Saturday, February 09, 2008

Virginians :Why Hillary Clinton is not African-American women first choice



This article is for the brothas who do not understand African-American women not automatically choosing Hillary Clinton. If brothas did not get it when hillary told all America that it is raced white people who got African-Americans their civil rightsthey should have got it when Bill suggested that the media needed to go after Obama and stop making Hillary cry. This was enough to bring out the first wave, out of the kitchen women voters for Hilliary and fuel the fire in the belly of the second wave women libbers, and confuse the genderless third wave women activists. But many of the African-Americans women have not forgotten Anita Hill..and her treatment by raced white women to push raced white women agenda.

“The [African-American] woman has occupied a unique if unenviable position in the United States. Historically she has borne the weight of inferior status ad prejudice derived from her [gender] as well as her color.” Treated as less than human, viewed as servant and not quite woman, but a breeder of enslaved children. Unlike raced white women, laws were not created to protect her as the better half of mankind. Although the African-American female suffered humiliate right along with the African-American male, and fought to secure his freedom, she was relegated to remain in her counter part male shadow. But not willing to remain behind, the African-American women had to step from the shadows and seek her own protection for her existence within the society that had casted her simply as invisible.

Through their experience as an African-American and a woman, African-American women have the special role of identifying with two oppressed group. Thus naturally, African-American women essence was more inclusive of others than the other two groups. African-Americans women related to both raced white females and African-American males. The African-American woman understood the African-American man had only been elevated up from slave to the stagnate role of servant. And with that understanding, that the African-American male was settling for less than full citizenship when compared to the raced white woman citizenship, African-Americans would be second class citizens.

African-American women would not settles for being a footstool for raced white women or African-American males.

Through this struggle, of existing in the shadow of both raced white women and African-Americans males,, African-American women were able to craft a political agenda that would meet the future needs of all African-American. In getting there, she had to overcome both race and gender, cby reating some political independent women, “By whatever unstated, immeasurable, invisible standards the American people applied to candidates for Congress, women have seldom been their choice.”

If this was true for raced white women, African-American women were never to be considered a part of the political equation. Three women spoke to the power of African-American women expressing their opinions. In doing so, speaks to the shaping of the history of African-American women in their contributions to the history of America.

Shirley Chisholm-inclusion--outsider- fought for immigrants' right to become citizens and to participant in the electoral process through democracy..a vote for the people by the people. Chisholm, a child of immigrants, in 1968 became the first African-American woman to serve in Congress, served seven terms. Chisholm saw that the political powers were not in recognition of the interest of the people. Chisholm ran on a platform created by the people and for the people by not following the procedure for entering the political arena. Chisholm credibility was established by staying connected to the people and not by who she knew. Chisholm remained with the people as an outsider. In 1972, she ran as the first African-American and African-American woman for President, a hundred years after the first raced white woman, Victoria Woodhull.

Barbara Jordan—diversity inclusion through the Constitution amendment
Jordan believed in the Constitution. Jordan's rally cry was in gratitude for the amendment of the Constitution. The amendment that allowed her to fully participate as a citizen. Jordan had something to contribute in the political and private sphere as an African-American born in the United States. Jordan believed that the constitution laws were color blind and that they applied to all Americans and should be enforced and upheld. Believing so, we was confronted to its greatest challenge, to impeach the former President of the United States, Richard Nixon. In doing so, reaffirmed the rock solid foundation in which the Constitution was drafted for all the people.

Lani Gunier-Dialogue-understanding the meaning of the voting right act purpose. The voting right act purpose was beyond having access to the ballot box. It would provide enough votes to elect African-Americans to political office. Once in political office these individuals would have an insider view in changing the laws that continue to support the exclusion of African-Americans from fully enjoying citizen rights. The voting right act of 1965 would serve a higher purpose than access to the ballot box to elect African-American candidates, it could used to influences legislature to improve the lives of African-Americans by electing those candidates who supported such interests. The interest of African-Americans included so many others.

The ability to influence lawmakers would be through political mobilization of voters creating a majority that supported African-Americans interest. A convergent of an interest group would have the ability to offset the tradition majority rule that excluded so many. This would be a group organized around interest that impact others beyond race.

Gunier, was an African-American Jewish academia who made her argument among her peers for the inclusion of the people who she had earlier represented. Academia encouraged her ideas, however, when her ideas for empowered African-Americans in the public arena, Gunier was silenced, by her long time friend, former President Bill Clinton. Gunier learned that in spite of her academic and professional accomplishment she was discredited as being on the fringe and not part of mainstream for standing up for what she believed in. The price is steep, but the African-American history never said it would be easy.

Read more on gender and race debate here

H/T to Blacksmythe

Also read Read Dr.Marc LamontHill post, February 8, 2008
Why Black Women Don’t Support Hillary

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous3/21/2008

    When will Hillary stop lieing to get ahead and when will people actually catch on to what she is all about?

    ReplyDelete