ThisWeekGhana.com becomes  the D-O-T
before the dot com
 
Commentary Page

We invite commentaries from writers all over. The subject is about Ghana and the world. We reserve the right to accept or reject submissions, but we are not necessarily responsible for the opinions expressed in articles we publish......MORE

 
 

Obama, Cain: Race or ideological pride for 2012?

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Ghanadot

November 1, 2011

 

The possibility for a 2012 faceoff between two Black presidential candidates, Obama and Cain, is of historical significance; perhaps, more so than when Obama ran against whites. 

Sadly, to date, that perception of inter-race competition is being or has been deliberately erased.  Made manifest in its place is the ideological difference.

Herman Cain, is thereby, denied the potent tool of the racial anguish that benefited Obama in his contest with Hillary Clinton. 

 

But Cain will have to learn to live with the denial the hard way; just as Clarence Thomas did on his way to the Supreme Court. 

Switching this contest to one based on ideology puts Cain at disadvantage among Blacks. 

 

It is known that Blacks are defined as Blacks only when they run as liberals or are card carrying members of the Democrat party. 

Sadly, the same view sees Republican Blacks as outcasts of the larger Black community.

Just wait for Cain to survive the ongoing Republican presidential primaries.

Even so, the assault on Cain has already started, timed to happen within the Republican primaries for Cain to be knocked off before he becomes a threat to Obama and the liberals. 

Hence, the interest of liberals and their ideological allies to bring Herman Cain down. 

 

The first salvo is this idea that Cain is the choice of racist Republicans. 

But does it matter whether in Herman Cain, Republicans have found a true conservative?

Ot that, the interest of winning the presidency, by nullifying Obama’s appeal among Blacks, Republicans may settle for Cain?

A week or so ago, the liberal on-line journal, Politico, ran a story about two women who were said to have accused Cain of sexual harassment when he was the President of the National Restaurant Association of America. 

 

The accusation, though made some 15 years ago, has now gained currency as news of interest.

Cain has denied the story. 

 

He admitted that the accusation happened, and was investigated.  Found to have no merit, the women were dismissed from their respective offices after the proper severance payments were made to them.

Oddly, it seems very significant that only when sexual harassment charges are made against Black men that the allegations gain civil and criminal potencies. 

 

In the past such charges led to instant lynching. 

For white liberals, when made against them, the accusation of sexual harassment usually turns to be a wash.

 

Men like Clinton, Gore, and Edwards, all prominent white liberals, go through it unscathed or less damaged than their accusers. 

S
adly, this historical fact is always lost on many within the Black community, as it was in the case against Justice Clarence Thomas, when it became a national spectacle at the hearings at the Senate on his nomination as a justice for the US Supreme Court in 1991.

Thomas was subjected to what he described rightfully as “electronic lynching” by liberal senators as Joe Biden, with the media in full throtle support.

 

The sad part was also that the charge was led by a Black woman, Anita Hill, who for years Thomas had helped on a carrier path to a law professorship at a prestigious university at the time of the hearing. 

Happily, the Black community stood by, idle as onlookers while the vicious crime against Black manhood unfolded and white liberals cheered the act on; as was done in the old days, when innocent Black men were lynched, during and before the Jim Crow years. 

One would have thought that Blacks would have acquired by now an emotional distress and disgust when a charge of “sexual harassment” was alleged against a Black man. 

And on hearing the charge, a distressed upshot that will drive them to respond collectively and instinctively, with alacrity and rage, to protest against the charge for its racist import. 

There was a case in Duluth, Minnesota in 1920 when two white teenage women accused six Black circus workers of rape.  They were rushed to jail on the unproven charges.

Subsequently, three of the six were sprung from jail.  Elias Clayton, Elmer Jackson, and Isaac McGhie, all suspects and were “lynched by a white mob of thousands,” according to Wikipedia.

It turned out after medical examination on one of the girls that no such rape had occurred.

The emotional wounds from such many injustices led to the Civil Rights marches.

 

But years after the marches, this typical tool for silencing Black men is still lodged in the present system; Black men can be rendered victims and made politically impotent at the whimsical cry of sexual harassment.

Herman Cain has been accused.  The tragedy is a large segment of the Black community will remain silent.  And his potential presidential candidacy will be damaged.

But the tragedy will be lodged in the fact that, historically, we have forgotten what happened to us. 

It happened when we refused to stand for Clarence Thomas against his accusers; not to forget that his accuser was also a Black woman. 

Ironically, when Clinton faced his impeachment and other host of sexual harassment charges, it was the Black Congressional Caucus itself that came to his rescue. 

And now one Black candidate is running for the American presidency, against another Black.  And one of them is being brought down by a sexual harassment charge while the Black Congressional Caucus hides its head behind ideology, forgetting that race matters.

A contest between Obama and Cain, all Black, will be a monumental racial achievement and a pride of historical proportion; the first ever between two Blacks from different sides of the ideological divide. 

 

Blacks ought to see this as a win-win situation for the race. 

But, just as with Clarence Thomas, we are likely to see one Black man degraded and described as undeserving; an Uncle Tom and many will join white liberals in a hurry in the attempt to bring him down.  And the whimsical excuse will be because he is a conservative!

So now, is our civil plight about race or ideology?   If ideology, then where is the historical scar, the racism, that we cry so much about?  Heaven help us.

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, November 1, 2011


Permission to publish:  Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited.  If posted at a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com . Or don't publish at all.

 

 
 

Rate this article:

 
 

 

 

More commentaries

 

UK airports to get full-body scanners

 

London, Jan 3, Telegraph - Full body scanners will also be introduced at Heathrow within weeks where they will be used for flights to all destinations and not just those bound for the United States ......More

 
  Obama, Cain: Race or ideological pride for 2012?

Commentary, Nov 1, Ghanadot - If it were a matter of race, Blacks would see a contest between Obama and Cain as a matter of racial achievement and pride of historical proportion.  ....
More
   

Ex-gratia Award accepted in full?

Commentary, Jan 3, Ghanadot - It may now come as a shock to many that the “"Ex-gratia award will be implemented in full,” a source close to Ghanadot has disclosed. But, don’t be surprised. This is Ghana. We do first muddy the pond, and then drink from it later.
....More

 

Nigeria says plane bomber began journey in Ghana

 

LAGOS (Reuters), Jan 1 - A Nigerian man charged with trying to blow up a U.S. passenger jet on Christmas Day began his journey in Ghana and spent less than 30 minutes in Nigeria's Lagos airport, the Nigerian government said on Thursday.   More

   
  ABC, Australia
FOXNews.com
The EastAfrican, Kenya
African News Dimensions
Chicago Sun Times
The Economist
Reuters World
CNN.com - World News
All Africa Newswire
Google News
The Guardian, UK
Africa Daily
IRIN Africa
The UN News
Daily Telegraph, UK
Daily Nation, East Africa
BBC Africa News, UK
Legal Brief Africa
The Washington Post
BusinessInAfrica
Mail & Guardian, S. Africa
The Washington Times
ProfileAfrica.com
Voice of America
CBSnews.com
New York Times
Vanguard, Nigeria
Christian Science Monitor
News24.com
Yahoo/Agence France Presse
 
  SPONSORSHIP AD HERE  
 
    Announcements
Debate
Commentary
Ghanaian Paper
Health
Market Place
News
Official Sites
Pan-African Page
Personalities
Reviews
Social Scene
Sports
Travel
 
    Currency Converter
Educational Opportunities
Job Opening
FYI
 
 
 
Send This Page To A Friend:

The Profile Africa Media Group