Monday, April 06, 2009

African-American Pundits Debate: To Criticize or Not to Criticize Obama

Well, it's about time to talk about this! Blurb:
As the nation's first black president settles into the office, a division is deepening between two groups of African Americans: those who want to continue to praise Obama and his historic ascendancy, and those who want to examine him more critically now that the election is over. Johnson is one of a growing number of black academics, commentators and authors determined to press Obama on issues such as the elimination of racial profiling and the double-digit unemployment rate among blacks.

But doing so has put them at odds with others in the black community. Love for the Obamas is thick among African Americans -- 91 percent of whom view the president favorably, compared with 59 percent of the total population, according to a Quinnipiac University poll conducted last month -- and as a result, the African American punditry finds itself navigating new ground.

Really now, as race should not be a reason in itself to criticize someone, race should not be a reason in itself NOT to criticize someone. Criticize based on policy, for goodness sakes.

I really like this quote by black commentator Jeff Johnson:
Get past "Obama the personality" and see "Obama the president," he says. "Otherwise all you're being is a political-celebrity groupie instead of a citizen. . . . It starts with acknowledging he's my president, and not my homie."

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