In this Jan. 20, 2009, file photo, President Barack Obama
and first lady Michelle Obama dance at the Commander in Chief Inaugural Ball at
the National Building Museum in Washington. Obama's second inauguration is
shaping up as a high-energy celebration smaller than his first milestone
swearing-in, yet still designed to mark his unprecedented role in American
history with plenty of eye-catching glamour. A long list of celebrity
performers will give the once-every-four years right of democratic passage the
air of a star-studded concert, from the bunting-draped Capitol's west front of
the Capitol, where Obama takes the oath Jan. 21, to the Washington Convention
Center, which is expected to be packed with 40,000 ball-goers that evening. (AP
Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)
U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson, right, talks with civil
rights leaders in his White House office in Washington, D.C., Jan. 18, 1964.
The black leaders, from left, are, Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); James
Farmer, national director of the Committee on Racial Equality; Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; and
Whitney Young, executive director of the Urban League. (AP Photo)
The statue of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is seen unveiled from scaffolding during the soft opening of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in Washington, Monday, Aug. 22, 2011. The memorial will be dedicated Sunday, Aug. 28. The Washington Monument is at right. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
King dreamed it, Obama realized it … but how much farther
to the promise land?
The inauguration of President Barack Hussein Obama for
his second term in office will be held in Washington, DC, on Monday, January
21. The date also marks the federally recognized holiday of the birth of civil
rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
The significance of these two events has been widely
noted. Many comparisons have been made with Dr. King throughout Obama’s first
term, and countless memorabilia items have been created that cement the
comparison.
Some of what Obama shares with Dr. King are his charisma
and handsomeness, a beautiful and intelligent wife who can hold her own and
beautiful children.
Both men come from strong culturally-intact backgrounds –
Dr. King was raised in the loving bosom of an African American and Baptist family
and community during the era of segregation; President Obama’s upbringing was
multi-ethnic, multi-cultural and international in scope.
Both men were intellectuals, with Dr. King receiving the
Doctor of Philosophy degree from Boston University in Massachusetts, while
President Obama taught Constitutional Law after receiving his law degree from
Harvard University.
Both men have written books and were awarded the Nobel
Prize for Peace. And both men have been
staunch supporters of the state of Israel.
Various memorabilia that cement the comparisons of the
two men also imply that the Obama Presidency is a fulfillment of Dr. King’s
legacy. But is it?
“It is absolutely,” said Dr. David Horne, professor of
Pan African Studies and Public Policy at California State University,
Northridge (CSUN). “Part of what Dr. King hoped for was an America that could
judge its worthwhile citizens by the ‘content of their character, more than the
color of their skin.’ President Obama is a living testament to that,” said
Horne.
“Dr. King also said we have to struggle for more than a
seat at the table, or a place in the dining hall,” Horne continued. “We had to
struggle to achieve real political influence and leverage within the American
system and the ability to help shape the world towards a better place. We had
to be the bearers of political morality and integrity, and we should strive for
leadership in that regard. Again, President Obama is all that. This is not to
say that were he alive, Dr. King would have agreed with every decision
President Obama has made – the issue of Libya and drones both come to mind
quickly – but, understanding the meticulousness with which he makes tough
decisions, the manner in which he has conducted himself as husband, father and
as president of the United States, and the very character of the man as
president, Dr. King would have been a relentless ally and an indefatigable
defender and supporter of this president. Is President Obama, a Black man who
is president, within the legacy left by Dr. King? Without any doubt.”
Damien Goodmon, executive director of the Crenshaw Subway
Coalition, thinks differently. “I do take issue with people thinking that
solely through his election, Barack Obama is the fulfillment of Dr. Kings
dream,” said Goodmon. As the recipient of the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference –Los Angeles’s 2013 Drum Major for Justice Award, Goodmon stated,
“As a Black man sits in the White House, Black inequality on several levels –
income, mass incarceration, health – remains, and I don’t think the cause of
Dr. King was solely to get Black faces in high places, but to improve the
conditions of all people, prominently Black people.”
It is hard to deny the symbolism of Obama in relation to
Dr. King’s Legacy, specifically his “dream” as shared on the steps of the
Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington in August, 1963. According to
Dr. Karin L. Stanford, political scientist and chair of CSUN’s Pan Afrikan
Studies Department, “Symbolism is always important for role modeling, mentoring
and demonstrating the possibilities of what one can accomplish, especially for
Black children if they live in impoverished neighborhoods, and for adults when
you consider the assaults on Black personhood that we see constantly in the
mass media.”
“Based on that,” said Dr. Stanford, “the symbolism of a
Black person who has the standing of a president is extremely important.”
Very few have downplayed the importance of the symbolism
of Obama’s first term but many have been critical of how that first term has
impacted African Americans.
In other words, where is the substance to go with the
symbolism?
“The president’s educational policies have been very
progressive – more funding for Pell grants, student loans, and he has provided
a lot of support for community colleges which is a first-stop for many, many
students of color before they enroll in four-year educational institutions,
said Prof. Stanford, adding that, “He has also provided relief to the
unemployed by extending the limits of the federal unemployment insurance
program.”
Stanford believes that at least some of the blame for a
lack of substance can be found outside of the White House.
“President Obama is part of a political system; the
president has limited power,” said Stanford. “And part of our problem is that
many Black organizations took the position, argued that we should not criticize
him publicly, so we have been silent. It is the job of Black organizations to
advocate for what we want as a body of Black people. Now that he has been
re-elected, we must advocate for our policies aggressively.”
“The role of a president and the role of a person who
pushes a president are different, and we should have different expectations for
them both,” said Goodmon. “President Barack Obama will never be Dr. Martin
Luther King, and there will probably never be another leader as great as Dr.
Martin Luther King.”
Although there should be differing expectations, one
cannot help but notice the similarities.
Just as glaring however, are the differences.
First and foremost, Dr. King maintained an inner circle
of men who looked like him and shared many of his same experiences: Ralph
Abernathy, Andrew Young, Hosea Williams, James Orange, Bayard Rustin, Kwame
Ture (aka Stokely Carmichael) and others.
Relying on these men (and some women like Ella Jo Baker)
and others he met while engaged in the struggle for Black civil rights helped
to move Dr. King to a position where he began to criticize both the economic
and foreign policies of the United States. As president of the U.S., Barack
Obama has sworn to uphold those policies.
Dr. King told us that we must begin to examine “an
edifice that produces beggars” and that it “must be restructured.” Thus far,
President Obama’s policies have given succor to banks and other Wall Street
corporations, and the “Grand Bargain” he is attempting to reach with the
Republican Party threatens to gut Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare which,
according to the online newsite Black Agenda Report dot com, “80 percent of Americans,
and virtually the totality of the Black American polity, reject.”
While Dr. King told us that militarism was an evil that
must be looked at for what it is, President Obama has permanently placed
American military troops – approximately 3000 so far – on the continent of
Africa through AFRICOM (Africa Command); conducted a ground/air war in Libya
which led to the murder of that country’s leader; and continues to maim and
murder children, women and men in Pakistan and Yemen through the use of Predator
Drones (unmanned aerial vehicles).
“Obama’s Presidency raises a lot of contradictions for
us,” says Kwazi Nkrumah, coordinator for the Martin Luther King Coalition for
Jobs, Justice and Peace, founded in Los Angeles in 2009.
“On the one hand, there’re Black folks being included in
the system and making progress through inclusion. In one sense, that’s what the
Civil Rights Movement and Dr. King’s work was raising. What Obama’s presidency
has raised, in a very practical way, is that our inclusion in the system, as it
is, does not necessarily represent progress for us. But in Dr. King’s last
years, he was clearly questioning the system itself; what he was raising is
that this system, as it is, is not ultimately where we want to go, as Black
people, other people of color, poor whites.”
As we approach the inauguration of President Obama’s
final term in office, it seems almost fitting, then, that we ask the question
that Dr. King asked in the title of one of his books: where do we go from here?
“He didn’t really feel that this system was the
end-all-be-all of our freedom,” remarks Nkrumah of Dr. King. “This economic
system, the international relations that grow from it, and the politics based
on it, have to be restructured,” Nkrumah said.
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