Monday, August 20, 2012

The Tea Party GOP's Greatest Fear: President Obama is a "Black-Beast Rapist"...and He is Coming to Get Them



Popular culture is an informal type of public opinion. In its best instances, popular culture is a powerful lens into our collective fears, hopes, and anxieties. I was rewatching David Mamet's Edmond, a great film which explores questions of existential angst, a man's descent into madness (or sanity depending on one's point of view), and his subsequent imprisonment. The final scenes of the film are challenging and provocative; they are a great example of how the "popular" and "political" can intersect in some surprising ways.

While it is little discussed in the mainstream press, or among the pundit classes, I would argue that the New Right and the Tea Party GOP's anti-Obamamania is driven by a sense of imperiled white masculinity. The "angry white man" has been a part of our political and cultural vocabulary for several decades. He ultimately found a home and a political party in the Tea Party GOP. Although white men are the single most powerful and wealthy group of people in this country, the Right has been able to successfully  manipulate a sense of grievance, anxiety, and fears of a lost future where "the blacks," "the minorities," "the women," and "the gays" have taken over.

This is a shrewd political strategy that plays on the relationship between psychology and politics. The petit authoritarianism that is contemporary conservatism fears nothing more than a loss of control. As such, what better way to advance one's political goals than to create a narrative of white victimology?

Ultimately, the fears of the New Right, the Tea Party GOP, and the aggrieved, imperiled white masculinity that Mitt Romney and other Republican elites pander to, are responses to a collective nightmare, what is a waking dream where they are being metaphorically raped and dominated by Barack Obama and people of color. 

During Bush 2's rule, Republicans were obsessed with how the American public, as well as the Democratic Party, should "respect" the Office of the President of the United States. Curiously, a few years later the Tea Party GOP has shown nothing but utter disrespect for President Obama since he won the office in 2008.

There are many examples of this paranoid and conspiratorial behavior.

The State of the Union Speech was interrupted in an unprecedented fashion by a Republican who yelled "you lie" at the President. Major political figures on the Right and in the mass media have alternatively suggested that President Obama is not a United States citizen, is a closet Muslim, takes orders from his dead father's African ghost, and is an "affirmative action" hire who sneaked his way through Columbia and Harvard. Obama has also been faced with threats of violence, mass rebellion, secession, and naked racism. The Tea Party GOP was willing to risk economic Armageddon during the debt-ceiling crisis in order to embarrass Barack Obama.

These conspiratorial fantasies are ultimately about respect, authority, and legitimacy. Partisanship, and an extremely polarized public that has been subjected to Right-wing propagandists who are deeply invested in crisis and rumor mongering, are central to this story too. But, "normal" politics cannot be decoupled from the symbolic politics that are necessarily embodied--quite literally--in Barack Obama, the country's first black president. For many conservatives, and especially aggrieved whites who are made insecure by the United States' changing demographics and a sense that America is not "their country" anymore, Obama is seen as pure evil--he is their anti-Christ.

In the conservative political imagination, people who look like him, his family, and those other black and brown folk with some degree of political and/or economic power, do not belong in or near the White House. White reactionary conservatives may not state the following as plainly as I am willing to: The United States has long been the white man's country; the Tea Party GOP, as a White Party, are willing to do almost anything to regain this true lie and fictive past.

As I have written about numerous times, Mitt Romney is a sociopathic racist. His campaign ads have recycled naked and racist stereotypes about Barack Obama--and by implication black Americans. Moreover, Romney's use of both naked racial appeals and dog whistle politics represent one of the most sophisticated uses of racial animus in recent American political history. As the election approaches, Romney and Ryan are going to go places that McCain never would have dared. White racial resentment, and manipulating white racial anxiety in order to win over white voters, is one of the few remaining weapons (along with voter suppression) that Romney and the Tea Party GOP have left in their arsenal given the unpopularity of their proposed policies.

I am not suggesting that Mitt Romney is experiencing, nor that he is moved by, the same racial fears and white anxieties which motivate the Tea Party GOP base. Romney and his backers are billionaires. They fear nothing. But, Mitt Romney is willing to use the petty fears of reactionary white conservatives and right-leaning independents in order to further his political and economic goals.

In these conversations about President Obama, legitimacy, white voters, and the Tea Party GOP, one variable has been consistently ignored by most pundits and analysts. The Tea Party GOP is a Southern, White political party. Its leaders made a bargain decades ago to absorb the Southern racists, the Dixiecrats, into their fold. By doing so, they flipped the South "red." This choice also meant that the Republican Party was now the party of Jim and Jane Crow, the slaveocracy, and all of the other assorted political, racial, and cultural baggage that comes with it.


As we have witnessed since the 1980s, contemporary conservatism, white populism, nativism, Christian Nationalism, and racism are apparently a good fit for one another. This brew may be bad for the Common Good and the American people, nevertheless it serves the elites on the Right quite well.

Part of the baggage that the Tea Party GOP absorbed was cultural, and involved very specific understandings of the color line, race, and authority. Southern politics and political economy historically revolved around a clear hierarchy in which black people were supposed to be subservient to whites. This worked through laws such as Jim and Jane Crow. These arrangements were also informal, wherein black people were expected to get off of the sidewalk when whites would come near, to look at the ground and be submissive to white male authority figures and women, letting white drivers pass you on the road and at four-way stops, and being very mindful of "white spaces" (and if you, as a person of color, belonged there or not).

The Southern culture which flows through the Tea Party GOP and contemporary populist conservatism is one of ruthless capitalism born in the shadow of King Cotton, and where black slavery was the preferred way of making money. There is no sense of noblesse oblige among the Southern planter class, or their elite descendants in the present. The Southern culture which the Tea Party GOP absorbed is also one of masculine honor, dueling, guns, and the spectacular violence of ritualistic lynching.

These variables help to explain the neo-secessionist rhetoric of the Right and their embrace of the "Lost Cause" ideology. The relationship between race, violence, social control, and white domination also influences the anti-black affect and hostility that is central to contemporary conservatism generally, and to the Tea Party (with its relationship to the John Birch Society and the White Citizens Councils) more specifically.

The racial order of the post-Emancipation, Reconstruction South, up through the 1960s and the triumphs of the Black Freedom Struggle, was one of clear racial authority, and a white over black racial order that was enforced by means both "judicial" and extra-legal. This arrangement of social, political, and economic control was based on the lie of black criminality, our unfitness for citizenship, and the mythic figure of the black-beast rapist. In the malignant and pathologically violent culture of Jim and Jane Crow, the black body had to be ritualistically dismembered, violated, tortured, and destroyed in order to reinforce white citizenship, and the imagined intraclass fraternity of white men.

In this world, if a black man or woman or child did not "know their place" they would be quickly and violently put back in it.

The New Right is infected by these cultural norms. It looms in their collective subconscious and comes out in many way--such as their patent disrespect for Barack Obama, as well as high levels of anti-black sentiment, and hostility to the Other. I am not suggesting that American society is still sick with either lynching culture or the "old fashioned" racism of the not so far away past. The color line has been redrawn in some amazing and progressive ways. A black man was elected President; the vicious racism of the lynching tree and Jim and Jane Crow would not allow such a thing.

In the United States, racism has evolved from the personal to the institutional and structural. "Meta-racism" or "colorblind racism" is the norm We now live in a globalized society, where concerns about human productivity and capital in a service age information based economy, are more primary than maintaining outmoded white supremacist racist ideologies. The multicultural elite classes profit more off of pretend notions of inclusion and diversity than they ever would from old style segregation and racial violence.

There are still old fits and spasms of white racism, violence, and ethnic chauvinism. The Southern Poverty Law Center has documented an astronomic growth in the number of white racist organizations since the election of the country's first black president. There have been domestic terrorist incidents that have involved the attempted IED bombing of a parade in honor of Dr. King, as well as the Sikh Temple massacre by a white supremacist gunman.

Of course, the racist emails, signs, rhetoric, and display of firearms and guns by the Tea Party at their rallies are expressions of old school white racism as well.

Ultimately, federal and state authorities will not permit mass racial violence in post-civil rights America; they will use militarized police forces and other means to quickly put down such "inconveniences" for the country's new/old racial order. However, these same agents of Power can do little about either the closet or front stage racism being ginned up by the New Right and the Republican Party.

The disrespect and hostility demonstrated by the Tea Party GOP and the (white) New Right is a manifestation of a deeply aggrieved sense of order and place. Black and brown people are supposed to be subservient to white authority. As I wrote about here, the necessity of white male control over women's bodies is part of the same ideological and political cosmology. In all, Whiteness, especially as manifested by White Conservatism, is rooted in a deep fear of white oppression by black and brown people. This is their doomsday and nightmare scenario. Southern Confederates feared it; bloviators such as Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and others give voice to it almost every day with their fixations on how Obama hates white people and that agitprop fools like the New Black Panther Party are coming to kill white good white folks.

The ending of the film Edmond is a graphic and disturbing representation of these anxieties about white male authority and black domination. The main character played by white every man William H. Macy has been sent to prison for life. His cellmate is the black actor Bokeem Woodbine. Macy is prey; Bokeem is the predator. Macy will be forced into submission--one way or another.

This narrative is ideologically rich, potent with questions about race, representation, masculinity, authority, sex, and power. As we work through how race and popular culture intersect here, there are three elements of particular importance in this scene that I would like to highlight:

First. The conservative white masculinity channeled by the New Right and the Tea Party GOP conceptualizes Macy as a liberal punk, he is aggrieved with liberal white guilt, and wants to confront Woodbine, the violent, hyper-thug, black-beast rapist, with words and reason. Macy eventually surrenders to Bokeem's advances. For the Right-wing conservative gaze, he is the ultimate embodiment of "cowardly" "feminine" "liberalism" and "progressivism," because Macy eventually learns to accept his "relationship" with his abuser. "Real men" (read: conservatives) would never submit to such an arrangement. They would rather die.

Second. Macy's character represents the deep fears of white oppression that drive the Right-wing imagination in the Age of Obama. In this framing, they have already lost their country. The United States' demographics are changing. White men are scared and worried about their futures. The Great Recession has been emasculating, and in many ways economically castrating, for white "working class" men who fear being obsolete and unnecessary in this "new" America. The Angry White Men who comprise the base of the Tea Party GOP are symbolically represented by William H. Macy's character.

On some deep psychological level, or perhaps even on the near-surface, they are moved by a profound vulnerability, that one mistake, one bit of misfortune, could literally or metaphorically emasculate them. Thus, putting them at the mercy of a black man or other person of color. Whiteness is about authority and "normal" arrangements of power; Whiteness, and white masculinity in particular, fears nothing more than being usurped.

Three. Bokeem's black-rapist beast inmate character is what The White Gaze imagines all black men to potentially be. In popular culture, as well as the collective popular imagination, hyper-thug black masculinity is one of the dominant tropes and ways of representing black manhood. Here, despite our levels of education, refinement, or success, all black men are somehow a second away from becoming violent, impulsive, or dangerous.

Consider: much of commercial hip hop plays off of this age old cultural trope. The dream merchants on Wall Street have perfected marketing "blackness" and "black masculinity" in ways that fulfill the fantasies of the mass public: there is a tension which is skillfully sold, where black men are simultaneously the most envied and despised people in the world.

Barack Obama, as a black man, is also burdened by these representations. The Right plays with these deep fears and anxieties to cause fear in white voters. Conservatives have argued that the President has been called lazy, irresponsible, and more interested in hip hop barbecues at the White House than in being an effective leader. Romney has based his political campaign on painting the president as a permanent Other, "niggerizing" him as a lazy, angry, hostile black man.

In reality, Barack Obama is refined, intelligent, accomplished, and has an effortless sort of "cool pose" about him.

Individuals immersed in white racial resentment, and plain old fashioned white racism, are incapable of seeing these aspects of Obama's humanity.

The conservative white racial frame sees Barack Obama as Bokeem Woodbine's character in Edmond. He is a thug, a violent rapist thug, who enjoys dominating white people (read: men) just like them. Conservative pundits such as Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh have even used the explicit language of rape to describe how Barack Obama, and the federal government under his leadership, has sexually violated the American people.



This view is generalizable. Many of the same white folks also see black men, all of us, in the same light.

27 comments:

CNu said...

lol, three months to go till showtime and you've already reached peak shrillness with this piece.

Better pace yourself and save a little bit for the weeks and months to come...,

chaunceydevega said...

@Cnu. Refined shrillness. My balls are heavy. I take yohimbe root, saw palmetto, and ginseng. No problems there.

Razor said...

CD

While I agree with your premise that to many of the scared, anxious, emasculated, financially castrated, emotionally and impulsively and obsessively see in Obama that oppressive black thug rapist-beast visage, I believe that they also see something else, that is equally or even more psychically demoralizing.

It is what we see. A refined, intelligent, uber-educated at elite institutions of higher learning, smooth, natural cool walk and mannerisms, make-a-sister-like-Michelle Obama-scream type of sensuality-effect-on-a-very large-segment-of-the-female-population-who-openly-admit-it-including-white-women, conversant, persuasive, almost-impossible-to-visibly-rattle-even when-a bomb drops-composure (see "you lie" interruption during monumental speech) and will as long as he lives be rich. That truth is devastating!

That he could spawn a whole new generation of hopeful children of color to high achievement and maximizing their God-given potential, and what that may mean to their own children too....is horrifying.

For them it's Reconstrution Era again...that's scary.

Cavoyo said...

Speaking of racial air raid sirens:

"“There’s something different on the ground, and I think it’s going to overtake us all again, think it’s going to overtake the political class,” [Illinois Republican Representative Joe] Walsh said. “I think it’s going to respectfully pick this president up and pat him on the head and say, son, son, son, Mr. President, you were never ready to be president, now go home and work for somebody and find out how the real world works.”"

CNu said...

Obama 2012 Strategy for Black Voters: Scare Them and Promise Them Nothing

It is late August in the election season and we brothas and sistas should clearly see how Obama 2012 is going to cater to the Black vote. Instead of offering any incentive or making any campaign promise to brothas and sistas that waited 4 hours in line during the 2008 election, Obama 2012 decided to enlist some cornball Blacks to spread propaganda and run a campaign of fear and smear against Mitt Romney.

At some point, we Black people gotta say we straight tired of this crap the Democrats keep pulling on us – trying to scare us instead of actually doing anything of material for us. I don’t give a f*ck if Mitt Romney is elected and I been through Reagan as a child, both Bush Sr and Jr so I’m the last person in this world the Democrats is going to scare me with is Mitt Romney. And I will be honest – I never seen Black people catch as much hell and suffering in any era in our lifetime than under US President Barack Obama.

No, Barack Obama is not promising he going to do anything for the Black vote and running around saying he is not the president of Black America. I’m telling you straight up – cats are going to stay home. Ain’t no punk ass Al Sharpton, some cornball radio talk show host, no pundit or bought and paid for preacher is going to convince regular everyday Black folks to run out to the polls and it’s sad seeing Obama 2012 try to pull this bullshit on Black people.

nomad said...

Fear is a great motivator. But you need a carrot to go along with that stick if you're going to herd the black flock into the Obama pen. Yeah, adding Ryan to the bad cop team does up the ante. But still, the good cop is just not too appealing. With Romney we get war, the police state and slashing the social safety net. On the other hand we get war, the police state and slashing the social net...with a black face. After all, you don't want your executioner to be white do you? If both paths lead to slaughter at least let the shepherd be black. The first few minutes of this video articulates what really happened when the change from Bush led to Obama. The whole of the video describes in symbolic terms our present political plight.

http://vimeo.com/44583147

Anonymous said...

Romney would denounce white people and believe he meant it if he thought it would win him the presidency. Racism is only a means to an end. He has no animus against blacks or any other ethnicity–hell, the Mormon church has declared them fully human!–but you have to understand monomaniacism. Everything is for sale. Everything. If it meant the presidency he'd probably become a Muslim.

—anotherbozo

Abstentus said...

Animus is not required for racism. All that is required is some vague sense that your people (by race or ethnicity) are some how better than those other people. Or conversely, that those other people (by race or ethnicity) are just some how not as good as your people or people more like your people.

chaunceydevega said...

@Abstentus. That is one of the most common excuse making strategies for racism/sexism/homophobia etc. he/she is just doing it for "strategic" purposes "they didn't mean it."

Irrelevant. You are what you do...or what you give tacit consent to.

Abstentus said...

Way I grade is like this. If someone is willing to risk being taken for a flat out racist by pandering to racist sentiments, I will oblige them accordingly.

Michael Paul Goldenberg said...

This is an excellent piece. Suggestions of "shrillness," well-intentioned/humorous or not, seem wrong-headed to me. I think you pretty well hit all the nails on their respective heads.

The inclusion of the scene from Mamet's EDMUND seems very much on-point. For what it's worth (mostly my chance to drop names), I went to college with David Mamet and William H. Macey. Didn't really know Mr. Macey, though we were contemporaries, but I got to know David a little when I was a freshman and he was a senior, mostly through getting my ass handed to me in a poker game he frequented. And then later, when I was a senior and he had returned to teach theater for a year, we became close, via poker, table tennis, and one of his excellent classes, through taking informal Yiddish lessons from a graduate student, and just from hanging around.

My best guess is that David would have found much to praise in what you've written, at least back in the '80s when his career was blooming and he wrote politically provocative (and intentionally ambiguous) plays like EDMOND and OLEANNA, both made into movies with William H Macey. I'm less sanguine given David's apparent shift to the right politically in recent years as to what he'd think of your commentary now, not that it matters. And I have no idea what Macey's politics are or have been. But for my money, your analysis is solid. And the play anticipates very clearly the current state of thinking of far too many white people, particularly white men from various classes.

That's the "beauty" of the racist scenario that has informed our nation for centuries. It's a narrative that serves the ruling class perfectly and satisfies the underlying dissatisfaction with the white "have-nots" and "have-less." The litany has always been, "Sure, maybe you don't have a plantation/mansion like we rich folks do, but at least you're WHITE!" And the implication is that as long as you have whiteness, you can rise to the top. Sure, it's mostly a fairy tale, but it is one that lots of folks can and do believe in. And they get to take their frustrations out on the "others": blacks, Latinos, Asians, gays, women, children, et al. What a wonderful, all-purpose story to keep nearly everyone at bay while the 0.1% rules.

I appreciate your work, which I've only discovered in the last few days. Keep it up.

chaunceydevega said...

@Michael. Thanks for the kind words. Was a bit longer than typical for a format like this but I was working through some of those ideas and wanted to get them out. I will probably come up with an abridged version and post it elsewhere. The point is correct--all this rape stuff is part of the psychological underpinnings of the Right's politics at present.

I have to ask: what was Macey like? was he an everyman in real life, or exactly the opposite? What about Mamet, was he self-aware of his genius? Every teacher who thinks about sleeping with a student while they are his or her student needs to see that movie btw. Scary.

Anonymous said...

This is brilliant and should be required reading for everyone.

As I wrote last night on another post, we need to be careful.

Some of these folks act like they've been backed into a corner and will react violently.

I long for the day when some of these people and their relatives would sit back and LISTEN to others and take the time to show some EMPATHY for their fellow man. Unfortunately, I don't think that that will happen in my life time.

But as the saying goes, "You never know."

I for one, never thought there would be a black president.

Razor said...

CNu


The more hate he gets from the Tea Party GOP, the more he knows that he can rely on the black vote without having to tell the lie that he is going to do anything for them, save for those select elite few, who are paid herders to keep the sheep quiet.
Obama has been pretty straightforward with black folk telling us to...shut up!

Nomad

How should we feel about those black entrepenurial slave-catchers in Africa who supplied the Europeans with their commodity? I believe that fewer of us would be here if they had to capture us themselves.

I too believe that the race is a good cop-bad cop parody...almost vaudevillian in fact...staged political theater. Certainly the very wealthy can afford it with their unlimited wealth, both counted and unaccounted (see recent articles on untaxed $Trillions hid in havens).




nomad said...

@ Anon
"I for one, never thought there would be a black president."
Me either. I wonder what forces came into alignment to engineer such a feat?

"How should we feel about those black entrepenurial slave-catchers in Africa who supplied the Europeans with their commodity? I believe that fewer of us would be here if they had to capture us themselves."

No doubt. How do I feel about em? Traitors. The thing is they are with us today, performing pretty much the same function. "Slave dry-va. The table is turned now." (Well, that last part may be wishful thinking.)

CNu said...

Obama has been pretty straightforward with black folk telling us to...shut up!

lol, what exactly is CDV telling us to do?

CNu said...

Traitors. The thing is they are with us today, performing pretty much the same function. "Slave dry-va. The table is turned now."

um...,

"respectable negroe" = paddy roller?

Bruto Alto said...

@CNu

I understand your reasons for voting for Mit (thin the herd stuff), but as a family man I also view women and LGBT rights as important. Mit and Ryan promise to limit those rights. Those rights are as important as my own. With B.O. at least there has been change. With Mit most of those items would be overturned or blocked. I know I could make it under Romney but is it worth it to pull others into the fire with me.

CNu said...

lol, I'm not going to vote for Romney - he's a stiff, unlikeable asshat and a parasite.

I'm not going to vote for Obombney either. He's a likeable slave-catcher.

I can only hope Ron Paul is out there in some or another independent manner, form, or fashion - trying to legalize sacraments, outlaw usury and fiat currency, and bring an end to the preposterous and unsustainable wastage that is the military industrial congressional complex.

Bruto Alto said...

@CNu

Do you mean Pro-life, Homeschooling, No to Immigration Ron Paul? "Plot for world government" Ron Paul? "Coming race war in our big cities" and "The federal-homosexual cover-up on AIDS" Ron Paul

Get the F out of here!

He would be the fire I would be standing in. Come on in the fires fine! He would set the U.S. back 50 years.

nomad said...

"He would set the U.S. back 50 years."

Roseanne is the way to go.

CNu said...

Bruto Alto

Ending the war on drugs alone pushes all boats forward 50 years.

Bruto Alto said...

There was no war on drugs! Ask Oliver North, Ask any south american leader that the U.S. has replaced, hell ask Smedly Butler. You think Mexican drug cartels didn't get their guns from the U.S. (legally) They are U.S. gorillas fighting a war for us to take their resources.

My Point is the boats have always been here you just didn't know what they were importing. Fruit/Drugs/Sugar/Slaves are all the same.

CNu said...

Prison Industrial Complex?

If I have a single domestic priority issue, it's bringing an end to the low-intensity, high-yield engagement by law enforcement with non-violent drug offenders.

Everything else is majoritarian gravy after that one...,

Razor said...

CNu

Ron Paul?????????????????????

He' a racist who is two steps away from the Tea Party and leading a lynch mob your way. His one or two issues that may seem appealing at first blush are illusory at best.

Consider Jill Stein with the Green Party if you want to walk away from the voting booth without feeling like you need toilet paper to wipe yourself with...to feel good about yourself.

The mass incarceration of people of color under the thinly-veiled pretext of Reagan's War on Drugs, a misnomer for The War on Black Folk, is an important enough single issue to support any candidate. I commend you on having a "heart", and not because it is not merely cost-effective. That war is causing untold misery in all of Central and South America as well, and really is a US tool for creating political instability in those countries. US drug policy is assinine and full of hypocricy.

Bruto Alto

Obama did what? You mean what lip service concession he gave on a fly-by...blatant teasing without real cost to the gay crowd vote. That is the totality of what they are ever going to get from him. Obama is a corporate shill in the highest order.

makheru bradley said...

In 2008 I had a clear choice-- Cynthia McKinney.I have not voted for a major party presidential candidate since 1980. This year I'm searching for an alternative. It may be Anderson, or I just may write in Farrakhan again.

Running for President on the Justice Party Ticket: A Q&A with Rocky Anderson

http://www.thenation.com/article/169155/running-president-justice-party-ticket-qa-rocky-anderson?rel=emailNation

StewartIII said...

NewsBusters| Daily Kos Week in Review: The Nauseating Party
http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-johnson/2012/08/26/daily-kos-week-review-nauseating-party