Posted by
Ronald Lanham Jr. on Friday, November 07, 2008 6:25:06 AM
I was sitting at work trying to be at peace with the nation's
choice of president and I came up with some interesting thoughts
about race. It is something that our nation will always have to deal
with but this particular election brings into the clear light of day,
I think for the first time.
I never had any intention of voting against Obama because his skin
was darker than mine. It really never entered my mind. And yet many
black Americans did vote for Obama because he is a black man. One
commentator said that the number of whites that voted against Obama
because of color offsets the number of black people that supported
him for the same reasons. I find this logic spurious at best.
Colin Powell is a prime example of a black man that voted for
Obama simply because he is the same color. Powell had been a long
time Republican—albeit a moderate one. Like John McCain he had
served in Vietnam and he was well aware of the the Arizona senator's
qualifications for the presidency. Despite his assertions to the
contrary he endorsed Obama for no other reason than his race.
I don't have a problem with black people supporting Barack because
he's black. They should be proud of the accomplishment of the first
term senator from Illinois, the “Great Emancipator”, Abraham
Lincoln's state. What I don't like is when a person tells a
bald-faced lie about their reasons for making this very important
decision.
It brings up a question that I feel has to be asked: why is it
that people think they have to lie about it? If this were forty years
ago I could understand the reticence of black Americans to state
their reasons for voting based on race. Of course forty years ago a
black man would never had made it. The point is that times have
changed. And Colin Powell is one of the reasons that they have
changed so positively. He served with distinction and became Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs under George H. W. Bush. He led the successful
campaign against Saddam Husein in the first Gulf War. He was the
first black Secretary of State. He has no reason to be ashamed about
the fact that he voted for Obama simply because he is also black.
Powell has paid his dues.
One of the reasons may simply be that he feels that he was
slighted by the current Bush administration because of his reticence
to use military force against Iraq. He made the case to the world at
the UN for war and the evidence was faulty. It made him look bad. He
also may feel that he is partially to blame for the deaths of over
4,000 men and women of the American armed forces. I guess I feel that
maybe I am too since I supported the war. But the fact remains that
we were operating on the intelligence that we had at the time. And
though I'm just a lowly civilian I supported the war because I
thought it was the right thing to do. I made some mean statements
about the people who were against the war and I am sorry. However,
neither Colin Powell nor anyone else that supported the war should
blame ourselves for that tragedy since we used the same info to come
to our conclusions. So if a feeling of responsibility for what
happened is one of the reasons that he lied about his reasons for
voting for Obama, it is misplaced. A lot of good people were duped.
I don't think that Colin Powell is afraid of what people think
about him. I don't think that that is why he lied about his reasons.
But if that's not the reason then the only remain reason for lying is
the worst reason. He was actively trying to mislead the American
people. Remember he didn't have to publicly support Obama. He could
have simply done what the rest of America did on November 5th;
he could have silently voted. But he went out of his way to make a
statement of his support on all of the Sunday chit-chat shows. And
while doing so he lied about his reasons.
I think that I have lost a little respect for Mr. Powell.