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Religion, Politics, Racism and Invisibility: Obama and Wright vs. McCain and Hagee

Robb's comment on my post about the Capitol Steps show in Seattle got me thinking - and writing - [again] about some of the religious and racial issues in the U.S. presidential race. I started to write a comment in response to Robb's comment, but as it grew longer and longer, I decided to move it into a separate blog post.

Robb is a good friend from college who grew up in the U.S. but has spent many years living in New Zealand, where he has been increasingly appreciating the natural beauty of the land (especially the mountains), the indigenous people - Maori - and their culture ... and writing inspiring prose and poetry about his experiences and growing appreciation in his Musings from Aotearoa blog. In his comment on my post, Robb, raised a number of provocative issues:

I find this issue of 0bama "throwing" Wright "under the bus" to reveal the real dark side of this issue, old fashioned racism. I still fail to see what he, Wright, has actually said that can be construed as being either inflammatory or has anything to do with 0bama directly. What are people so afraid of here, or should I write, perhaps inflammatorily, what is conservative, entrenched, white America so afraid of here? I am trying to track where I read it down, but I recall reading somewhere John McCain's religous mentor saying the New orleans devastation was the "wrath of God on those people". Where is that in the news media? 0r what things are spoken from the pulpit of many white churches on any given Sunday in the land where Emmett Till was murdered? Where is the balance?

Good questions! I want to spend a bit of time reviewing some of Wright's recent remarks before exploring McCain's religious connections.

WrightAtNationalPressClubReverend Jeremiah Wright, the former pastor of the current Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, has made a few appearances lately. I enjoyed watching Bill Moyers interview Wright on PBS a week ago, a venue in which Wright came across as a relatively reasonable - and clearly passionate - man. I did not watch Wright's more recent National Press Club speech and Q&A last week, but it was carried on C-SPAN (and there are segments posted on YouTube), and Fox News has posted a transcript; I had seen and heard snippets of commentary during the week, but it was not until Robb's comment that I decided to sit down and listen the entire speech and read the transcript.

As with my earlier experience in reviewing the larger contexts of Wright's sermons from which short snippets have been repeatedly rebroadcast in the mass media, and which have been reportedly perceived as so inflammatory by so many, I found myself agreeing with nearly all of the views expressed by Wright in his National Press Club talk on "The African American Religious Experience; Theology & Practice". And, in an effort to help provide a larger - or at least different - context than has been offered in most accounts of this talk, I wanted to share some of the excerpts that I found most inspiring.

Invisibleman Wright starts off describing the relative invisibility of the black church and black religious tradition, beginning with its roots during slavery, and continuing through the present day, referencing The Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison - implicitly and explicitly - throughout his remarks, and I think this invisibility characterizes - or cloaks - many of the issues that are arising throughout this controversy. As he progresses through the talk, his presentation become more inclusive, promoting liberation for all peoples, urging acceptance of differences without presuming deficiencies, and closing with an invitation to reconciliation, through which greater unity can be achieved ... and I can't help but note that the theme of unity is one of the key messages of Wright's [former?] church member, Barack Obama.

Robb's reference to "throwing Wright under a bus" highlights the unfortunate, but understandable (given the mass media focus on the most controversial aspects of Wright's views), tone of Obama's response to Wright's most recent remarks, in which he condemns the "outrageous" and "destructive" nature of some of those remarks. I find Obama's assertion that Wright is "giving comfort to those who prey on hate" to be particularly interesting. Wright's refusal to recede into the background - to become invisible - may be giving ammunition to those who prey on hate, but I don't see how it offers any comfort to anybody. The explosive charge of that ammunition is more the result of media coverage of Wright's comments than the comments themselves, which, in my interpretation, represent more of a challenge to those who promote and prey on hate rather than a comfort to them.

Anyhow, before offering further interpretations and judgments, here are some extended exerpts of the actual words spoken by Wright during his National Press Club speech: 

The black religious experience is a tradition that, at one point in American history, was actually called the “invisible institution,” as it was forced underground by the Black Codes.

The Black Codes prohibited the gathering of more than two black people without a white person being present to monitor the conversation, the content, and the mood of any discourse between persons of African descent in this country.

Africans did not stop worshipping because of the Black Codes. Africans did not stop gathering for inspiration and information and for encouragement and for hope in the midst of discouraging and seemingly hopeless circumstances.  They just gathered out of the eyesight and the earshot of those who defined them as less than human.

They became, in other words, invisible in and invisible to the eyes of the dominant culture.  They gathered to worship in brush arbors, sometimes called hush arbors, where the slaveholders, slave patrols, and Uncle Toms couldn’t hear nobody pray.

...

The prophetic tradition of the black church has its roots in Isaiah, the 61st chapter, where God says the prophet is to preach the gospel to the poor and to set at liberty those who are held captive. Liberating the captives also liberates who are holding them captive.

It frees the captives and it frees the captors.  It frees the oppressed and it frees the oppressors.

The prophetic theology of the black church, during the days of chattel slavery, was a theology of liberation.  It was preached to set free those who were held in bondage spiritually, psychologically, and sometimes physically.  And it was practiced to set the slaveholders free from the notion that they could define other human beings or confine a soul set free by the power of the gospel.

The prophetic theology of the black church during the days of segregation, Jim Crow, lynching, and the separate-but-equal fantasy was a theology of liberation.

It was preached to set African-Americans free from the notion of second-class citizenship, which was the law of the land.  And it was practiced to set free misguided and miseducated Americans from the notion that they were actually superior to other Americans based on the color of their skin.

The prophetic theology of the black church in our day is preached to set African-Americans and all other Americans free from the misconceived notion that different means deficient.

...

This principle of “different does not mean deficient” is at the heart of the prophetic theology of the black church.  It is a theology of liberation.

The prophetic theology of the black church is not only a theology of liberation; it is also a theology of transformation, which is also rooted in Isaiah 61, the text from which Jesus preached in his inaugural message, as recorded by Luke.

When you read the entire passage from either Isaiah 61 or Luke 4 and do not try to understand the passage or the content of the passage in the context of a sound bite, what you see is God’s desire for a radical change in a social order that has gone sour.

God’s desire is for positive, meaningful and permanent change. God does not want one people seeing themselves as superior to other people.  God does not want the powerless masses, the poor, the widows, the marginalized, and those underserved by the powerful few to stay locked into sick systems which treat some in the society as being more equal than others in that same society.

...

God does not desire for us, as children of God, to be at war with each other, to see each other as superior or inferior, to hate each other, abuse each other, misuse each other, define each other, or put each other down.

God wants us reconciled, one to another.  And that third principle in the prophetic theology of the black church is also and has always been at the heart of the black church experience in North America.

...

To say “I am a Christian” is not enough.  Why?  Because the Christianity of the slaveholder is not the Christianity of the slave. The God to whom the slaveholders pray as they ride on the decks of the slave ship is not the God to whom the enslaved are praying as they ride beneath the decks on that slave ship.

How we are seeing God, our theology, is not the same.  And what we both mean when we say “I am a Christian” is not the same thing. The prophetic theology of the black church has always seen and still sees all of God’s children as sisters and brothers, equals who need reconciliation, who need to be reconciled as equals in order for us to walk together into the future which God has prepared for us.

Reconciliation does not mean that blacks become whites or whites become blacks and Hispanics become Asian or that Asians become Europeans.

Reconciliation means we embrace our individual rich histories, all of them.  We retain who we are as persons of different cultures, while acknowledging that those of other cultures are not superior or inferior to us.  They are just different from us.

We root out any teaching of superiority, inferiority, hatred, or prejudice.

And we recognize for the first time in modern history in the West that the other who stands before us with a different color of skin, a different texture of hair, different music, different preaching styles, and different dance moves, that other is one of God’s children just as we are, no better, no worse, prone to error and in need of forgiveness, just as we are.

Only then will liberation, transformation, and reconciliation become realities and cease being ever elusive ideals.

During the Q&A following his speech, Wright was asked about about his recent remarks about the political nature of Obama's recent remarks renouncing some of Wright's earlier remarks.

Politicians say what they say and do what they do based on electability, based on sound bites, based on polls, Huffington, whoever’s doing the polls.  Preachers say what they say because they’re pastors.  They have a different person to whom they’re accountable.
...
He didn’t distance himself.  He had to distance himself, because he’s a politician, from what the media was saying I had said, which was anti-American.  He said I didn’t offer any words of hope. How would he know?  He never heard the rest of the sermon.  You never heard it.

Wright was also asked about his earlier assertion that "the government lied about inventing the HIV virus as a means of genocide against people of color" - still, for me, the most disturbing of his statements during the increasingly infamous sermon snippets. He referenced the books Emerging Viruses: AIDS And Ebola : Nature, Accident or Intentional?, by Dr. Leonard G. Horowitz, and Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present, by Harriet A. Washington, and went on to say:

I read different things. As I said to my members, if you haven’t read things, then you can’t — based on this Tuskegee experiment and based on what has happened to Africans in this country, I believe our government is capable of doing anything.

I share Wright's distrust of our government, though I still do not believe his earlier assertion. However, given the larger scope of all he has said (at the National Press Club, during Bill Moyer's interview, and in his sermons I have watched on YouTube), I am not willing to dismiss all of Wright's views based solely on this one questionable dimension ... and I can think of many, far more destructive, examples of questionable assertions by political and religious leaders.

Speaking of which, getting back to Robb's comments, and his reference to a hateful "wrath of God" condemnation of the victims of Hurricane Katrina by a religious figure associated with U.S. Senator and Republican presidential candidate John McCain, I tracked down an article on "McCain’s faith: Pastor describes senator as devout, but low-key" in the Associated Baptist Press. McCain's pastor, Dan Yeary, notes some controversial religious connections for McCain:

The candidate endured some criticism in February after San Antonio pastor and Christian Zionist leader John Hagee endorsed him. Catholic and Jewish leaders denounced Hagee for statements he has made in the past that could be interpreted as anti-Catholic and anti-Semitic.

Hagee claimed the critics had misunderstood and de-contextualized his comments. Nonetheless, McCain’s campaign issued a statement in which he distanced himself from the preacher’s more controversial remarks without rejecting or repudiating the endorsement.

The senator has received less media scrutiny for a separate endorsement of his candidacy by Ohio pastor Rod Parsley. Parsley, who leads a charismatic multi-media empire, has been criticized for statements insisting Islam must be “destroyed” and for denigrating gays, the separation of church and state and secularists.

This led me to another article, "McCain, Hagee and the Politics of God's Wrath", in The Nation blog, which provides references to John Hagee - not McCain's pastor, but an endorser (and we know Obama has been criticized for people who have endorsed him) - and his "wrath of God" condemnation(s):

Hagee, whose views about a host of social issues give new meaning to the term "hateful," is not McCain's pastor. They have no personal or spiritual relationship. Rather, Hagee is a close political ally of McCain and an ardent supporter of the Arizona senator's presidential bid.

McCain sought Hagee's endorsement and continued to defend and embrace the pastor – saying he was "glad to have the minister's endorsement – even after Hagee said that Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans because of the city's "sinful" acceptance of homosexuality.

"What happened in New Orleans looked like the curse of God…" Hagee explained after the city experienced a national disaster that cost at least 1,836 lives – making it the deadliest hurricane in American history – and permanently dislocated tens of thousands of Americans from not just their homes but the communities of their birth and upbringing.

I hadn't heard about this rather hateful comment that Robb mentioned - it was, one might say, invisible ... leading me to wonder about the relative visibility and invisibility of religious and political connections as they apply to white presidential candidates and black presidential candidates - but it reminded me of the many hateful pronouncements by Christian Coalition of America founder, former minister and erstwhile Republican presidential candidate Pat Robertson (who has endorsed many other Republican candidates over the years). [BTW, I was surprised to discover there is a Christian Coalition in New Zealand.] One example of hateful speech by this self-described "Christian" was uttered in response to Gay Days at Disney World:

"I would warn Orlando that you're right in the way of some serious hurricanes and I don't think I'd be waving those flags in God's face if I were you, This is not a message of hate; this is a message of redemption. But a condition like this will bring about the destruction of your nation. It'll bring about terrorist bombs; it'll bring earthquakes, tornadoes and possibly a meteor."  

I'm further reminded of some of the hateful speech associated with other conservative commentators, such as Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, Bill O'Reilly, Michael Savage and Sean Hannity, but do not want to digress further. I'll simply note that while Hagee is not McCain's current or former pastor, his unsolicited endorsement of McCain seems to be far less visible in the mass media than some of the unsolicited endorsements by controversial figures that Obama has received.

Speaking of media, further on in his comment, Robb notes:

I am not at all acquainted with American television these days, hardly with New Zealand television for that matter, but I must say when I do watch television here I find the best, and most informative, and most balanced programs on Maori Televison. And even as "enlightened" as white New Zealand claims to be, I readily recall the battle in the late 90's it was to get that up and running. Privileged people are always afraid of change it would seem.

The reference to Maori Television was prompted, in part, by my reference to 1995 testimony in which Senator McCain claimed that cable networks are less biased than PBS and "superior in some cases". Robb's observation that "privileged people are always afraid of change" really strikes a chord, and reminds me of an unfinished post I started months ago - after finishing Yochai Benkler's book, The Wealth of Networks, and after hearing an interview on NPR with Tony Blair, in which he shared his father's perspective that "if you became successful then you became Conservative" - and may just prompt me to finish (and post) my rumination on the issue of incumbency, and the encumbrances that incumbents sometimes erect to maintain their unfair advantage(s) ... which, in my mind, relates to issues of religion, politics, racism and invisibility.

The Beginning of the End of America

Keith Olbermann is my hero

In a scathing commentary on George W. Bush's recent signing of the Military Commissions Act, Keith takes the president to task, comparing him and this act to earlier presidents and similar actions that gave them the authority to ignore and abuse the constitutional rights of our citizens:

  • John Adams' Alien and Sedition Acts, in which hundreds of American newspaper editors were jailed for speaking out against the government.
  • Woodrow Wilson's Espionage Act, in which thousands of pacifists were jailed for speaking out against the government.
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066, in which over a hundred thousand Japanese Americans were placed in internment camps, simply by virtue of their ancestry

With a presidential administration that is more secretive, less truthful and more vindictive than any other in history, I share Keith's concern that anyone, including me, could be arbitrarily labeled an "unlawful combatant" and be shipped off somewhere, anywhere.   

It's never been clear to me whether the so-called terrorists want to do away with the American way of life (or simply stop our unwelcome interventions in their ways -- and places -- of life), but it's increasingly clear that this administration is doing away with the very constitutional liberties that underly our way of life ... liberties George W. Bush swore an oath to uphold.

As Keith notes:

"One of the terrorists who planned the September 11 attacks," you told us yesterday, "said he hoped the attacks would be the beginning of the end of America."

Habeas corpus: gone. The Geneva Conventions: optional. The moral force we shined outwards to the world as an eternal beacon, and inwards to ourselves as an eternal protection: snuffed out.  These things you have done, Mr. Bush, they would constitute the beginning of the end of America.

Big Brother is watching, and he is happy.

No One Can Terrorize Us Without Our Consent

As we approach the fifth anniversary of the September 11 attacks, some politicians and members of the media are promoting and perpetuating terror, consciously or unconsiously.  I'm reminded of a famous quote from the former First Lady of the United States, Eleanor Roosevelt:

No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.

I would expand that to a broader statement: no one can make me -- or anyone else -- feel anything without our consent.  People may try very hard to evoke certain feelings in us, but ultimately, we decide what our responses are to these stimuli, individually and collectively.

I acknowledge, with sadness, the suffering of the people who died or were physically injured during the attacks of 9/11, and the families and friends of those people.  However, the emotional and spiritual scars have been far more extensive, and this culture of fear is only benefiting the government, the media, and individuals and groups that fear-mongering members of the former two groups call terrorists.

John Mueller, Woody Hayes Chair of National Security Studies at the Mershon Center of the Ohio State University, wrote an insightful cost / benefit analysis of terrorism, entitled "A False Sense of Insecurity?" in which he addressed the question "How does the risk of terrorism measure up against everyday dangers?"  His conclusions are

  • Assessed in broad but reasonable context, terrorism generally does not do much damage.
  • The costs of terrorism very often are the result of hasty, ill-considered and overwrought reactions.

People are generally unable to realistically assess personal risks and comparative probabilities, and our government and the media take advantage of this -- consciously or unconsciously -- to keep us fearful enough to vote against change and stay tuned to Fox News, but not so fearful as to become debilitated consumers: "Be scared; be very, very scared -- but go on with your lives".

The costs for perpetuating this fear are high.  Money spent on the Department of Homeland Security (US$30 billion annually) and the war in Iraq (estimated between US$657 billion to US$2 trillion) -- which, at least in the view of the current administration, is part of the "war on terror" -- is being diverted from other programs that would keep us healthy, safe and sound.  Mueller quotes a study by Roger Congleton that estimates the annual economic cost of increasing the average delay of airline passengers by 30 minutes to be US$15 billion, a level we may have reached during the more recent "war on moisture".

The United States "won" the cold war against the former Soviet Union largely through spending more on defense -- with the higher GDP in the U.S., the Soviets were unable to match our government's pace of arms buildup, thus ending the mutual assurance of each other's destruction.  In that arms race between nations, the competition was a matter of apples to apples ... or, perhaps, missiles to missiles.  The relatively smaller, less centralized groups who are now pledged to the destruction of the United States cannot be defeated through a similar race, as very small investments by such groups -- who are often depicted as having little to lose -- can carry far disproportionate costs in a society where people feel strong attachments to what they "have", and thus [believe they] have much to lose.  Such groups do not have to inflict much real damage if mere allegations of plots can have such immense emotional and economic impact.

Keith Olbermann, host of MSNBC's Countdown w/ Keith Olbermann, recently offered some piercing commentary on the Nexus of Politics and Terror, in which he noted how the U.S. government has benefited from each announced elevation of the Department of Homeland Security's threat level.

Keith has also noted parallels between Donald Rumsfeld's tactics in promoting the current "war on terror" and the tactics of other leaders who have promoted wars, including Adolf Hitler and [another] Joe McCarthy.

Keith finishes off with an invocation of Edward R. Murrow, and I want to finish off with invoking the wisdom of a few other luminaries.

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has. (Margaret Mead)

However one might judge the motives of "terrorists", there is little doubt that they are thoughtful and committed.  Would not the best defense, then, be for everyone to be more thoughtful and committed, rather than fearful and disengaged?

No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it. (Albert Einstein)

We appear to be applying tried and untrue methods to solving the problem of terrorism, and are likely to achieve the same poor results, unless we are willing to risk a higher level of consciousness. 

I would argue that the central problem we face is the persistence of our government and media -- and the people who listen and unquestioningly believe them (despite mounting contrary evidence) -- in distinguishing between "us" and "them" rather than seeing everyone as part of one world.  The Bush administration regularly decries the goal of terrorists ("them") as trying to destroy "our" way of life.  In fact, the current First Lady of the United States, Laura Bush, has offered a quote on this issue:

Terrorists are the enemy of freedom. And they seek to destroy more than our institutions of democracy and freedom, like our schools or places of worship. They want to destroy our very way of life.

Yet the administration itself appears to be taking advantage of terrorist threats to do more harm to our democracy and freedom (e.g., through the erosion of civil liberties enabled by the so-called USA Patriot Act) than the enemies they claim to be defending "us" from. 

Indeed, in the immortal words of Pogo, "We have met the enemy, and he is us."

Pogo2

A Lion in the House, Tears in my Eyes: On Cancer, Courage, Honesty and Generosity

Alioninthehouse Leukemia. Children. Families. Doctors. Nurses. I just watched the second half of A Lion in the House. I don't think I have ever had tears in my eyes for as long a stretch as during the last two hours. I feel sadness, gratitude and awe at the inspiring stories that unfolded in this episode of the PBS series Independent Lens. Children with cancer, families who support them, medical care professionals who do what they can ... perhaps made all the more poignant due to our own recent experience with cancer.

My cousin's daughter was diagnosed with Leukemia many years ago, and I'm grateful that she is a survivor. I don't think I really understood what her family went through ... and, actually, I probably still don't, but believe I can better empathize now. A local friend's son was recently diagnosed with Leukemia ... I sent him an email alerting him to the show ... now I'm not so sure it was a good idea (only 2 of the 5 children profiled survived during the six year production).

One of the many things that struck me during the show was the courage, honesty and generosity of the people who were willing to lay their lives bare for the camera ... to share their stories with us, the good and the bad, the beauty and the ugliness of facing a challenge as imposing as childhood cancer. Although it was not easy to watch, I am grateful for their willingness to be open and vulnerable.

At the end of the show, it was noted that childhood cancer rates are increasing ... perhaps an example of yet another inconvenient truth that most people would rather avoid addressing head-on ... reminding me of some remarks I made in an earlier post about losing the war on cancer because we're unwilling to face the real causes, and make the tough choices that might enable us to win:

I'll finish off this update with a link to an article entitled "Cancer: It's a Growth Industry" (an interview of Dr. Samuel Epstein by David Ross, originally appearing in Z Magazine in October 2003), in which Dr. Epstein questions the priorities and highlights the environmental, economic and political factors in our "war on cancer" ... reminding me of questionable priorities in other "wars".

I think this country -- and the world -- could benefit from having more courageous, honest and generous lions in leadership roles.

TV-B-Gone: Life-B-Here

Mitch Altman, founder of 3ware, has invented a universal remote control, TV-B-Gone, with a single function: it can toggle the power (on or off) of nearby televisions. Altman's goals are to help people extract themselves from the television world and attend to the physical world and the people around them, "improving conversation" and "freeing people from the attention-sapping hold of omnipresent television programming". Interestingly, according to reports I've read, there seem to be very few examples of people caring or even noticing when Altman uses the device to turn off a television. He has reportedly manufactured 20,000 of these devices, so it will be interesting to see how this story develops.

There are other efforts aimed at preventing people from accessing content in the digital world, e.g., cell phone jammers and WiFi jammers. A Wired article about the device speculates about future capabilities to shut down vehicle subwoofers and kill car alarms. Perhaps we're seeing a resurgence of the Luddite movement, a new dimension of the Attention Economy, or perhaps the Attention Ecology. What would life be like with a planet full of mindful people who were focused on the here and now? I'd love to find out :-).

[Originally heard about on NPR]

Music ID

AT&T Wireless recently announced a new music recognition service that will enable customers to use their mobile phones to identify music they are currently listening to. By entering "#ID" on the keypad and placing the phone near the source of the music, the service will send a text message with to the phone with the title & artist of the music playing. It's not clear from the announcement how inclusive the service is with respect to musical genres, but I know that there have been many times I've agonized over my inability to definitively identify a song; I'm just not sure how often I'd be willing to pay US$0.99 to relieve that frustration. If only there were a "#ERASE" service that would allow me to clear my mind of a tune that just won't quit playing on my "internal" speaker ...

Continue reading "Music ID" »

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