of lying under oath in his testimony to Congress.  According to the Boston Globe, Eric Holder, the Attorney General designate, has promised to investigate Schlozman if he is confirmed.

This is just one instance in which the fox was been invited to guard the Department Of Justice hen house during the Bush Administration.  The DOJ is supposed to represent the interests of all Americans, not just those of a favored minority.  When hiring policy at the Civil Rights Division is being set by a guy who doesn’t believe in civil rights we’ve got a problem.

While the Obama administration shows little appetite for a thoroughgoing investigation of Bush administration abuses, Paul Krugman at the NYT wants the offenders held accountable.   After cataloguing the manifold sins of ommission and comission (including hiring practices at the DOJ) Krugman has some strong advice for the 44th President:

While it’s probably in his short-term political interests to forgive and forget, next week he’s going to swear to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.” That’s not a conditional oath to be honored only when it’s convenient.

And to protect and defend the Constitution, a president must do more than obey the Constitution himself; he must hold those who violate the Constitution accountable. So Mr. Obama should reconsider his apparent decision to let the previous administration get away with crime. Consequences aside, that’s not a decision he has the right to make.

Presidents and Preachers

I listened to this thoughful NPR opinion piece this morning as I lifted weights in my garage.  I was impressed. 

William Lawrence teaches American Church History (my own specialty) at Perkins School of Theology, a Methodist seminary affiliated with Southern Methodist University in Dallas. 

Presidents have preacher problems, Lawrence says, because most Americans don’t know very much about religion–their own or anybody else’s.  That’s why so many Southern Baptists feared the election of a Roman Catholic named John Kennedy and why non-evangelicals broke into a sweat when a born-again Baptist named Jimmy Carter took the oath of office.  The text of Dr. Lawrence’s remarks is printed on the KERA website. (more…)

Obama opens the door

 

Bill Cosby and Alvin Poussaint have been barnstorming the country ever since they released their diatribe against the Hip Hop generation, “Come on, People!”  They were on a panel at Howard University a week or two after the massive march on Jena.  Howard students were polite and defenential toward Cosby and Poussaint, but they were much more enthusiastic a few hours later when I joined several Jena 6 parents on stage.

This all started back in 2004 when Cosby addressed a Washington gala on the 50th anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Education.  Instead of honoring the ground-breaking world of Thurgood Marshall and the Legal Defense Fund, Cosby lit into “the lower income folk” in the black community.  Black people needed to stop blaming white folks for all their problems, Cosby said.  The time had come to move beyond the victim mentality. 

Ted Shaw, the newly minted lead counsel for the Legal Defense Fund, followed the Coz to the podium.  Scrapping the polite speech he had prepared for the occasion, Shaw launched into an impromptu call for a modern civil rights movement.  As a case in point, he cited Tulia, Texas, where, he told the audience, 47 innocent black people were arrested on the word of a racist white police officer.  In other words, some poor black people really are victims.

When I ran into Ted Shaw in Jena last year, I reminded him of his run-in with Bill Cosby.  I could see the pain in his eyes.  No one enjoys mixing it up with a cultural icon.

That hasn’t protected Cosby from the wrath of the black intelligentsia, however.  He has been accused of selling out the civil rights movement, for blaming the victim, and for aiding and abetting white conservatives.  Michael Eric Dyson’s “Is Bill Cosby Right?  Or has the Black Middle Class Lost Its Mind” may have offered the most scorching critique. (more…)

Beyond the thug-hero syndrome

News and Notes is an NPR program that highlights stories of particular interest to African American listeners.  Host Farai Chideya took an interest in the Jena 6 story early on and her program has contacted me about it in the past.  The lion’s share of this roundtable discussion deals with Mychal Bell’s attempted suicide (none of the panelists considered the shooting accidental).   

I clicked on the “listen now” tab with a sense of foreboding.  I was afraid participants would conclude that the black community should never have supported the Jena 6. 

That’s not what I heard.  Jasmyne Cannick, Shaun King (of Shaun in the City), and Eric Brown of the Detroit News talk about the impact of intense media coverage on small-town kids like Mychal Bell.  The general sense is that supporters of the Jena 6 turned Mychal into a hero–a burden of expectation he couldn’t handle. 

When we stand behind people like Mychal Bell, Robert Bailey and the other Jena defendants we must understand who they are and who they aren’t.  They aren’t heroes.  They are neither wise nor well-informed.  For the most part, they come from broken families and have learned to live with severe financial hardship.  In their world, role models are in short supply and, for better and for worse, the Hip Hop culture fills the moral void.

Justice advocates need to grow beyond what I call the thug-hero syndrome.  The Jena 6 were vulnerable to over-prosecution because the white community in Jena had labelled them as lower ninth ward thugs.  I tried to present the Jena 6, Justin Barker (the student assaulted at Jena High School) and the young white boys who hung nooses from a tree on the white side of the school courtyard as victims of a toxic social environment.  These kids had been fighting sporadically for months when a fire at the high school sparked a crisis atmosphere. (more…)