Chauncey DeVega

Chauncey DeVega
Location
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Birthday
September 12
Title
A (Sometimes) Respectable Negro
Bio
Failed Polemicist, A Race Man in Progress, and Contributor to the blog We Are Respectable Negroes

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JANUARY 16, 2012 4:30PM

The Romneys, Whiteness, and "Race Suicide" on MLK's Holiday

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romney race suicide

The road to the world imagined by Dr. King remains long.

Some four decades after his murder, and the inauguration of the Southern Strategy, the sweet appeals of racial code words, and the succor offered by white racial resentment remain undeniable to the Republican Party. When Santorum, Gingrich, and Romney talk about lazy, parasitic African Americans who should pick up mops to learn about hard work, and where "the blacks'" exalted leader wants to turn America into a "Socialist-Communist-Fascist European welfare state," the signals to white racism are beyond dog whistles. They are blaring air raid sirens.

Dog whistles can also be subtle; they can be visual cues which speak to the faithful.

For example, some Americans see Mitt Romney's much publicized family photo as one of homogeneous whiteness and WASP glory.Whether in rust belt towns, gated communities, poor white rural America, or the nondescript suburbs, this is the America of "Nixonland" that so many yearn for. This is real America; the best of us; a country that they/we should die to protect.

Of course, this is a memory steeped in false nostalgia. It is whiteopian dreaming. Nevertheless, such illusions are both compelling and compulsive to many Americans of a certain age, hue, ideology, and experience.

Other folks see the family photo of Barack Obama and his kin as the future. Americans are a cosmopolitan people. While there exists a deep and historic nativist impulse, as well as a fear of the Other, the country's greatness has been its ability to include all folks that want to belong-- what is an all embracing sense of pluralism and "we the people" that is flexible, accommodating, and inclusive.

obama family

Citizens use heuristics, memes, cues, and slogans to make sense of politics, and to work through their own political decision-making. As such, for many, the photo of Mitt Romney's family is that of "real America," and to deviate from this approved model is hazardous to the Common Good, a decision that is perverse, and one that is "unAmerican."

By implication, for the collective consciousness of the white Tea Party GOP populist electorate--and although they may lack the vocabulary to express this cogently--there is something inherently wrong with the interracial, international, and "diverse" nature of Barack Obama's family. In all, the Obama way is "race suicide": it is a path of destruction for the United States, as to be American is to be quintessentially and unquestionably "white."

Folks like Pat Buchanan are honest enough to voice such sentiments, feelings which are the rotten, beating heart of the Tea Party GOP. Others who share Buchanan's anxieties and loyalties are not as courageous; they play around with his themes while not owning their substance.

Ironically, their need to couch such wickedness in race neutral talk is "progress." However, the concerns of reactionary white populists are centuries-old, near and dear to Whiteness and a country originated as a White Republic. For them the question remains unresolved (even in the year 2012): how much racial equality is "enough?"

The challenge here is that to be wholly inclusive, and to really create a radically democratic society, is to risk the privileges of Whiteness. It is to create a world in keeping with Brother King's vision where white people are forced to compete on an equal playing ground with people of color. Some of us are more than ready for that world.

Others, those White Dreamers, who foreground whiteness as "real and "idolized" America, are scared to death of a multiracial, multicultural, pluralistic 21st century. Whiteness is such a valuable currency, one whose rewards have been outsized for so long, that to consider further reductions in its returns is terrifying to many White Americans.

On Dr. Martin Luther King Jr's birthday, conservatives will mouth breath about his legacy as they spin an empty story of racial equality, racist Southern Democrats, and white victimhood in the Age of Obama. These contortions are to be expected. The joke is--and has long been--that the real Dr. King, the radical visionary and not the deracialized, apolitical panderer for gross consumerism and empty politics, would be hated by conservatives, Red State America, and many others fearful of his progressive vision, if he lived in the present.

This fact is a signal to Dr. King's greatness.

All Americans should be reflective on this day. Sadly, many conservatives, and others who hold a deep disdain for people of color, the poor, unions, the working class, immigrants, and the disadvantaged, will try to find a way to steal Dr. King's vision. The time is long past for such antics to be made obsolete. In the year 2012, those on the Right who bastardize and rape Dr. King's legacy, should finally stop such foolishness.

Brother Martin does not belong to you. Sorry. He belongs to us. It is about time that his legacy and vision were taken back--without apology--by those who would stand shoulder to shoulder with him in the present, and that are the offspring of his struggle and martyrdom.

And Tea Party U.S.A. is not part of that vision. They never were and could not possibly be today.

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One of the great obscenities of the recent past was Glenn Beck claiming King's mantle in the very place where King envisioned an America where children would not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.

That Beck -- and now the other defilers of that dream -- Romney, Santorum, Gingrich and Perry -- would desire to take us back to a despicable past, and that so many would join them -- is stark testimony to just how far we have to go to make King's dream a reality.
If today's young people are any indication, Tea Party style white supremacy is fading, however much the Republican Party continues to try to keep it alive. It is under siege by both generational change and anti-racist activism. That the proponents of white supremacy are now so open about it, suggests a panicked desperation in my mind. White supremacy has the ability and the financial support to hold out for some time to come, but I am optimistic about the future.
It's not whites that are being victimized by Obama, it is the brown and black people he is jailing, torturing, and assassinating, including so-called African Americans (because this means American Citizens who originate in Africa, Charleze Tharon must be included in this group, which is why I choose to call black Americans black Americans...especially they are so different than their African counterparts).

Kayne won't say it, but Barack Obama does not care about black people. He cares about rich people just like the president that came before him.

But, like a Disney Channel child star, we got to cocoa skin colored version of Hannah Montana as our president so that we could all feel good about the crimes he commits against us, and articles like this (because while Romney's America isn't the ONLY America, it is just as real as Obama's more cosmopolitan version) only serve to kill the dream, not bring it closer to reality. And, that's a fact, jack.
i draw two conclusions. If you're black or latino get in some politicing now for Romney and like Cain become another poster boy. There's plenty of vacancies. forget about whether you have a conscience, think about the garage you could buy.

two: the miracle that Obama was elected has still not registered in the collective mind. if they thought he was a threat, as they know he is now, they would have never let it happen. But don't be surprised if and when they come back this year. this is the watershed, and I also think if he makes it through, the nation is making it through too, and even old curmudgeons like you and I Chauncey will have to take notice.
"All Americans should be reflective on this day."
This was a fantastic post. I loved the juxtaposition of the two family portraits. Romney's was just a bit scary. Obama's was a promise. We are evolving and will evolve as a people and society. Whether the evolution creates a large schism or not remains to be seen.
Mr. DeVega, I will stand shoulder to shoulder with him and with you for as long as it takes, and then some.
I take issue with this. The Romney family picture isn't viewed as "homogeneous whiteness and WASP glory", it looks normal to the hundreds of millions of us whose family portraits are no less pale. When you see a picture that looks so familiar, it doesn't occur to ask what is missing.

You should be asking yourself how Iowa and New Hampshire (both about 95% white) influence the choice of candidates and whether that is reflective of the country as a whole. And, while we are at is, around 95% of the Republican voters in S. Carolina are white. So, the chances are the nomination will be wrapped up before a non-negligible number of non-white voters get to have a say.

That's a problem. Romney's picture is not.
I have a dream...........................and if things do not go the way they need to go in November, the dream will be a nightmare.