Obama Cannot
Win the Race Debate
Do We Go To
Church to Worship God Or The Pastor?
Let’s
discuss religion and Obama and the Reverend Wright and his
indignation.
The uproar
over the words of Reverend Wright and its effect on Obama’s candidacy
makes me wonder why do Christians or believers of God go to church. I am
listening to Meet The Press as I write this and the debate is ongoing
right now.
As a Catholic,
I can relate to having listened to many pastors preach about issues that
they felt passionately about. Many people were so upset about things that
a particular pastor preached about, that they felt they could no longer
attend that church. I thought Christian people went to church to worship
their God. I can understand people feeling uncomfortable with a certain
pastor of whatever religion or denominational belief and I have no problem
with those people making the decision to go to some other church. I have
made that decision myself in my lifetime. I cannot condemn others or
assume that they agree with every thing their pastor preaches about even
if he preaches the sane theme repeatedly. They certainly are not
responsible and I think Obama’s way o dealing with the issue of race and
his pastor is fine.
I cannot blame
Obama for what Reverend Wright strongly believes nor can I blame him for
continuing to be a member of that church.
The issue of
what Reverend Wright spoke about raises the question of do these people
who complain really understand the anger that lies behind his words. I
doubt if most of them do understand where the anger comes form. This
little article cannot begin to explore the debts of that anger nor the
issue of whether that anger is justified. He certainly has the right to
express that anger in America. I
was born in New Orleans in 1947 and I grew
up in New
Orleans. I was not allowed to go places because of
the color of my skin and that probably made me angry in ways some people
could not begin to understand unless they lived that life. I was fortunate
in the fact that my family raised me to understand that when life gives
you lemons make lemonade.
I have no
doubt there are many people in my city and state and this country and this
world who don’t like me because I am black, but I cannot spend my life
worrying about those people. I am a physician and a retired USAF Lt.
Colonel and I have been successful in my career and my life and I
understand Reverend Wright’s anger because many times I have been rejected
and denied the simple courtesy and privileges that Americans should expect
according to our constitution. Those rejections make you angry and believe
me it is real and justified and I don’t have a problem with anybody
expressing that anger.
Reverend Wright didn’t commit a crime or kill anybody as a result
of that anger, he merely expressed it several times and it probably helps
him to deal with it appropriately.
Obama is of
mixed race and so am I but I am black also. In tracing my roots back to
1836, my great-great grandfather was a “free man of color” in New Orleans. I
guarantee you his freedom was severely limited even though he was a “free
man” but nevertheless he worked hard, and I have records of his voting as
early as 1860 many times and he served in the Union Army in 1863 in the
Civil War and worked as a cooper and raised a family. I don’t know how
angry he was, but he raised children who which each generation worked hard
and allowed my father to became a pharmacist and a dentist and allowed me
to become a physician. I have heard friends and relatives say things which
were very racist to my ears and they did not even realize they were racist
statements. Even after I told them how I perceived their statements they
still often did not agree with me that the statements were racist. I did
not however declare they were no longer my friends because of their
views.
I would not
run for public office, but I can understand Obama and how lucky he is to
have family who taught him to continue to believe in himself and gave him
the opportunity to accomplish what he has accomplished. I can understand
Reverend Wright and his anger and I cannot condemn him for voicing that
anger. I can understand Obama not being willing to throw Reverend Wright
under the bus.
There are
people who will never believe Obama cannot be a great President simply
because he is black or that Hilary Clinton cannot be a great president
simply because she is a woman. Well those people are narrow minded and
ignorant if that is the only reason they vote against either
candidate.
Growing up in
New
Orleans was tough at times but it did not deter me
form succeeding. I think that thanks to my family and the values they
instilled in me, it actually made me more determined to succeed.
I haven’t
decided who I will vote for in this election, but the decision will not be
based on whether Obama changes churches or denounces Reverend Wright. One
of the commentators on Meet The Press said some people realize now that if
Obama tried to walk across Lake Michigan,
he wouldn’t make it. That made me chuckle because I often tell patients
who praise me for a job well done and say I am great that the last time I
tried to walk on water, I almost drowned.
There will
always be racial issues long after I am gone and long after Obama and our
grandchildren are gone. There will always be people who will never vote
for a candidate fro president or even go to a doctor because they are
black or because they are a woman. Then there are people who will say
Obama is ok even though he is black because he is different in a good way.
I have heard that one also from people who hate black people but choose to
rationalize how to deal with me who happens to be a black
person.
Race,
religion, and politics, gender, and sexual orientation will always be a
controversial mix and anyone who thinks Obama or Clinton, or McCain for
that matter should or should not be President based solely on that mix is
delusional.
The news media
loves it and will keep the discussion going and politicians will spin it a
thousand ways to suit their own agenda.
The Concocted Myth of Iran's Threat
The ancient Persian empire became Iran on March 21, 1935. From that
time till now, Iran obeyed international law, never occupied a foreign
territory, and never threatened or attacked another state beyond
occasional border skirmishes over unsettled disputes of the kinds other
nations engage in that are far short of all out wars. It only had
full-scale conflict defensively after Saddam Hussein launched a full-scale
invasion in September, 1980 backed, equipped and financially aided by
Washington that included supplying chemical and biological weapon
precursors and crucial intelligence on Iranian field positions and force
strength.
The conflict became known as the Iran-Iraq war. It lasted till August,
1988 over which time a million or more people died, countless numbers more
were wounded and displaced, with America all the while inciting both sides
to keep up the killing. It hoped to destroy both countries and then move
in to pick up the pieces like it's been trying to do since in the Middle
East and elsewhere with growing difficulty as not everyone likes our rules
and some are even bold enough to renounce them.
Iran became a major US adversary after its 1979 revolution established
the Islamic Republic in February, 1980. Since then, the two countries have
had no diplomatic ties and relations between them have been frosty and
uncertain at best with Washington only interested in normalization on its
usual one-way dictated terms. They're the same kinds offered other
developing states - we're "boss," surrender your sovereignty to ours, and
accede to neoliberal market-based rules made in Washington that aren't
negotiable. Iran refuses so it's public enemy number one topping the US
target queue for regime change. Rule by extremist mullahs and reactors
aren't the problems. They're just pretexts like all the phony intelligence
about Iran destabilizing Iraq discussed below.
Despite a hopeless quagmire in Iraq, the Bush administration seems
focused on further escalation notwithstanding the danger, near-impossible
chance of success, and mounting opposition and anger to its agenda in the
homeland. It's coming from the public on Iraq and even the Congress with
some there getting twitchy enough to voice concern, though still far short
of acting as they can and should with too many there twitching to fight,
not quit. It's also heard in the highest ranks of power from both parties
first circulated in the Jim Baker-led Iraq Study Group that reported its
rumor-leaked findings December 6. It represented a clear rejection of Bush
administration Iraq policies gone sour, a proposed rescue plan and effort
to save his family name, and a scheme to restore US Middle East dominance,
fast slipping away, and near past the point of no return by now from which
there's likely none.
Despite its clout, its recommendations went unheeded, especially
regarding engaging Iran and Syria to help bail Bush's Middle East fat out
of its self-made fire. And nothing's changed in the wake of Washington's
agreeing to include those countries' officials in initial and follow-up
discussions on Iraq's security along with members of the Arab League,
Organization of Islamic Unity, G 8 countries, and five permanent members
of the Security Council.
The decision represents no softening of the US's position, and the
administration likely will use the talks to repeat unproved claims Iranian
elements support anti-American forces in Iraq, continue refusing broader
diplomatic discussions unless Tehran stops enriching uranium which it
won't nor should it be forced to or be punished for, and keep negotiating
the way it always does - making ultimatums and accepting no compromise,
meaning nothing will be resolved and tensions will only be further
heightened. And if anyone doubts that's how things will unfold, the New
York Times was front and center spelling it out. It reported any US
discussions involving Iran and Syria won't be "from a position of weakness
(so the administration intends) ratcheting up the confrontational talk (to
show) the United States was in more of a driver's seat" and not planning
to negotiate in good faith. No surprise.
The Bush administration's rejectionism has even deeper roots going back
at least to a 2003 "grand bargain" offer from Iran - unreported, of
course, in the corporate media. It was approved by Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, former President Mohammad Khatami and former
Foreign Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi. Former Bush National Security
Council official Flynt Leverett revealed it calling it a "serious proposal
(he knew from multiple sources) went all the way up to former Secretary of
State Colin Powell (who) 'couldn't sell it at the White House.' " It was
part of a six year Bush administration pattern of rejecting all Iranian
overtures with responses of ultimatums, threats and Washington-style
bullying all framed to send the same message. Washington wants nothing
less than regime change and may go to war for it.
Fast forward to today and the largely unreported testimony of former
Carter administration National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski before
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee February 1. He highlighted it in an
op ed piece in the Los Angeles Times February 11 calling "The war in
Iraq....a historic strategic and moral calamity undertaken under false
assumptions.... undermining America's global legitimacy (and) tarnishing
America's moral credentials. (It's) driven by Manichean impulses and
imperial hubris, it is intensifying regional instability." It's too bad he
ignored the most damning fact of all - the Iraq and Afghan wars are both
acts of illegal aggression the Nuremberg Tribunal called "the supreme
international crime" and Nazis convicted of it were hanged. Don't expect a
hint of that from a spear-carrying member of the empire in good
standing.
Brzezinski did say the conflict is ominous for the national interest,
and if the country stays bogged down in Iraq it's on track for a "likely
head-on conflict with Iran and much of the Islamic world." He believes if
it happens it will mean a "spreading and deepening (protracted) quagmire
lasting 20 years or more and eventually ranging across Iraq, Iran,
Afghanistan and Pakistan (causing) pervasive popular antagonism" and
plunging the US into growing political isolation. He stated a "plausible
scenario (for war with Iran) might be "some provocation in Iraq or a
terrorist act (real or otherwise) blamed on Iran."
Brzezinski represents powerful interests using him as their influential
spokesman. They want an end to policies gone sour they see harming "the
national interest" meaning their own. He and they want "a significant
change in direction" with a strategy to "end the occupation of Iraq" with
a serious US commitment to "shape a regional security dialogue that
includes all Iraq's neighbors including Iran and Syria and other major
Muslim countries like Egypt and Pakistan." He's calling for an unambiguous
"determination to leave Iraq in a reasonably short period of time," and
believes the US should "activate a credible and energetic effort (to end
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict without which) nationalist and
fundamentalist passions (will eventually doom) any Arab regime (perceived
supporting) US regional hegemony." Brzezinski sounded alarmist about the
Bush administration's hostile intentions toward Iran, and his implications
are clear. Washington's agenda is ominous and threatening the national
interest. He denounced the scheme and pressed Congress to engage Iran, not
attack it. His message so far is unheeded.
Brzezinski's influential voice was joined by Russian President Vladimir
Putin's addressing the international security conference in Munich
February 10. He stunned listeners with his harsh frankness accusing the US
of endangering the world pursuing policies aimed at making it "one single
master (in a) unipolar world." He went on saying "It has nothing in common
with democracy (and the people) teaching us democracy (but) don't want to
learn it themselves." He continued that US policy "overstepped its
national borders in every way....in the economic, political and cultural
policies it imposes on other nations."
He claimed the US is responsible for "a greater and greater disdain for
the principles of international law (and) no one can feel that
international law is like a stone wall that will protect them." He also
accused the US of stimulating "an arms race (in an environment where)
peace is not so reliable." He added "Unilateral actions have not resolved
conflicts but have made them worse," and force should only be used when
authorized as international law requires by the UN Security Council. He
sounded an alarm gone unheard in the West that "Today we are witnessing an
almost uncontained hyper use of force - military force.... that is
plunging the world into an abyss of permanent conflicts (and) Finding a
political settlement....becomes impossible." He further warned about the
use of "space (or) high tech weapons" with implications of a new cold war,
nuclear arms race and frightening possibility of devastating nuclear war
that was unthinkable before the age of George Bush.