The mandate
By Michael Hasty
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 10, 2008, 00:19
The day after the election, I had to unexpectedly leave my
computer to go help my sister for a few days. I’m glad I’ve had the time to
process the Obama victory.
Like the vast majority of the world’s population, I had a
strongly emotional response to the election night results, and to Obama’s
unprecedented speech before his largest crowd ever. In historical fact, now, he
is the rightful heir to the legacy of Lincoln (whom he quoted twice in his
speech) and a culmination of the abolitionist movement (with a long way to go).
The significance of this event in the national soul, and the step toward
healing our relations with the rest of the planet, were even greater than I
thought they would be. It was one of those times I regretted not living in a
big city, with dancing in the streets.
I marked the victory by announcing the results, when the
west coast polls closed and Obama went over 270, to the handful of volunteers who
had braved the rain to come down to the local Democratic headquarters. I just
happened to be the one sitting in front of the laptop at that moment. There
probably would have been more people there, if the vote-counting machine in the
courthouse just down the block hadn’t broken down (we didn’t get the county
results until the next morning). But we celebrated in our own quiet way; it was
nice to be with like-minded friends.
In our county, Obama got 36 percent of the vote, about
midway between the best and worst-case scenarios. (Mine was one of 28 votes for
Cynthia McKinney. This will come as a disappointment to some of my friends. But
as I predicted, Obama didn’t need my vote in this state, where he only got 43
percent -- still seven points better than in Hampshire County.) I think he did
as well as a white Democrat would have done in this increasingly Republican
county. The black candidate for sheriff got 41 percent against a popular
incumbent white Republican. This would seem to indicate that Obama was voted
against more because of abortion than race -- relatively, a step forward.
My sister has satellite television. Since I only get one
station at home with my rabbit ears, the visit with my sister turned out to be
a rare opportunity for me to survey the vast wasteland, at a time of momentous
change.
I didn’t watch Fox News, but spent most of my available time
watching MSNBC and CNN. I was amazed at how many times I saw Barney biting that
White House reporter, and how much airtime the prospective First Puppy got. But
what I found most surprising (since I wasn’t watching Fox) was the unanimity of
opinion about what a smart choice the American people had finally made in their
election of Obama. (You could see why Republicans accuse the media of being in
the Obama tank, but that’s actually one of the concerns I have about him. If
corporate media is supporting him, that raises red flags.)
In my last post before the election, I talked about the
sense of unity that Americans would feel with the knowledge that it would have
been a united effort of black, white and Hispanic votes that put Obama in
office. I think, post-election, there was a general feeling of being awestruck
by the enormity of a historically racist country like the United States
choosing a man the color of a slave as president. I think this sense of awe
surprised everyone, including those who talked about it on the cable networks.
I heard several people say that they never really expected to see an African
American president in their lifetime. I’ve thought the same thing myself. It’s
an amazing moment in our history.
But the unique combination of elements in Obama’s character
-- from his preternatural coolness under pressure to his mixed race heritage to
a rare synthesis of thinking and rhetorical skills perhaps not seen since
Lincoln -- combined with the familiarity that has grown between the races in
two generations of civil rights legislation and blacks holding office, have
perhaps made this day happen sooner than might have been expected.
In an excellent analysis of the Obama victory by McClatchy
reporter Margaret Talev (“Obama saw an opportunity -- and positioned himself to
take it”), Obama adviser David Axelrod says that a presidential candidate can’t
really influence when it is the right time to run. “The times pick you,” he
says. “He [Obama] seemed to match the times.”
Obama, in his own personal history, symbolizes the
globalized multiracial world in which we presently live. Among the many
advantages he brought to the presidential race is his ability to adapt to
virtually any situation, having grown up as a second-generation African in both
white and mixed-race communities, in middle American Kansas and in exotic
Hawaii and Indonesia. It’s been my experience that the native Africans I’ve met
have seemed to have more self-assurance than African Americans, not having
internalized the centuries of oppression that black Americans grow up with.
Obama also escaped that internalized oppression, which is why he comes across
so confidently.
Obama will be the first American president who came of age
in the era of civil rights. The remarkable strength of his victory, in itself,
marks a shift in our national paradigm. If we are lucky, this shift will
inaugurate a new era of human rights -- all human rights. That’s the mandate I
think we should take from this election.
Michael
Hasty lives on a farm in West Virginia, where he wrote a column for seven years
for the Hampshire Review, the state’s oldest newspaper. In 2000, it was named
best column by the West Virginia Press Association. His writing has appeared in
the Charleston Gazette, Online Journal, Common Dreams, Buzzflash, Tikkun and
many other websites. He publishes the blog, Radical Pantheist.
He plays guitar and harmonica with the folk/gospel trio, the Time Travelers.
Email: radicalpantheist(at)gmail (dot) com.
Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor