Barack Obama’s race has been discussed practically to death in this last year – what it means that a black man can be elected President, what it means that white people will vote for him, what it means that white people won’t vote for him, and did his wife call someone “whitey”? (Answer: no.) But ultimately that hasn’t driven his campaign, historic as his candidacy might be (and it is). What has fundamentally driven his campaign is this: people decided, by and large, that this was a decent man.
This is not small potatoes. About the best we can ever hope for in politics, anywhere in the world, ninety-nine percent of the time, is to get somebody in charge about whom one can say “well, he might be a son of a bitch, but he’s our son of a bitch,” and make do with that. We have, as a whole, largely divorced ourselves from the idea that political leaders can be upstanding, moral citizens; we expect them to be bastards because the process demands that they be bastards to win.
The idea that Barack Obama could be a genuinely decent human being and win the Presidency – be a person capable of making the hard choices required of the job but nonetheless doing so while maintaining, as best he can, a state of moral grace – is exciting, and terrifying, and awe-inspiring. Contrary to what people might tell you, it takes more than just saying “we need change” to move people; you need to say it and then make people believe you can do it, and cracking the fundamental cynicism of a First World electorate is nearly impossible.
But Obama did it, and he made it look goddamned easy. And he did it while creating a campaign funding model that has the potential to essentially end large-donor corruption of election campaigns.
Either Obama has managed the greatest trick in the history of politics, or he’s the real deal. I am genuinely unsure which is more staggering in its implications.
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But of course it is about race, too. It’s always been about race, which is the unspoken focus of American public life; nobody likes to admit that racial politics and its related implications have defined American society since its very beginning (right from when abolitionists “compromised” with slaveowners in a deal that, in retrospect, was Never Going To Work, but can you blame them for trying?).
It is the fact that it is about race that makes Obama’s election all the more noteworthy. By this point you’ve probably read about the 109-year-old daughter of slaves voting for Obama, or the elderly seventy- and eighty-year-old black people who drank at coloreds-only water fountains breaking down in tears after they got to vote for a black man for President, or seen the pictures of young black children at rallies staring at him in wonder. These are all good stories, of course.
But that is nothing compared to what comes next – a generation of people who will grow up without the automatic preconception that “President” automatically means “white guy, probably also old.” That’s really going to change things in ways you and I, with our blinkered, limited-by-our-experiences-and-upbringing vision, can’t begin to imagine.
And it couldn’t have happened anywhere else. Obama said as much early in his campaign, and liberals outside of the United States all started immediately complaining, but he wasn’t wrong. It couldn’t have happened anywhere else; no other country has both the sufficiently diverse population and the (relatively) free electoral system to manage the trick. (The Canadian equivalent would have been electing a First Nations prime minister, which, if I – and for that matter all Native Canadians – get very lucky, might happen sometime in my elderly years.)
I said once, a long time ago, that America is not a nation which can be content to keep pace with the progression of the rest of the world; it is one that continually wants to lead the pack and ultimately to lap it, and that is one of the great things about the American character. Electing Obama is an example of that.
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The challenges that lie before him are nigh unbelievable. It is not hyperbolic in the least to say that the world faces financial ruin; it is no less overdramatic to suggest that the viability of the human species as a whole is at serious, even critical risk thanks to our environmental negligence. There’s that whole forthcoming oil emergency supply to worry about, too. Let’s not forget that natural resources we take utterly for granted – the honeybee, the seedless banana – could become extinct before I hit retirement age. In the face of all this, it might seem that something as relatively simple as creating a workable healthcare system for the American public would be comparatively easy, but that alone could be the major job of a Presidency – and accomplishing only it would be impressive.
For Obama, it is not enough and it will never be enough. People suggesting that he needs to be the Jackie Robinson of politics miss the point; Jackie Robinson’s metaphorical level of accomplishment is something Obama will need to shatter in his first hundred days. Obama needs to be the Michael Jordan, the Wayne Gretzky, the Tiger Woods of politics; he needs to be consistently great from his very first day, his very first hour to simply keep his country’s head above water, to say nothing of the wider world. He needs to destroy all expectations and mobilize the citizenry of his country to take part in an orgy of civic reconnection so amazing and uplifting that it would put the fear of God into Mao Zedong.
It seems almost impossible. The rationalist in me thinks that he will try valiantly and ultimately fail, that the world is likely due for a very long night and that no leader, no matter how skilled, can prevent this. The nature of the challenge that he faces – that we all face – is just that daunting.
But when I become depressed, I consider that just over forty years ago, in Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner, Sidney Poitier’s character conceded that a black president within his lifetime was impossible and that he would “settle for Secretary of State.” That is how entrenched social attitude was: even a fictional liberal black man, educated and proud, could not bring himself to believe that a black man could become president. It was impossible. Everybody knew this.
But here we are.
Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner debuted in 1967. Barack Obama would have been six years old at that time. In just under forty-one years since, we’ve gone from impossibility to reality. It took mankind nearly fifteen hundred years to learn to fly once we started trying, two hundred and fifty to circumnavigate the globe, one hundred sixty to generate and manage electric current; it took only forty-one years to overcome millenniae of racial suspicion and fear.
And if we can overcome ingrained hatred that quickly – perhaps not to utterly conquer it, but at the very least to put it firmly in check – then what can’t we do?
Today was a very good day. For now, we can worry about tomorrow when tomorrow comes.
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32 users responded in this post
Well said.
Did you have a concession type essay prepared, too?
Anyways, nicely put. Let’s all just hope that it’s not Obama vs. Schwarzeneggar 2012.
Very well written.
Yes. It consisted of “Well, fuck.”
Ah, so you gave it equal thought, then.
Beautifully written. The same can be said for your concession essay.
Well said. And well said about America; there is a tendency in the world to dis our neighbour to the south, but from its creation out of revolution there has been a great deal to be impressed about, and that striving does come through.
I am so proud of my country right now. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t fighting back tears.
Beautiful piece. Another thing to consider:
It took mankind nearly fifteen hundred years to learn to fly once we started trying
And once we did, it took only 66 to land a man on the moon.
Imagine what we can do with this start.
I am so relieved. I didn’t even now the weight of anxiety I was carrying until it was lifted.
I’m so proud of Florida and Virgina, my home states.
And today, I’m proud to be an American. With no qualifications. I am just.
Wow.
“Anyways, nicely put. Let’s all just hope that it’s not Obama vs. Schwarzeneggar 2012.”
Fortunately, that would require a Constitutional amendment. Curiously, I’ve met the woman who was in charge of the push for that amendment.
We’re still waiting here to see if Prop 8 is going to pass, but so far, things don’t look good (i.e. it’s passing, damn it).
I’m not against that amendment, as I think it would be a fair revision of an old law.
Sometimes we fall behind, but that’s just because we are charging our SUPER DASH!!!
I have seldom read anything I so profoundly agreed with, MGK. Thank you.
Thanks, MGK. A great piece.
I have to say I had to struggle not to cry. It’s an amazing moment for me. Even though I’m from a deep red state (Arkansas), I feel a part of something much larger than state politics. I feel like a part of history.
It’s times like these that I wonder why I never feel emotion at anything and if I’m fucked up. The last time I actually cried was when watching Click, which i dont even know why i was crying on.
Since you said it so nicely, I will only say woot.
WOOT!
This is why I’m glad your blog is back.
Thank you.
Ive been quoting your “America can lap the rest of the world” statement to my fellow Texans since you mentioned it back during the primaries. Thank you again, for saying this so eloquently.
I spent the time from polls close in Ohio to polls close in California at the Parma, OH, branch of the Obama campaign drinking heavily (or, at least, heavily for me) and now I’m sitting up paying for my sins. Last night and yesterday all together was a bit of a whirl wind, filled with every emotion known to man, and I’m stuck with the task of writing it all down today lest I forget even a detail. But one particular instance, that you just brought out to the forefront–
I had wandered back up to the front of the office, having collected a new beer, and came across a knot of people in the phone bank watching Fox News in vicious humor. Someone repeated the newest vote totals. I asked what happened, that McCain had shot up so much while Obama had held relatively still. My organizer, Carli, told me that Texas had been called for McCain and okay, we shrugged, no giant shocker. But then she said, you know, it’s still really amazing, returns are showing Obama has 46% of the vote there.
And it was like a switch had flipped in my very tipsy head. Somewhat caught up in the moment, I grabbed Carli by the shoulders.
“Do you know what this means?” I blathered drunkenly. “Somebody mobilized the Hispanic population to vote for a black man! Jesus Christ! It’s different! There are new rules! It works differently now!”
Carli gave me the hug I probably needed at that point.
Now, how correct I am in that assessment is a matter of debate — it’s certainly no giant feat to get lower-class Hispanics to support a democrat. But just this idea that we had overcome not only racially-driven antipathy, but possibly racially-driven apathy was like a bolt from the blue, making clear what had been the real shocker of the day — we tilted the axes of the world. American politics, from this day out, are a different beast now, with different strategies, different models, and different nuggets of wisdom. There’s an incredible amount of untapped potential right now, an incalculable current ready to bring us to life or burn us to a crisp.
Maybe a remark made out in the parking lot over post-California cigars sums it up better.
“Ten years down the line, when they’re writing social studies books, tonight will be where they put the paragraph break.”
Oh, you dick. You outdid me… And I cried! You wrote this over the week, didn’t you? DIDN’T YOU?!? Rassum frassum punk should go back to Canadia…
For me, this is totally the one about the kids. I don’t know what it does to a child to know that ‘people who look like me can never be president’, but it CAN’T be good. And it’s clear that children at a very early age knew damn well who got to be president and who didn’t.
One of your best blog posts ever. You add to my regret of not watching last night, and especially not watching with a group of people.
(Though I did tell Laura when I ran into her that I knew I could count on your blog for coverage.)
mdk: As my 17 year old sister said last night: “I’ve never wanted to vote for someone so bad in my life.”
A few things nobody seems to be considering in all this discussion of racial advancement in America:
1) Obama isn’t “black”, he’s black, white, and middle eastern. Apparently the “one drop of black blood means your black” rule still applies? Technically, he’s the first biracial president, which is important because….
2) The prejudice against biracial individuals was so bad that some part black multiracial people would chose “other” when asked their race; they didn’t consider themselves either white or black, because neither truly accepted them.
That Obama got so much support from black voters is hopefully a sign that they too are moving past some of their collective racial issues.
Middle Eastern?
I’d argue that the UK has both a free electorate and a diverse population – a Sikh becoming PM, for example, would be equivalent. Or, for that matter, an Algerian in France.
dirge93: I’ve pointed out on my website that his being of mixed ancestry makes his election even more important. Amongst bigots, miscegenation is worse than being of a different background.
I think MGK has brought all this up in the past, too.
J.N., I agree completely about his bi-racial parentage. I had a bi-racial coworker in college, and she was sensitive about it because of the harassment she and her parents endured when she was growing up. I wish I knew how to contact her now.
I hate the way you link “diverse population” with “progress”. The mono-cultural sovereign nation-state is the pinnacle of international justice, and sooner we get every human culture one of their own, we can put war and strife behind us.
I literally couldn’t have said it better myself. Shame that a Canadian has better perspective on being American than most of us.
Thanks. You made tears come to my eyes reading that.
Congratulations from Germany, it was a beautiful Victory.