Post-Racial and Post-Partisan?

President Obama in the Oval Office

President Obama in the Oval Office

Joe Conason writes in Salon that former CNN anchor Lou Dobbbs sound like he is running for office and that if he does it will be the GOP’s nightmare.  “Lou Dobbs for president!” is the headline on the op-ed.

It send a chill up my spine, but I’ll leave Lou and his whole schtick alone for now.  Rather I want to focus on one thing Canuson reports that Dobbs said in his first radio broadcast after leaving CNN that just completely baffles me.  Nor is Dobbs is not the only one who has made the allegation, many on the right have.

He said that President Obama “focuses on the partisan and racial” in a “21st century post-partisan, post-racial society.”  I don’t know what planet Dobbs is living on, but we do not live in a post racial society.  I do think that since the Civil Rights Movement, we have slow progress toward this becoming a nation in which race doesn’t matter, but we’ve still got a long way to go.
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I also don’t know what policies or rhetoric Dobbs (or Glenn Beck, Bill O’Reilly or the tea partiers) are referring to when they accuse President Obama of focusing on the racial.  If you are reading this and he has done so, please enlighten me.  Indeed, a numbers of previous presidents have probably focused on it much more.

It saddens me that those who are demonstrating against health care reform and the economic recovery policies of the Obama administration and almost entirely white.  It is they who are injecting race into the debate, not the President.

As for the Post-partisan, well, just look at the Congressional voting record on pretty much every issue that matters since the 1980s, maybe even before that.  They tend to fall along party lines, and it is hard to believe everyone is voting their conscience or in the interests of their constituents when that happens.

2 thoughts on “Post-Racial and Post-Partisan?

  1. I agree that saying Obama is pushing race is crazy. That is the one issue he does not seem to want to touch. He wins by making people forget about race. But all these commentators seem to be engaged in a practice which I think of as push-opinions. They say it to create what they want people to see.

    • Exactly. It’s a dangerous game. There are opponents of the White House agenda that will do or say anything to stoke their supporters to the point that they lobby their representatives, turn out at the demonstrations, and vote the right way. But their rhetoric is divisive, dangerous and inflammatory and, quite frankly, it scares me.

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