Gary Kamiya: Jeremiah Wright Isn't the Problem

AlexWalker's picture

Forget Alex Walker. Who the hell is he, anyway? A failed computer programmer! Instead, read Gary Kamiya's excellent essay posted on www.salon.com. Kamiya says almost everything I was trying to say in my post last week. He does it much better than me and since Gary Kamiya is executive editor and oncofounder of the online magazine Salon.com, and a regular contributor to The New York Times Book Review, unlike me, he has a license to say it. I have deleted my entire essay from Green Commons and substituted Gary Kamiya' because I think this so important. Please note the powerful quote from Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address which today's ignorant US "intellectuals" never remember.

Posted on Salon, Tuesday, March 25, 2008.
Rev. Jeremiah Wright Isn't the Problem

The hysteria over Obama's former pastor's attacks on America shows we're still in thrall to knee-jerk patriotism.

by Gary Kamiya

Maybe we really are doomed to elect John McCain, remain in Iraq forever and nuke Iran. Nations that forget history may not be doomed to repeat it, but those that never even recognize reality in the first place definitely are. Last week's ridiculous uproar over Rev. Jeremiah Wright's sermons proves yet again that America has still not come to terms with the most rudimentary facts about race, 9/11 -- or itself.

The great shock so many people claim to be feeling over Wright's sermons is preposterous. Anyone who is surprised and horrified that some black people feel anger at white people, and America, is living in a racial never-never land.

Wright has called the U.S. "the United States of White America," talks about the "oppression" of black people and says, "White America got their wake-up call after 9/11." Gosh, who could have dreamed that angry racial grievances and left-wing political views are sometimes expressed in black churches?

It's not surprising that the right is using Wright to paint Barack Obama as a closet Farrakhan, trying to let the air out of his trans-racial balloon by insinuating that he's a dogmatic race man. But beyond the fake shock and the all-too-familiar racial politics, what the whole episode reveals is how narrow the range of acceptable discourse remains in this country. This is especially true of anything having to do with patriotism or 9/11 -- which have become virtually interchangeable. Wright's unforgivable sin was that he violated our rigid code of national etiquette. Instead of the requisite "God bless America," he said "God damn America." He said 9/11 was a case of chickens coming home to roost. Now we must all furrow our brows and agree that such dreadful words are anathema and that no presidential candidate can ever have been within earshot of them.

This is absurd. We're worrying about someone in Row 245 who refuses to stand up for "The Star Spangled Banner," while the people who are singing loudest and waving the biggest flags are the ones who got us into the mess we're in today.

Wright isn't the problem. Stupid patriotism is the problem.

We are now five years into a war that may outrank Vietnam as the most pointless and disastrous one in our history. George W. Bush and his neoconservative brain trust conceived that war, but they were only able to push it through because the American people, their political leaders and the mainstream media signed off on it. And they did so because they were in the grip of the fearful, vengeful, patriotic frenzy that swept the nation after 9/11. Without 9/11 and America's fateful reaction to it, there would be no Iraq war. Every day that the war drags on is yet another indictment of that self-righteous, unthinking "patriotism."

Bill Clinton's line that McCain and Hillary are "two people who love their country" may or may not have been intended to subtly denigrate Obama's patriotism. But whatever it meant, it didn't have anything to do with the actual problems facing the country. Loving America more than your opponent does is not a qualification for higher office.

In fact, the same all-American flag-wavers who called loudest for war against Iraq are now denouncing Wright as a hate-monger and a traitor, and attacking Michelle Obama for saying that only recently has she had reason to feel proud of her country. They insist that anyone who is not permanently proud of the United States, whose patriotism isn't plastered on his or her face like the frozen smile of a beauty queen waving from a Fourth of July float, is beyond the pale. Never mind that the glorious results of their debased version of patriotism -- 4,000 American troops dead, a wrecked Iraq, and a greatly trengthened terrorist enemy -- are plain for all to see.

You wouldn't expect the Republican Party, Fox News, Bill Kristol or the readers of FreeRepublic to issue any mea culpas -- they don't acknowledge that they've done anything wrong. But the mainstream media's pious tut-tutting over the Wright affair shows that it, too, has learned nothing from its disgraceful post 9/11 performance. The worst excesses of media groveling -- the flag pins, the instructions not to run anti-U.S. stories -- may be history, but the timorous mind-set remains the same.

Its reaction to Wright shows that the American establishment still cowers before the patriotic idol. It cited the "God damn America" sermon again and again, like the Spanish Inquisition ritually intoning the words of some heretic before drawing and quartering him. It didn't matter that Wright uttered his curse in the context of demanding that America live up to its ideals -- all that mattered were those three talismanic words. Anyone this angry, our media gatekeepers solemnly informed us, must be rejected. The only question was whether Obama was irrevocably tainted by his association with the evildoer. Wright's "chickens coming home to roost" line about 9/11 produced the same unthinking, reflexive reaction. How dare this apostate suggest that America might not be blameless, that its actions could have had anything to do with the 9/11 attacks?

This isn't a brief for Wright. I'm not a fan of Sharpton-style black demagoguery, with its knee-jerk grievance and identity politics. I don't know Wright's political philosophy or racial views well enough to place him on the vast spectrum of black leaders. Based on the few clips I've seen and the excerpts I've read, Wright certainly has his shortcomings. His preaching can be over-the-top, crude and ludicrous. His assertion that the U.S. government spread AIDS in the black population is a caricature of paranoid black demagoguery. In his "chickens coming home to roost" sermon, when he thundered that America's sins were being revisited upon us, he failed to make the essential distinction between saying U.S. actions were partly responsible for the attacks and saying that we deserved the attacks. At times his aggressive, almost gloating tone and delivery made it seem like that's exactly what he was saying.

But if Wright's "chickens" sermon was unpleasant, the fact is that it was also largely right. He had the bad taste, and the courage, to say exactly what America did not want to hear at that moment. He said that although those who were murdered by terrorists were innocent, America itself was far from innocent. He placed 9/11 in a historical context, instead of pretending that it emerged out of nowhere. Critically, he said that lashing out in vengeful anger, however tempting, was not a wise or just response. To make this point, he used the Bible against itself, citing the terrible Verse 9 of Psalm 137, in which David, speaking in imagination to his Babylonian captors, gives voice to his people's desire for vengeance: "Happy shall he be, that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the stones." This path, Wright pointed out, had biblical sanction. But it was not the right one.

Yes, Wright was angry, shrill and one-sided. But America would have been better off if his uncomfortable sermon had echoed through every church in the country after 9/11, instead of the patriotic, ahistorical pablum that did.

That's strange, and depressing, is that all this has happened before -- and we've learned nothing. In the days after 9/11, the nation whipped itself up into an ecstasy of moral sanctimony. Among the few who dared to resist the groupthink was Susan Sontag, who in a brief New Yorker piece wrote, "The disconnect between last Tuesday's monstrous dose of reality and the self-righteous drivel and outright deceptions being peddled by public figures and TV commentators is startling, depressing. The voices licensed to follow the event seem to have joined together in a campaign to infantilize the public. Where is the acknowledgement that this was not a 'cowardly' attack on 'civilization' or 'liberty' or 'humanity' or 'the free world' but an attack on the world's self-proclaimed super-power, undertaken as a consequence of specific American alliances and actions?"

Sontag was saying the same things Wright did. Like him, she was instantly pilloried. She was called a traitor, an enemy of the state, an appeaser, a supporter of Osama bin Laden. But she was right.

Today, after five years of a catastrophic war driven by patriotic vengeance, it's still not acceptable to disturb the myth of eternal American innocence. As David Bromwich wrote in a recent piece in the New York Review of Books, "the uniformity of the presentation by the mass media after 2001, to the effect that the United States now faced threats arising from a fanaticism with religious roots unconnected to anything America had done or could do, betrayed a stupefying abdication of judgment." Stupefying indeed: Patriotism has proved to be a stronger opiate of the people than religion.

The taboo against any critical national self-examination has always existed here. But 9/11 sealed it in blood and made it virtually untouchable. Only a few academics, Middle East specialists and outspoken journalists have dared to suggest that U.S. foreign policies played a role in the 9/11 attacks. The Democrats, terrified of being called unpatriotic and "weak on national security," won't go there. Which is a big reason that the desperately needed national discussion over how to deal with the Arab/Muslim world after Bush leaves office still hasn't started.

Turkey has a notorious law, Article 301, that makes "insulting Turkishness" a crime. We're a lot closer to this than we like to think. In fact, we can expect John McCain's entire campaign to basically be an American version of Article 301.

Our currently mandated version of patriotism is banal and genteel, as if we are afraid to dig beneath the surface of America and find out what's really there. But there is another tradition of patriotism -- a prophetic one. It is dark, angry, disturbing, even terrifying. And it cannot be dismissed, for its exponents include figures who exist at the very heart of the way Americans define themselves and their nation. Wright was vilified for saying "God damn America." But it turns out that the words are inscribed in our national charter.

In "The Shape of Things to Come: Prophecy and the American Voice," the culture critic Greil Marcus looks at the dark visions articulated and made manifest by John Winthrop, Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. Like Wright, these three figures did more than demand that America live up to its ideals. Whether in their rhetoric or by the example of their lives, they held a prophetic sword over it.

In 1630, Winthrop delivered a sermon to his fellow members of the Massachusetts Bay Company. The line that has gone down in history, oft cited by Ronald Reagan, is "wee shall be as a Citty upon a Hill." But Reagan, eager to present America as perfect, omitted the passage that followed. Winthrop warned that if the community of Puritans dealt falsely with their God, they would be cursed "till wee be consumed out of the good land whether wee are goeing." Marcus describes this terrible image as "the replacement of God by a demon who, as citizens went about their work or leisure, would suddenly devour them."

In his Second Inaugural Address, delivered near the end of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln issued an equally terrifying warning -- one also largely erased from the national memory. "Fondly do we hope -- fervently do we pray that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away," Lincoln said. But then he added, "Yet, if God wills that it continue, until all the wealth piled by the bond-man's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash, shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said 'the judgments of the Lord, are true and righteous altogether.'" Of this horrific vision, Marcus comments that it is "a call for a reenactment, on a national scale, of an Old Testament sacrifice."

Finally, there is Martin Luther King's "I have a dream" speech, delivered in 1963 in Washington. "I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will be judged not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character," King thundered. Time has smoothed and sentimentalized King's soaring rhetoric; the sheer force of his language has allowed us to convince ourselves that his words came true. But as Marcus points out, they have still not come true -- a fact that makes his great speech both inspiring and unbearably painful.

I am not comparing Jeremiah Wright to these towering figures. My point is that his angry claims that his nation has betrayed its promises of racial equality and a just foreign policy are part of a long and honorable prophetic tradition. It was not critics like Wright who got us into the bloody mess we're in today. That honor belongs to the flag-wavers, the patriots -- "the real Americans."


URL: http://www.salon.com/opinion/kamiya/2008/03/25/rev_jeremiah_wright/

 

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I, as a White American, was deeply offended and angered by Rev. Wright's sppech. Although black people were discriminated in the past, it isn't 1861 anymore. Blacks have made tremendous strides in this country economically and socially. Divisive figures such as Rev. Wright and David Duke don't help America in any way. Although I agree that the United States should be completely neutral in the Middle East and we shouldn't be arming any country, the 09-11-01 terrorists had absolutely no right to bomb us and Rev. Wright is insane to believe that we deserved such a heinous act to occur. 09-11-01 occurred is because we have an open, unlimited, illegal immigration policy that allows everyone in to this country. It's supported with different reasons by both major political parties in this country.

AlexWalker's picture

I am never going to blog on this subject, which nobody gives a shit about, again.

JANUARY 20, 2009 -- PRESIDENT JOHN McCAIN

Gregg Jocoy's picture

on this topic or any other. I care about these issues, in large part because you bring them to my attention. I posted the negative comment without making my own positive comments as a good steward of free speech. My own personal situation has rendered me pretty much unable to do much more than survive. With four adults living in a home designed for two, one a stroke victim, one a stage four cancer patient, and all four of us with serious upper respiratory infections, the bottom line is that I have spent precious little time online.

I understand and share your frustration.

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Alex, I had a few comments on what you posted here (they were all positive) however, after re-reading your post...you said it all...nothing to add here...except...well done.

AlexWalker's picture

Forget Alex Walker. Who the hell is he, anyway? A failed computer programmer!

Instead, read Gary Kamiya's excellent essay posted on www.salon.com. Kamiya says almost everything I was trying to say in my post last week. He does it much better than me and since Gary Kamiya is executive editor and oncofounder of the online magazine Salon.com, and a regular contributor to The New York Times Book Review, unlike me, he has a license to say it. I have deleted my entire essay from Green Commons and substituted Gary Kamiya' because I think this so important. Please note the powerful quote from Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address which today's ignorant US "intellectuals" never remember.

We have come to associate the word "race" with issues concerning the African American in our society.  The world of my youth was not so very different from that of today.  As a student at Flagstaff, AZ High School, we had to deal with race every  day of our lives as it was then a community where being named Babbitt brought privilege while being names Begay or Yazzi or Seumptewa meant that you would be ignored, irrelevant, not considered, ultimately forgotten.

 When Brown vs. Board of Education forced the closing of Paul Lawrence Dunbar Elementary School in Flagstaff, there were some in that community who complained because it meant the end of good education... or so they thought. 

Let me call attention to such a simple fact as the denial of water rights in the Southwest to the members of the Navajo nation.  Why is the US of A one of only two major countries to object to the UN's recognition of the right to water.  The other is Canada.

We still have a long way to go, so don't stop writing, Alex.  

"Anytime you have an opportunity to make things better and you don't, then you are wasting your time on this Earth" Roberto Clemente

AlexWalker's picture

Post are cropping on around the Internet of Hillary Rodham Clinton unabashedly race-baiting Barack Obama about Jeremiah Wright. No doubt about, Hillary Rodham Clinton has gone insane. What the hell does she think the Democratic Party nomination would be worth after is? I never liked the Clintons but I always credited them for having a least a litttle political savvy. Does she expect ninety-two percent of African-Americans (and non-black antiwar activists) to vote for her because they have "No Choice" but to vote for the "Lesser Evil?"

Posted on The New Yorl Times Politics Blog, March 25, 2008

Clinton: 'Wright Would Not Have Been My Paster'

by Patrick Healy

GREENSBURG, Pa. – Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton broke her week-long silence Tuesday morning about Senator Barack Obama’s relationship with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, saying that she would have changed churches if her pastor had made the racially divisive and anti-American remarks that Mr. Wright had made.

“He would not have been my pastor,” Mrs. Clinton told reporters and editors at the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review as she interviewed for the paper’s editorial endorsement. “You don’t choose your family, but you choose what church you want to attend.”

. . .

When Mr. Wright’s comments surfaced, Mrs. Clinton sharply criticized “hate speech,” but she chose not to comment on the Obama-Wright controversy after Mr. Obama’s speech, simply saying that reporters should ask Mr. Obama if he was doing enough to condemn or break with Mr. Wright.

In her interview with the Pittsburgh paper, she cited her criticism of Don Imus, the radio shock-jock who made racially derogatory comments about the Rutgers women’s basketball team.

“You know, I spoke out against Don Imus, saying that hate speech was unacceptable in any setting, and I believe that,” Mrs. Clinton said. “I just think you have to speak out against that. You certainly have to do that, if not explicitly, then implicitly by getting up and moving.”

URL: http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/25/clinton-wright-would-not-have-been-my-pastor/

It is becoming clearer by the day that the stupid Democrats are blowing this election. The question is whether or not the Green Party will be prepared to bear the heavy burden America's second major political party, which we will be when the corrupt and incompetent Democrats totally collapse over the next four years.

Gregg Jocoy's picture

First off Alex, I don't think that Kamiya writes with any more clarity nor authority than you do.

As to the argument, it reflects to me the mindset that says "Don't confuse me with the facts, my mind is already made up." I believe that for some it is also rejected because to accept his argument you risk having to accept personal responsibility for the criminal conduct of US foreign and corporate policy. Recognizing that our military is used most often in support of economic interests instead of US principles of justice and freedom can make many turn from military service, but for many the economic and other benefits of military service are too attractive to reject.

Pointing out our governmental and corporate complicity in actions that contributed to the World Trade Center becoming a target makes us uncomfortable at best. As the column points out, even something as calm and objective as Sontag's observations caused a caustic reaction.

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First of all thanks, Alex. This is a spot-on essay, as you said. I don't care for Kamiya's reference to some of Reverend Wright's remarks as "black demogoguery" (that itself strikes me as at least a bit racially offensive). But the rest of his piece pretty much points out how silly and distracting the political and media discourse has gotten between the Obama and Clinton campaigns, the latter being slightly worse in this regard. Unless I'm mistaken, our party agrees with our probable presidential nominee this year (and a handful of congressional reps and other former presidential candidates) that the 9/11 investigation was a farce anyway and it's beyond time we had a proper one!

Secondly, the media's race-bating on the "chickens come home to roost" quote particularly reminded me of what it and the late Elijah Mohammed (former leader of the Nation of Islam) did to Malcolm X when his speech was also soundbited and publicized as saying the same about the JFK assassination. For those who don't know, Mohammed silenced Malcolm X for 3 months because of the offense his remarks were perceived to have caused, and the damage he perceived it to have done to the NoI. Whether you're offended by that remark (or Wright's comment on 9/11) or not, does that make it necessarily make it completely (or even partially) untrue? We need to ask the question since we don't really know what happened with either incident and those who do refuse to tell us, or classify the documents that would. Anyone else wonder what they're hiding?

Thirdly, I have to disagree with Truthman. Fair enough, it's not 1861 anymore. But how far have we moved beyond the racial exploitation of the past when, as the infamous film about Congresswoman McKinney and the work of Greg Palast, Bob Fitrakous and others documents, the fifteenth ammendment and Voting Rights Act are systematically violated, not just in Ohio and Florida, but nationwide? Against Blacks, Latinos, Asian and Native Americans, and some "caucasian" voters as well. How far beyond racial exploitation are we in light of the issue of water (and land) rights raised by Wrolley continue to fester and drive the native american population in much of this country further behind all other racial groups in terms of rates of impoverishment, inequality, educational achievement and standards of access to jobs and adequate health care? Do I even need to mention the subprime crisis that, according to Palast, has taken the homes (and life savings) of 2 million most Latino and African American families, bailed out to the tune of $200 billion the crooks who illegally (under NY state law) foreclosed those homes under predatory lending practices, and illegally spied on the chief prosecutor in that case, former Governor Spitzer?! If you add in issues of income inequality, rollback of affirmative action, the prison industrial complex which has incarcerated 1 in 99 Americans, usually for trivial offenses such as drug possession (the bulk of them are people of color), continued redlining and spatial discrimination in terms of where people of color can live and continued gutting of America's cities in favor or the suburbs, and I'd say we're at least back to the standards of 1963 when King made his speech. Despite the gains that have been made.

I'd therefore argue Reverend Wright is "right" on point (please excuse the pun). Senator Obama shouldn't be apologizing or distancing himself from his former pastor's comments, he should be doing something about this, as we in the green party and Congresswoman (or sister if you prefer) McKinney is. I'm pessimistic, given the apparent strength of the Nader campaign (see last week's Zogby polls) that we are in a position to benefit from the possible split coming in the dem party that Alex is speculating about. But as time wears on, and the Dems both increase the chances of a McCain victory and do little to fight on the issues to stop it and start to reform our country, I think the split may become increasingly likely.

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