Black World Column
October 1998
Clinton's Race Initiative
by Lou Turner
After more than a year of exhaustive investigations, testimonies by scores
of witnesses, and millions of taxpayers' dollars, the report and
recommendations finally released to the public in mid-September fell far
short of the media hype about explosive revelations and far-reaching
consequences for the nation. There was simply nothing there, and the
American people were tired of discussing the matter.
No, it's not Kenneth Starr's Special Prosecutor's report on the
misadventures of President Clinton's sex life that seems to endlessly
titillate the fancy of a salivating national media and a voyeuristic
right-wing Congress. It's instead Clinton's own advisory report that the
McCarthyite Starr report and the release of Clinton's video-taped testimony
to the grand jury succeeded in whiting out, namely, The President's
Initiative on Race report: "One America in the 21st Century."
Clinton's Race Initiative report and the timing of its release are full of
ironies, both banal and bazarre. That Clinton has sought to wrap himself
not in the American flag as all other patriots and scoundrels have when
facing adversity and scandal, but in race and religion, especially in the
Black dimension, is one of the more bazarre ironies now playing itself out
in American life. In the category of banality is the Race Initiative report
itself whose title is an unimaginative composite of two of the most
powerful aphorisms ever formulated to sum-up the intractable contradiction
of race in "American civilization."
The designation "One America," which is apparently derived from Clinton's
own personal "vision" and which the report defensively acknowledges in its
very first endnote as having come under criticism as "misleading and even
worse, hypocritical," is an allusion to the famous summary judgment in the
Kerner Commission report that there is not one but "two Americas-one black
and one white, separate and unequal."
The reference to the "21st century" is an homage to W.E.B. DuBois' famous
1903 prophetic utterance in SOULS OF BLACK FOLK that "The problem of the
twentieth century is the problem of the color line-the relation of the
darker to the lighter races of men in Asia and Africa, in America and the
islands of the sea."
The explicit reference to DuBois' formulation came out of a "debate" that
arose during the first meeting of the Advisory Board for Clinton's Race
Initiative between Board chairman, Duke University Black historian John
Hope Franklin, and Board members Linda Chavez-Thompson, the Latina
Executive Vice-President of the AFL-CIO, and Angela Oh, a noted
Korean-American lawyer who served as Special Counsel to the California
Assembly Special Committee on the Los Angeles Crisis (i.e., the 1992 LA
rebellion).
Chavez-Thompson commented that the "classic American dilemma has now become
many dilemmas of race and ethnicity," and Angela Oh argued for the need to
"go beyond" the discussion of racism affecting Blacks "because the world is
about much more than that" and the Initiative must look toward "the next
horizon." To this Franklin responded: "This country cut its eye teeth on
racism in the black/white sphere... [The country] learned how to [impose
its racist policies on] other people at other times...because [it had]
already become an expert in this area." In fact, despite its widespread
attribution to Black/ white race relations, the original import of DuBois'
aphorism recognized the multiracial character of the color line.
However, the more illuminating reference was Linda Chavez-Thompson's
allusion to Gunnar Myrdal's historic study of American race relations, AN
AMERICAN DILEMMA. For it is precisely Myrdal's moralistic framework of
bridging the gap between the promise of the so-called "American creed" and
America's racist reality without in any fundamental way transforming the
capitalist system that bred the "dilemma", that most informs the
perspectives and recommendations of the Race Initiative report.
Of course, there is no President more prone to moralizing rhetoric on
everything from race to personal redemption than Bill Clinton. In the most
Myrdalian tone, the report sonorously states that "as difficult as it may
be to acknowledge the darker side of our history, we strongly acknowledge
and appreciate that at every stage of the struggle to close the gap between
the promise of our democratic principles and our policies and practices,
Americans of every race worked side-by-side to move the Nation closer to
the realization of that promise."
What this moralizing view of race in America is meant to obscure is the
darker side of our history being made today by Clinton and the right-wing
Congress. In the section on "Welfare Reform and Race," there is not the
slightest criticism of Clinton and the Republic-led Congress' dismantling
of welfare for the working class poor. Instead, the report sounds
positively triumphal that "Welfare rolls have fallen 37 percent since the
President took office in 1993 and 27 percent since the enactment of welfare
reform (sic) in 1996."
Even on the totalitarian practices of racial profiling and the racial
disparities in drug sentencing in the criminal justice system, the report
couldn't even muster the "moral" courage to recommend that these racist
practices be unequivocally abolished.
In all, Clinton's Race Initiative report documents the progress of and
barriers to a growing non-white, multiethnic America's achievement of the
middle-class "American dream." Questions of ghetto and barrio poverty, of
economic underdevelopment of Native American reservations, of the
criminalization of immigrants, and so-called welfare "reform's"-all
essentially formations of punitive government policies that persist under
Clinton-come down to recommending that the poor help and transform
themselves rather than the power structure changing or abolishing itself.
Clinton's Race Initiative, in other words, has only initiated more of the
same.
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