Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The "Pretenders"


No, not them.

These are the folks--leftist/prog bloggers, pundits and Pols, the 'changey-hopey" crowd, i.e.--who continue to seek so avidly for, and to insist so valiantly on finding reasons OTHER than deep-seated, endemic, still mostly undiluted racism in USer culture to explain the rabidly vocal "resistance" to "President Obama's" ostensible desire to reform the provision of health-insurance for average Murkins.

The question is: What provokes this large, vitriolic cabal of (mainly working- and lower- and lower-middle class, mainly white) citizens, many of whom are already recipients of the State's largesse, to rage so furiouslt against proposals that, if enacted, would improve THEIR OWN health care, either by offering a 'public' option or by eventually eliminating the Health Insurance Parasites as middle-men, altogether?

And the answer, as plainly as ever has been possible to enunciate, is good, old Murkin institutional (as if there were any other kind) racism. Here's Tim Wise, a widely known lecturer on the subject:


Scholars studying the phenomenon have always averred that racism is not mostly, or even particularly, about individual acts of bias, bigotry, or discrimination. Individuals possessed of those demons exist in all human groups. But it has often been difficult to point to non-abstract examples (explicit 'systems,' or 'policies') which would satisfactorily illuminate the relevant social/political outlines of institutional racism in practice. The unfolding health insurance/health care 'debate' provides a paradigmatic case-in-point. That is, it is an OBVIOUS iteration of the (implicit) "racist" system by which the "superior" majority uses its political power to deny equal, fair access to a 'public good' (improved health care) to the despised, "inferior" minority, even though it means the majority will also be deprived (albeit less so).

And the animosity generated by the right-wing against the policies attributed to Obama apparently stems from the perception--fondly, even rapturously promulgated by the drooling fucktards of the flying-monkey right, the militia movement, and the nativist morons like Dobbs and Beck--that Obama is a disloyal, "un" or "anti" American 'plant' or 'mole' foisted off on the electorate by the "liberals" in an elaborate exercise in Affirmative Action aimned at finally ending the power of the "superior" majority.

(That may happen, in 100 years, but it won't be because of any health-insurance plan Obama happens to sign into law later this year.)

If you've not heard/of Tim Wise, now's the time to start.
Scholars studying the phenomenon have always averred that racism is not mostly, or even particularly, about individual acts of bias, bigotry, or discrimination. Individuals possessed of those demons exist in all human groups. But it has often been difficult to point to non-abstract examples (explicit 'systems,' or 'policies') which would satisfactorily illuminate the relevant social/political outlines of institutional racism in practice. The unfolding health insurance/health care 'debate' provides a paradigmatic case-in-point. That is, it is an OBVIOUS iteration of the (implicit) "racist" system by which the "superior" majority uses its political power to deny equal, fair access to a 'public good' (improved health care) to the despised, "inferior" minority, even though it means the majority will also be deprived (albeit less so).

And the animosity generated by the right-wing against the policies attributed to Obama apparently stems from the perception--fondly, even rapturously promulgated by the drooling fucktards of the flying-monkey right, the militia movement, and the nativist morons like Dobbs and Beck--that Obama is a disloyal, "un" or "anti" American 'plant' or 'mole' foisted off on the electorate by the "liberals" in an elaborate exercise in Affirmative Action aimned at finally ending the power of the "superior" majority.

(That may happen, in 100 years, but it won't be because of any health-insurance plan Obama happens to sign into law later this year.)

Scrape the ridiculous rhetoric away, and it comes down to the fact that, for now, anyway, it is still considered bad form to stand aside and shout "Nigger" at black folks, so those who feel compelled to do it (and that seems NOT to be a small number of Middull Murkins) have fastened on 'issues' around which to organize their rage at being "led," even nominally, by an "inferior" race...

Make no mistake: That IS the issue, has always BEEN the issue, and will always BE the issue...

3 comments:

  1. You are so right - THAT is the issue. Growing up, I had black friends and a sense of equality. I wasn't even affected at that time by any civil rights movement. When that came into my life, I was right alongside my friends. I now live in a hotbed of old KKK supporters. This area was once a hub for their vile meetings and planning sessions. I despise the "N" word, but it is common verbiage here. I, being the ass I am, walk away from those using that word, and the tirades against the black residents.

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  2. Amen, bro. All that ranting about "socialized medicine" by old farts who are getting Medicare "socialized medicine" already? Just code language. I grew up in the South, I know what it's like down there, the word "nigger" is still in common use though only amongst immediate relatives (it's now understood that it's not polite to use it in public). So I know the code. When they rant about "evil gummint" what they're really ranting is, "goddamned gummint took my slaves away, then said I gotta let them go to the same schools as my own kids!". It's just code for "I want to be free to be a racist slave-owner again", in the end.

    - Badtux the Southern Penguin

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  3. Them's both quite apt precis of the sitcheyashu...thanks for the concurrences

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