Posted by
Walter Grandberry on Wednesday, November 05, 2008 11:17:35 AM
And so it begins.
The opening act of a new political passion play has now commenced.
And not with a whimper. As his predecessor would say, President-elect Barack Obama "thumped" Sen. John McCain in a not quite landslide. To be sure, even as we hoped against hope (and change), most conservatives saw this one coming.
Nevertheless,
our disappointment is manifest, our sense of disillusionment is
palpable. We wonder what has become of a nation that once possessed a
healthy skepticism for leaders that promised too much at the expense of
individual liberty, and government that sought to overrun its
Constitutional bounds. Those touchstones of our national culture seem
but part of a distant, dimly-lit past. Now begins our season of
self-flagellation, of a questioning self-doubt. Did we ignore the
mandates we received in 2000 and 2004? Were we too aggressive (or too
incremental) in implementing our agenda? Is political conservatism the
best template for governance in a post-modern society? The most we can
hope for is a period of soul searching that is equally painful and
brief.
And what of the Left? Doubtless, they are in full jubilee, and I begrudge them not one moment of it. But while it never seemed as much at
any point in my life, it occurs to me now that a black man ascending to the
highest elected office in the land is the easy part.
It will soon be his task to govern, which is to say that it will be his
duty to establish priorities - to grant as well as to deny favor. When
the Left's electoral sugar high is over, the crush of disappointment will be swift and certain.
It
will also be sustained and multifaceted. The causes will be as
innumerable as the wildly fantastic promises Obama offered up during
the campaign, as he has created a bloat of expectation that can only
yield to an eventual letdown. Election results notwithstanding,
progressives have many hurdles yet to overcome. Even as America seems
to have lost its stomach for war in Iraq, we are not subject to shy
away from self-evident threats, and we will hardly countenance
interminable negotiations with nations that mean us ill. Nor do we see
ourselves - or our economic betters - as overtaxed, and we won't appreciate confiscation of our wealth by a rapacious government.
While
conservatives will mourn for a night, or perhaps a fortnight, I suspect
that Obama supporters will ache with regret every day for the next four
years. As Obama's
track record bespeaks, if it can't be done with a grandiloquent speech,
it won't get done. I sense that those who are in for the rudest
awakening will be African Americans (and anyone else who voted for
Obama based on the possibility of his being the first black president.)
As a conservative, and as an American of African descent, I am entirely
nonplussed by Obama's
negritude. This should not surprise for any number of reasons,
particularly the fact that it is blacks who are generally the first to
forget about so-called "first blacks."
Find me one black fifth-grader who knows the name of the first black elected official (John Mercer Langston), the first mayor of a major city (Carl Stokes), the first black U.S. Representative (Joseph Rainey), the first black U.S. Senator (Hiram Revels) or the first black Governor (P.B.S. Pinchback).
Show me a black college student who remembers the name the first black
to graduate from college (Alexander Lucius Twilight), a black
entrepreneur who knows the first black millionaire (Madame C.J.
Walker), or an African American serviceman who knows the name of the
first black recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor (Sgt. William H. Carney).
For that matter, I defy you to a black lawyer or judge who knows the
name of the first black editor of the Harvard Law Review (hint: it's not who you think.)
Nearly
every one of these first blacks, along with dozens of others, have been
left by the wayside. This rich vein of history (the better part of
which was accomplished prior
to the advent of affirmative action) has surely had little effect on
the comportment of the masses of African Americans, and blacks seem to
have gained virtually no wisdom form their example. What then suggests
that the election of a black president - particularly one who offers so
little in terms of recognizable accomplishment - will be the catalyst
for a much-needed change in the African American community or
elsewhere?