Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Great White Hope
Bill Quigley
15 Oct 2008

by Sikivu Hutchinson

"Maverick" John McCain and attack-dog Sarah Palin seem to have staked their entire campaign on the powers of racial revulsion. "Linking Obama to William Ayers and domestic terrorism, Palin exhorted that ‘this is not a man who sees America as you see it and how I see America,'" while McCain "melds xenophobic and Orientalist rhetoric, conjuring up the dark inscrutable treasonous Other when he asks ‘who is the real Barack Obama.'" Together, McCain and Palin "tap into the deepest reservoirs of white racial angst."

Great White Hope

by Sikivu Hutchinson

"The beermeister and the demagogue evoke a nightmare vision of black insurgency."

Cindy McCain has spoken.  Shellacked white blond hair bristling with outrage, the beermeister lit into Barack Obama recently at an election rally, accusing him of voting against troop supply funding for soldiers in Iraq and thus endangering her enlisted son.  The beermeister's liberation from St John power suit-cosseted trophy wife to mother bear-firebrand has been hastened by Sarah Palin's transformation into the self-styled attack dog of the McCain campaign.  The visual choreography of McCain events now spotlights the two in tandem-Palin rallying the Christian soldiers onward with her nationalist screeds on homeland security while the beermeister hovers close behind in all her Stepford glory.  Snatching a page from their nativist 19th century white feminist forebears, the beermeister and the demagogue evoke a nightmare vision of black insurgency.  Linking Obama to William Ayers and domestic terrorism, Palin exhorted that "this is not a man who sees America as you see it and how I see America," to her rapt audiences. 

Despite all his efforts to distance himself from a black agenda, the assiduously race-averse Obama is still playing as a fist in the air Black Muslim to the American Legionnaires in east Overshoe.  In response to Palin's innuendo, lynch mob chants of "terrorist," "treason" and "kill him" have been gleefully hurled at Obama, eliciting the usual tepid condemnations from the McCain camp.  McCain's contempt for Obama as lawn jockey crashing the country club was on snarling display during Tuesday's debate when the uber male American war hero couldn't bring himself to look at the Senator and infamously referred to him as "that one."  In a desperate attempt to reverse his falling poll numbers, McCain melds xenophobic and Orientalist rhetoric, conjuring up the dark inscrutable treasonous Other when he asks "who is the real Barack Obama."

"The McCain-Palin doubletalk express taps into the deepest reservoirs of white racial angst."

Yet it is Palin who is the great white hope, mobilizing the faithful in the hinterlands while exploiting the far right electorate's bloodlust.  And what better messenger to paint Obama as a black subversive than Palin, whose pro-death (in the sense that she believes that a fetus should supersede the right to life of a real woman) views would even prohibit a woman from getting an abortion in cases of rape and incest?  Far right prohibitions on women exercising rights over their own bodies and destinies have a direct correlation with the preservation of God, country and the virtues of white womanhood.  Nationhood and the territorialization of white femininity have always been inextricably linked in the American imagination.  D.W. Griffith's anti-Reconstruction epic Birth of a Nation, based on Thomas Dixon's The Clansman, associated black rule with miscegenation and the rape of white women.  Racial terrorism against Reconstruction-era black legislators was justified on the grounds of protecting the Union from the scourge of race-mixing and a slide into anarchy.  Insofar as an Obama presidency foreshadows these primal threats to home and hearth it won't matter that McCain backs welfare handouts for the Wall Street and multinationals and shrugs off his ignorance about how many houses he has while morphing into a populist.

By evoking this symbolism, the McCain-Palin doubletalk express taps into the deepest reservoirs of white racial angst.  It has become a truism among many white left progressives that working class whites are essentially voting against their class interests when they vote conservative, but are they really?  The scores of white Democrat undecided voters and the all white legions who throng to the McCain-Palin circus tent revivals prove that white class solidarity has been, and always will be, about the defense of the homeland from the incursions of the Other.

Sikivu Hutchinson is the editor of blackfemlens.org and a commentator for Pacifica radio KPFK 90.7 FM. She can be contacted at [email protected].

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Covid Fueled by Neoliberal Austerity
    Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Covid Fueled by Neoliberal Austerity
    05 Jan 2022
    The neo-liberal austerity model of governance ensures that Covid-19 will continue spreading and producing new variants. Only people focused public health remedies will end the pandemic.
  • Ukraine: What Does it Have to Do with Black Folks?
    ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
    Ukraine: What Does it Have to Do with Black Folks?
    05 Jan 2022
    “…it is imperative that everyone, in particular Black and working-class people, understand that not having an awareness of the interconnections of the “grind” (the struggle to survive in the U.
  • The Black Agenda Review of Books
    Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    The Black Agenda Review of Books
    05 Jan 2022
    An overview of recent Black books that can help us get through the year ahead.
  • Don't Look Up Reflects the Cynicism of Capitalist Decay, for Better and for Worse
    Danny Haiphong, BAR Contributing Editor
    Don't Look Up Reflects the Cynicism of Capitalist Decay, for Better and for Worse
    05 Jan 2022
    The controversial film offers insight into the crisis of the system but misses the mark in key areas.
  • Black Panthers, Sacramento CA 1967
    Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    Copaganda
    05 Jan 2022
    Copaganda I.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us