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Jesse Jackson’s Dressing-Down of Boston on Race Draws Rebuttals
by W. James Antle III
2 August 2004
Many
of the politicos who profess to speak on behalf of minorities are actually
quite removed from the people whose interests they claim to represent.
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One of the more interesting
discussions to come out of the Democratic National Convention, which mercifully
ended days ago, concerned the state of American racial politics. Did
the keynote address by Illinois Senate candidate Barack Obama prefigure the
beginning of a new, more centrist politics that transcends race? Or
did the elevation of the notorious agitator Al Sharpton to a primetime speaking
slot signify that racial obsession and identity politics are in fact ascending
to unprecedented heights?
Some, like my colleague Nicholas Stix,
are more skeptical that the distinction being drawn in print between the
two Democrats is necessarily as great as advertised. But I’ll leave
that debate to others. I like to point out progress wherever it can
be found, so I’ll point out this all-too-rare example: Jesse Jackson, the
nation’s leading purveyor of identity politics, came to Boston to practice
his shtick, and received his comeuppance.
Boston, like many major urban areas throughout the country, has had a troubled
history in race relations. While forced bussing was an episode of wrongheaded
judicial social engineering, some of the opposition to it spilled over the
line into ugliness and intolerance. Images of adults throwing rocks
at school buses carrying black children were broadcast nationwide a decade
after school desegregation commenced in the South. Incidents dividing
the city along racial lines continued into the early 1990s, including the
notorious Charles Stuart case, in which a black man was falsely accused of
murdering a white woman and wounding her husband.
This was the past that Jackson sought to exploit when he came into town for
the Democrats’ convention with one of his familiar lectures aimed at eliciting
concessions in the form of racial preferences and wealth redistribution.
Speaking to the press on the second day of the convention, Jackson publicly
chastised the city for what he saw as its lack of racial progress and failure
to adequately serve as a “shining light on the hill.” (What is it with
the Democrats this year? First, they highlight Ronald Reagan’s son
as a speaker to promote policies the 40th president would have almost surely
opposed; then, the party’s spokesmen mangle his signature phrase.)
In what was both a startling display of liberal disunity as well as a frank
endorsement of race-based redistributionism, Jackson singled out Harvard
for a special rebuke. “Harvard has a twenty billion dollar endowment,”
the activist is quoted as saying in the Boston Herald on July 28.
“Not one black has ever managed a dime… (n)o black has ever managed a dime
of Harvard’s money, so the wealth must be shared.”
But then an unexpected thing happened: Boston’s political leadership
did not bend over backwards in a fit of apologies to appease the Rev. Jackson.
Instead, they fired back in defense of the city’s strides in race relations.
“It’s nice he comes into our city and makes a statement like that,” Boston
Mayor Thomas Menino sarcastically retorted. He told the Boston Herald that in his 11 years as mayor, Jackson has never contacted him to discuss any racial or other issue involving the city.
African-American activists who actually work regularly in Boston’s black
neighborhoods also took issue with Jackson’s comments. “Jesse’s talking
trash and blowing smoke,” said the Rev. Eugene Rivers, chairman of the Ten
Point Coalition. “This is Jesse’s showboat.”
Rivers seconded Menino’s assessment of Jackson’s lack of involvement in Boston:
“Jesse Jackson has never, ever come to me or any of the black clergy that
work on the streets of the city of Boston. Jesse has been too big to
actually meet with the black clergy that work in the trenches and have been
doing that for many years, so we are sort of mildly amused that Jesse has
so much to say about something he knows so little about.”
The Boston Herald also reported the reaction of a black state legislator
who immigrated to the Boston area from Haiti in 1969. “I guess the
Reverend is entitled to his opinion,” said Democratic state Representative
Marie St. Fleur, “but as an individual who was raised here… in the city of
Boston, I have seen and experienced major changes. To tell me there
hasn’t been progress is not real for me.” Darnell Williams of the Urban
League told Boston’s WCVB TV he was “shocked by the statement Rev. Jackson
made, but at same time, Rev. Jackson made a good point to galvanize us to
respond.” The combined force of these responses led Jackson to amend and
considerably soften, if not entirely retract, his comments.
None of this is to suggest that any of Jackson’s critics quoted here would
share my political views on all questions related to civil rights or other
issues. Most of them, including Menino, are liberal Democrats.
But this incident and the honest response it drew from many Boston community
leaders offers us an important reminder.
Many of the politicos who profess to speak on behalf of minorities are actually
quite removed from the people whose interests they claim to represent.
Often they are pushing agendas that have little to do with those interests
and more to do with an ideology in which it is more important to categorize
people as victims or oppressors than to actually accomplish any measurable
results.
When a self-styled civil-rights leader can defame an obviously imperfect
but improving city, when a California legislator can protest a state education
official calling a little girl a name only until he finds out she is white,
and when critics can attack Bill Cosby for perfectly reasonable comments
on education and personal responsibility, this disconnect between ideology
and practical results is evident. If people continue to speak out with
the truth when these outrages occur, we will make greater progress toward
a new politics that moves beyond race than any political convention speech
is likely to attain.W. James Antle III is a primary columnist for Intellectual Conservative.com. He works as an assistant editor of The American Conservative magazine and is also a senior editor of EnterStageRight.com. The views expressed here represent his alone.
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