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Thoughts on an Obama Win, or Loss

September 15, 2008

 
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Writing in Sunday’s Washington Post, Klein professor of law Randall Kennedy argues that Barack Obama’s nomination as a major-party candidate is a milestone in itself—it “has opened the public mind to the idea of a black president and made that idea broadly attractive,” he writes.

But Kennedy also believes an Obama loss is a distinct possibility, due at least in part to lingering prejudice. He writes:

If Obama loses, I personally will feel disappointed, frustrated, hurt. I’ll conclude that a fabulous opportunity has been lost. I’ll believe that American voters have made a huge mistake. And I’ll think that an important ingredient of their error is racial prejudice—not the hateful, snarling, open bigotry that terrorized my parents in their youth, but rather a vague, sophisticated, low-key prejudice that is chameleonlike in its ability to adapt to new surroundings and to hide even from those firmly in its grip.

Read more about Kennedy’s work and, specifically, his latest book, Sellout: The Politics of Racial Betrayal, in this article from the November-December 2007 issue of Harvard Magazine.

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  1. September 21, 2008

    But here’s the thing. What if I believe another candidate genuinely has more of what is needed for this job? Am I to take Mr. Kennedy’s article as a sort of muffled threat, that if I vote for anyone but the first black candidate to make it this far, that I’ll be accused of racism? Well, I think I’ll have to learn to live with that. I know who I am. I have black friends, and some of them are voting for McCain. Personally, I think Obama will get my vote, but I don’t need someone trying to subtly manipulate it out of me; “Beware, if Obama doesn’t win, I don’t know how I might react.” I live in a country that is in financial shambles right now, have a son that will be at war-fighting age shortly, and a whole formless, countryless, theocracy that wants to compel me to build a super-mosque in Washington DC and make a pilgrimage to Mecca before I die. I have to make practical decisions. I will be voting my conscience. How pissed off racists get because of how I choose to exercise my rights as an American citizen is suddenly pretty low on my list of potential problems.

    ~Rational

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