Michael Eric Dyson, Professor at Georgetown University, where he teaches Theology, English and African American Studies. He is the author of 14 books including “Debating Race,“ "Come Hell or High Water” and “Is Bill Cosby Right.” He has been named by “Ebony” as one of the 100 Most Influential African Americans.
Glen Ford, Veteran journalist and Executive Editor of Black Agenda Report.com, a weekly journal of African American political thought and action.
Michael Eric Dyson, Professor at Georgetown University, where he teaches Theology, English and African American Studies. He is the author of 14 books including “Debating Race,“ "Come Hell or High Water” and “Is Bill Cosby Right.” He has been named by “Ebony” as one of the 100 Most Influential African Americans.
Glen Ford, Veteran journalist and Executive Editor of Black Agenda Report.com, a weekly journal of African American political thought and action.
We turn now to a debate on Barack Obama. Michael Eric Dyson is a professor at Georgetown University, where he teaches theology, English and African American studies. He’s author of fourteen books, including Debating Race, Come Hell or High Water and Is Bill Cosby Right? He has been named by Ebony magazine one of the 100 most influential African Americans. Michael Eric Dyson, endorsing Senator Barack Obama, joining us from Washington, D.C.
And Glen Ford is a veteran journalist, executive editor of blackagendareport.com. In the late ’70s, he launched America’s Black Forum, a national black news TV program, and in ’87 he launched the first nationally syndicated hip-hop music show called Rap It Up. He also co-founded the weekly political journal Black Commentator in 2002. Glen Ford is not endorsing Senator Obama. He joins us here in our firehouse studio in New York.
Michael Eric Dyson, your response to last night’s, well, loss for Barack Obama.
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON: Well, I think, as you pointed out, that Barack Obama was predicted to be far behind, initially, in this race, and then, of course, the pollsters got it wrong, in terms of his overwhelming victory.
But I think a couple of things. First of all, there may be more a bit of play here of telling pollsters one thing, what they expect to hear when it comes to race, not simply because people have racist intent, but because of the historic lag between publicly identifying and embracing a person of color—in this case, a black man who is transcending what they believe to be race—to represent the entire swath of the population, on the one hand, and the persistence of a kind of resistance and skepticism, on the other. We don’t know how that will play out; we’ll see.
But secondly, I think that in his speech about “Yes, we can,” obviously he had tailored that speech for a victory, but I think what he is pointing to among his followers and the people who support him is that it was still nonetheless an extraordinary victory in overcoming such initial odds against him and then moving forward. His eye was on the future, so to speak, in Nevada and in South Carolina, where this debate will be waged bitterly, where the campaign battle is on.
And I think Barack Obama has extraordinary momentum, regardless of the perceived—of the loss last night. That loss last night didn’t lose him many more delegates, but at least the perception of being the inevitable nominee for the Democratic Party. But I think Barack Obama has extraordinary wind behind his wings and will obviously ascend much higher.
AMY GOODMAN: Glen Ford, your response to the New Hampshire loss and the Iowa victory?
GLEN FORD: Well, it wasn’t really a loss. He only lost by a couple of points. I think with New Hampshire and Iowa, Barack Obama has won a great unprecedented historical victory in proving that he can win the support of huge numbers of white people in essentially white primaries. And by doing that, he has accomplished the central mission of his entire campaign, which is to prove that a black man can be embraced by masses of white people.
The problem is, he has done that at the expense of black people, by constantly, relentlessly sending out signals to white people that a vote for Barack Obama, an Obama presidency, would signal the beginning of the end of black-specific agitation, that it would take race discourse off of the table. And he’s gone to extraordinary lengths to accomplish that.
He said things that white Democrats would—that no white Democrat would ever say—for example, the ridiculous statement that blacks had already come 90% of the way on the road to equality, with the implicit idea that a vote for him would take black people the other 10% of the way. Now, it’s a ridiculous statement. It’s based on no substance whatsoever. No indexes show blacks 90% of the way towards equality in any area of life. We’ve never made 65% more in income than white people. Black median household wealth is one-tenth white median household wealth. And on and on and on and on. In fact, we can’t find 90% figures relevant, outside of NBA teams and prison. But no white man, no white Democrat who said that would avoid being excoriated by the entire spectrum of black political opinion.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Dyson, your response?
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON: Well, I think that there’s no question that the politics of race, when it comes to Barack Obama, are complicated. There is the repudiation of a certain narrow conception of skin nationalism when it comes to race, and yet if you look at audacity of hope, where Barack Obama discusses the issue of race, it’s a much more nuanced and complex comprehension of the racial factors that remain.
I obviously share, as a person who’s written greatly and a great deal about race, that certainly we are not in a promised land by any measure, but I think what Barack Obama is pointing to is the fact that, as a person who can carry the water for not only African American people, but for the American population, the notion that a black man can be president then has to be put squarely in front of the American population, at least on the table.
On the other hand, Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton and other political critics and activists are not going to be out of job when Barack Obama becomes president. I think there’s an illusory notion that perhaps Mr. Ford might want to at least pay more strict attention to, and that is the fact that there’s a bifocal vision going on here. Barack Obama’s ascent to the presidency doesn’t destroy black poverty, radical inequality, social injustice, the need to pay attention to all of those issues that he should be held accountable for once he ascends to the presidency.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Dyson—
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON: My support of Barack Obama is not predicated upon a denial of the legitimacy of social critique arguing for the development and betterment of African American people. So I think we have to keep our eyes on both of those issues at the same time.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Dyson, I interviewed the Reverend Jesse Jackson on Sunday. He supports Barack Obama. I asked him why he’s not out stumping for him.
AMY GOODMAN: So you would go out on the campaign trail for Barack Obama if he asked you to?
REV. JESSE JACKSON: Well, I would have to discuss that with him. He has not asked me to. That’s not an issue for me, frankly. My issue right now is—
AMY GOODMAN: Has he asked you not to?
REV. JESSE JACKSON: No. And I tell you that I respect the distance he is trying to create for his own strategic purposes, and I accept that.
AMY GOODMAN: What is that? Why is that?
REV. JESSE JACKSON: I don’t know.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Dyson, your response?
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON: Well, Jesse Jackson is one of the greatest freedom fighters in the history of this country, certainly in the twentieth century, and he is an ally and an asset to any campaign. I think when he talked about the strategic distance, that’s an acknowledgement and a nod to the kind of burden that Jesse Jackson may carry among the white population of people who potentially could vote for him, the same way that Hillary Clinton has to be very careful in terms of how she uses Bill Clinton, whether use him as a person to leverage her authority or as a wedge between her and that vote. So that’s a calculation that has to be dealt with.
I think that Jesse Jackson is an incredible asset, a brilliant politician. Without him, Barack Obama wouldn’t exist. At the same time, I think his disappointment, perhaps, in his acknowledgement of that painful lag is a realpolitik of race in American culture. And again, this is part of the very difficult and complex argument made on behalf of a person like Barack Obama seeking to represent all of America, and at the same time not losing sight of what Mr. Ford has talked about: the issues that are gritty, that make a difference for black people. I happen to believe that a Barack Obama presidency would speak poignantly to those issues, but would not nullify or eradicate the necessity for strategic political intervention on behalf of those interests. It’s not an either/or [inaudible].
AMY GOODMAN: Let’s get Glen Ford’s
response.
GLEN FORD: Yes. Barack Obama does
not carry our burden, in addition to other
burdens. He in fact promises to lift
white-people-as-a-whole’s burden, the burden
of having to listen to these very specific
and historical black complaints, to deal
with the legacies of slavery. That is his
promise to them. That is what allowed him to
amass huge, huge numbers of white votes. And
he will amass larger and larger percentages
of black votes now that black folks see that
white folks will vote for Barack Obama.
Finally, there’s somebody who has a chance.
But he can only do this—he has only pulled
this off by these continual assurances to
white people that race will be off the
table. At least, that is the way it is
received. It’s received by masses of white
people. It’s even received in that way by
hard-right ideologues like Bill Bennett and
George F. Will, who seems to be fascinated
by Barack Obama.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, let me ask you
about Secretary of State—the former
Secretary of State Colin Powell. The
television/radio host Tavis Smiley recently
interviewed Powell on his show. Tavis asked
Powell what he thought of Obama’s candidacy.
This is some of what Powell said.
COLIN POWELL: I’m terribly
excited. I’m impressed, and I’m happy
for Barack Obama. I know him. I’ve met
with him a couple of times. And I think
this is such an important event for
America, for the American people. We can
show to the rest of the world that it’s
possible to have a Kenyan father, to be
a black man, to have gone to school in
Indonesia, come back, gotten your
education in this great country, and now
you can put yourself forward for
national office.
I mean, this argument about him not being black enough, that’s just absolute nonsense, and I’m glad that he doesn’t respond to that kind of challenge. What he has put himself forward as is as a person who has a belief in the country, who is competent, and he is putting himself forward not as a black man, but as an American man who wants to be president of the United States of America, and he’s going to take his case to the American people, just as all the other candidates are. So we should see Barack as a candidate for president who happens to be black, and not a black candidate for president.
AMY GOODMAN: Former Secretary of State Colin Powell. Glen Ford,
your response?
GLEN FORD: Naturally, I’m not
impressed by Colin Powell’s endorsement, but
I’m glad you played it, because we’re in
this era of firsts, and the ultimate first,
a first—possibly a first black president.
But we already had two firsts. Colin Powell
was one of them, and Condoleezza Rice, his
successor as secretary of state. How did
that redound to the benefit of black people
for the United States to have a black—put a
black face on imperialism, on aggressive
war, on violations of international law? How
does that make black people look better in
the world? Is that the kind of burden that
black people want to carry around?
Certainly, there will be no exemption for
African Americans internationally after
these kinds of experiences.
And Barack Obama shows quite definitively
that he, being the political twin of Hillary
Clinton, will also put forward that same
aggressive, bellicose face to the world. How
else to explain his call for 100,000
additional US Marines and soldiers? For what
purpose? Even as he speaks vaguely about
withdrawing from Iraq, as vaguely as Hillary
Clinton does, he wants 100,000 more soldiers
and Marines. What will he do with them?
Clearly, he is talking about expanding,
continuing US efforts to dominate
militarily.
AMY GOODMAN: Professor Dyson?
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON: Yeah, I think,
look, that when you make the argument, first
of all, implicitly that there’s a
relationship of similarity between Colin
Powell, but especially Condoleezza Rice, and
Barack Obama, I think that’s patently
unfair. First of all, the ideological matrix
from which Barack Obama emerges and the grid
that he has attempted to deploy is radically
dissimilar to any rightwing interest.
That doesn’t mean that there’s not room
for severe and serious critique of any
political candidate. I have no investment in
these people as deities or demiurges or
gods. What is suggested in the real world of
politics, however, what Mr. Ford has not yet
grappled with, is that the alternative to a
Barack Obama or, for that matter, for those
people who are concerned about it, even a
Hillary Clinton, the reality is this is the
game we’re in. This is the game that’s being
played. To limit the scope of African
American intelligence, interest or political
concern to the fact that a president is
being put forth who happens to be a black
man versus the interests of African American
people, I would not be so naive as to assume
that the presidency of a Barack Obama would
in any way mitigate against or militate
against the vast region of problems that
black people face. That would call for a
kind of political naivete that should be
suspected from the beginning.
AMY GOODMAN: Let me—
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON: What I’m
suggesting is that African American people
have the ability to understand his
presidency, at the same time deal with these
persistent issues. And to Jesse Jackson, Al
Sharpton and others, strategic interventions
need to be made by those people, as well as
a Barack Obama presidency. It’s not an
either/or.
AMY GOODMAN: Let me a clip of what
Hillary Clinton said a few days ago about
Barack Obama’s reference to John F. Kennedy
and Martin Luther King. She was speaking to
a crowd of supporters in Salem, New
Hampshire.
SEN. HILLARY CLINTON: Senator Obama used President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to criticize me and, you know, basically compared himself to two of our greatest heroes, saying, well, they gave great speeches. President Kennedy was in the Congress for fourteen years. He was a war hero. He was a man of great accomplishments and readiness to be president. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. led a movement. He was gassed. He was beaten. He was jailed. And he gave a speech that was one of the most beautifully, profoundly important speeches ever delivered in America: the “I Have a Dream” speech. And then he worked with President Johnson to get the civil rights laws passed.
AMY GOODMAN: That’s Hillary Rodham Clinton. Your response, Glen
Ford?
GLEN FORD: Well, Dr. Dyson doesn’t
seem to know what a rightwing interest is.
An expanded US military, 100,000 new troops,
isn’t a rightwing interest? An expanded
military budget that sucks up all of the
money for healthcare, for revitalization of
the cities, for a rebuilding of America’s
infrastructure, for all the projects that
black folks hold dear, all of which would go
down the tubes, will be postponed
indefinitely with the kind of expanded
military budget that clearly follows from
Barack Obama’s proposal for 100,000 new
troops. And so, it is not in black folks’
interest. It’s really not in anyone’s
interest, of course. But it is diametrically
opposed to the historic black political
consensus on domestic development to be
proposing expanded military activities and
budgets for the United States.
AMY GOODMAN: We only have thirty
seconds. Michael Eric Dyson, your response?
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON: Well, listen
here. I think that that is a legitimate
comment to be made in terms of the critique
of a potential Barack Obama presidency.
Let’s see it get here first. I think that a
Barack Obama presidency at least holds out
the possibility of engaging these forms of
critique, engaging the form of the black
political consensus about which Mr. Ford has
spoken, but also to deal with the fact that
we have to be bifocal. The presidency—the
people who are making critiques of the
system, if he’s part of the system, he will
be critiqued legitimately. And African
American people will be able to enjoy the
victory of the grassroots being able to
speak, while at the same time being part of
a political process that includes us in a
very serious way. I think a Barack Obama
presidency—
AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to have to leave it there, but this is part one of this debate. Professor Dyson, thanks for joining us, from Georgetown University; Glen Ford, executive editor of blackagendareport.com.
