Letters to the Editor

Letters posted here are associated with the following article:
The hysteria over Obama's former pastor's attacks on America shows we're still in thrall to knee-jerk patriotism.
The letters thread is now closed.
  • The Swift Boats have been launched

    It immediately struck me, an older white woman and 14th generation American, that Rev. Wright's crime was his giving voice to a painfully honest view. That Barack is now swift-boated as anti-American and anti-white by association is merely the standard M.O. of inverting his message by opportunistic design. The candidate who would unite us all in love is said to have "thrown his white granny and her walker under the bus." Punditry who said he was naive and too hopeful suddenly insist he's slick and cynical. I despair Gary is right. We'll elect not the president we need, but the one we deserve.

  • Oh Gawd

    I wish the CIA could cook something up for 14th Generation Americans...But alas...

  • Kasimira,

    I'm certainly sure I could hear much saner speech inside the walls of any of America's most prestigious insane asylums.

  • Thomas Jefferson: I shudder to think...

    Nice article! I'm awfully proud of American ideals, of the fact that the Great Experiment was the first government of laws--not individual rulers--in the history of the world. But I have no illusions of either personal or national infallibility (not since I read Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee as a teen). Boldness and courage are of course important, but so are wisdom and humility.

    I can't find the quote, but even Thomas Jefferson wrote something to the effect of: I shudder to think that God indeed is Just, for this nation is tainted by the sin of slavery. (Of course, Jefferson's God/Creator, was a much more Deist/universalist conception than is employed by most people today who speak of "God and Country.")

    What could make more sense than trying to understand the motivation of the 9/11 bombers? Is it so hard to discern? How can our leaders make wise decisions about how to protect this country if they don't understand specifics, and can only drone on about fighting concepts like "terror" and protecting concepts like "freedom"?

    In an early Repub debate, Guliani dropped a b.s. bomb on Ron Paul when Paul pointed out that our foreign policy might just have something to do with it. Guliani, a former prosecutor (!) who has certainly cut through a logical fallacy or two in his life, accused Paul of saying that New Yorkers DESERVED it.. on t.v., he said this, and apparently without shame.

    If a doctor seeks to diagnose the cause of my illness, she isn't necessarily saying I deserve to be ill. This is obvious, right?

    We as Americans do need to adopt a more grown-up and sophisticated mindset, especially NOW.

    ____

    All that said, I think the Wright flap is more complicated than just pointing out unpleasant truths about America, though. (There are many unpleasant truths, and patriots will face them and learn from them, in order to keep working toward a more perfect union.) He did kinda lump a bunch of us together.

    Black anger is certainly understandable. Slavery (torture, murder, rape...). Jim Crow. The Tuskeegee experiment. Driving While Black. The Bluest Eye. As we learn more and more about PTSD from our returning military vets, we may wonder exactly what it would be like to grow up black in this country, and we may, as Mike Huckabee admirably suggested

    http://youtube.com/watch?v=ZNwMPNxwHmQ

    cut these people a little slack.

    Stupide quotes aside, I don't think Wright is a raving hater, and white people who've been in his congregation has reported

    been greeted warmly and treated like members of the human family.

    But I've never believed that there's no such thing as a black racist. Simply, if a minority group is oppressed and appeals to the humanity/fairness of the majority, they're arguing universal principles. This is undercut when an opressed person loses sight of principles and loses sight of the HUMANITY of those in the oppressive group. We should remind them.

    Faulkner, who Obama quoted, is great for this--acknowledging the utter horror and brutality of slavery while reminding of us the humanity of ALL his characters. Look at the dehumanizing effect the role of slaveowner has on slaveowners!

    I can understand why white people, especially the working poor, especially Southern whites (many of whom are in communities still crippled by Reconstruction all these years later, and are still mocked by hateful caricatures) would have plenty of resentment of their own, especially when coming face to face with what they feel is unfair black resentment...

    Ideally we white folks would bend over backward to be fair and understanding to those who've been systematically bought and sold, tortured and lynched, and black folks would bend over backward to show that they value universalist human values.

    This is what Harold Washington (first black mayor of Chicago) did,

    http://www.thislife.org/Radio_Episode.aspx?episode=84

    and for my money it's what Obama will do.

    There's a lot of unfairness in this world, and we can't keep killing the messenger. We can't keep blaming the evil white man; we can't keep demamanding the "grateful negro" and seeing simple fairness as "special rights." Maybe we should work together, cause we're all paying for that CEO's Golden Parachute...

    check out this doc: A Class Divided

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/divided/

  • Jeremiah Wright and the preaching tradition

    Jeremiah Wright's "God damn America" sermon has perfectly standard Protestant themes:

    1. He lists human empires (German, Japanese, French, and, in most detail, British).

    2. He says that all failed to provide justice, because only God is just.

    3. He says to the congregation that they shouldn't think that they are better than others, that their own country is no more just than the rest. (Hiroshima, internment of Japanese Americans, massacre of North American Indians...). In each case, he says "we" did these things, not separating black from white. He's not playing black victim here.

    4. In this context, he brings up slavery and Jim Crow laws.

    5. When he says "God damn America," he's being biblical enough. Consider the words of the prophet: "Ah sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of evildoers, children that are corrupters: they have forsaken the LORD, they have provoked the Holy One of Israel unto anger, they are gone away backward" (Isaiah 1:4).

    There's nothing remarkable here. It's got its loony side, but that looniness is straight from the Bible and from the religious tradition. I don't think it's at all surprising that McCain's preacher is just as loony.