Posted on 03/28/2008 3:56:52 PM PDT by nuconvert
The Secretary of State Thinks She's Suffering
Michael Ledeen
March 28, 2008
After listening to the (excellent!) weather forecast (mid-seventies) and walking the dog in the woods near us, I made my morning tea and opened the Washington Times to find the secretary of state talking about race again:
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said yesterday that the United States still has trouble dealing with race because of a national birth defect that denied black Americans the opportunities given to whites at the countrys very founding.
Black Americans were a founding population, she said. Africans and Europeans came here and founded this country together Europeans by choice and Africans in chains. Thats not a very pretty reality of our founding.
As a result, Miss Rice told editors and reporters at The Washington Times, descendants of slaves did not get much of a head start, and I think you continue to see some of the effects of that.
That particular birth defect makes it hard for us to confront it, hard for us to talk about it, and hard for us to realize that it has continuing relevance for who we are today, she said.
Secretary Rice is a highly educated and sophisticated woman who, like many who have risen from modest circumstances to great heights, sometimes seems to suffer pangs of guilt for her great success. And so, it seems to me, she is vulnerable to one of the more common intellectual/emotional traps of our time, which is the yearning to believe in our own victimhood. I have good standing to pronounce on this subject, being a Jew, for a great deal of Jewish self-identity involves precisely that cult of victimhood. A famous Jewish joke tells of a man complaining about the miseries of his life, to which another remarks, so look who thinks hes suffering. There is now an open competition throughout the Western world for the title of most victimized. Its ridiculous, of course, not least because those truly oppressed and suffering rarely get the same chance for freedom and success that the Western whiners have.
She is quite right to say that slavery has relevance to American Blacks sense of themselves. How could it be otherwise? Just as the Jews slavery, oppression, and genocide are relevant to our sense of ourselves (our constant anxiety about the fragility of our success, whether in Israel, America or elsewhere), so Black slavery, the institutionalized racist oppression of Blacks for a century after the formal abolition of slavery, and the continued negative attitudes toward Blacks among other Americans, is a source of anger and anxiety.
But the subject is much more complicated than she seems to think, and she seems unaware that most Americans no longer find it difficult to talk about past and present racism, nor to embrace one another across racial lines. For many years now, she has lived in a cultural cocoon, whether on the politically correct campus of Stanford University, or the cubes in the NSC offices in the White House and the Old Executive Office Building, or the State Department. It seems to me that she has little direct experience with the melting pot of America, where intermarriage is rampant. This is nowhere more dramatic than the military, and I think shed be astonished to see the extent to which racial and ethnic distinctions have vanished in our armed forces. We recently had the exhilarating experience of spending five days on a Marine base, where ethnicity is melting away, and it is really quite impossible to define soldiers, and even more so their children, in ethnic terms. And yes, history is a factor in their identities, but it is still history, it is not today and will be less of a weight tomorrow.
It would be good to hear an American secretary of state talk along those lines, I wish she had more a sense of the dynamics of American society. Those young men and women in the armed forces are a cross section of America, far more than her peers at the academy or in the government. Instead, she finds it emotionally satisfying to talk about the victimization of her ancestors, and of herself when she was younger. Some of her words are even plaintive, which she does not seem to realize are inappropriate for a person who has risen to great heights.
Secretary Rice attracted a lot of attention a while back when she told a group of Palestinians that she understood their suffering, because she came from a people who had similarly suffered under unjust oppression. But that sort of statement is unworthy of a serious person, because victims of oppression is not a universal category. We are all victims in one sense or another, and we do not automatically understand one another by slapping that label on everyone who whines, or even on everyone who is really oppressed. It takes serious study and hard thinking to recognize the enormous differences between Palestiniansmost of whom are oppressed by other Palestinians, or by brother Arabs,and American Blacks, almost all of whom were enslaved by others. The whole basis for the oppression, and thus its content, is different. Unfortunately, she only looked at one slice of the Palestinians woestheir domination by Israelis in Gaza and the West Bankinstead of coming to grips with the more difficult context.
Later in the interview, she says that, even in the worst times, black Americans loved America and believed in America. Ill take her word for it, and if it is true it is because they knew that America, despite slavery, was fundamentally committed to the equality of all. No Palestinian believes that his society is committed to human equality. Unless we get these distinctions right we shall get the policy wrong, as night follows day. She is muddying the waters.
We were slaves in the land of Egypt, we Jews say every Passover, at the beginning of the celebration of the Exodus. Thats a good model for all those who were oppressed, and eventually found freedom. If she had said we were slaves in the land of America, and then gone on to celebrate the abolition of slavery and then the civil rights fight, and now the remarkable rise of a black upper class that is an integral part of the countrys elite, I would have cheered. America is supposed to be about freedom, and the opportunity to excel. No one more fully embodies the American Dream than the secretary of state, and she should lead the celebration instead of whining that discussions of race are sometimes difficult. I doubt it, frankly. But even if it were true, so what? Lots of worthwhile endeavors are difficult. Get on with it.
And by the wayjust to add one more layer of complexityI wonder if she would be surprised to learn that there are plenty of Africans who are convinced of the inferiority of black Americans, on the grounds that they were enslaved, and therefore weak. The Africans know that winning tribes enslaved the losers, and some of the enslaved losers were sold to Arabs, Europeans and Americans. Does Secretary Rice think that Africans find it difficult to discuss this matter? Did she raise the subject in her conversations with African leaders? I first heard about this from Africans, and they did not seem to me to have any trouble talking about it.
So look who thinks shes suffering, I would say to her. Try being an Iranian, or any woman in the Middle East (aside from Israel), or a pretty girl most anywhere in the Third World who is an automatic target for the sex traffickers, or a Syrian, or an African threatened with death in various forms (disease, starvation, massacre) every day. Thats real suffering. Today. Not a generation ago. Our mission is not to encourage discussion, but to fight these evils, as weve so often done. Its discouraging to hear the secretary of state sound like Michelle Obama in her more unfortunate moments.
An aside, perhaps, but just for the record, is Obama a descendent of slaves?
The Secretary of State is pro abortion, from what I gain.
He’s a descendent of Arabs according to his records
AND, the Japanese NEVER suffered during the days of World War II, the Chinese Coolies, never felt the harshness of iron, how about Irish immigrants who came fleeing a potatoe famine? How many actually did make it through at Ellis Island only to become indentured servants, working 14 years for their passage to America. Homesteaders in SW Kansas and SE Colorado went bankrupt,during the days of the Dirth Thirties, Dust Bowl, many died of diptheria, typhoid and the flue. My kin lost farms TWICE...but they kept struggling. Some people need to get a LIFE, and make the most of their lemons.
Interesting that she comes out with this now. Maybe She is running for VP.
How do you gain this?
My first thought too.
Both of the issues in the Article are exactly why I and many others say NO to a Condi VP question. No way.
And that would be another reaon!
And how about the Jews who were persecuted in Germany and Russia, Poland, etc. and those who lost their relatives and still came to this country and built a life, many who couldn’t speak the language...there was no welfare, no “job training’ , no EEO lawsuits or Jewish affirmative action.
Hey, african Americans...you don’t have a corner on suffering. Its one thing to complain, its another to ask everyone else to take care of you and be ungrateful.
So she blames the problems of blacks on "birth defect" of the nation because blacks were slaves at the founding of the nation. I wonder how she can explain the rise of Asians and Japanese in our culture when they haven't been here as long as the blacks? Maybe she, like Obama, still sees chains on the blacks. Ah, yes, got to love the talk of one nation one people. As long is there is government to keep the races separated by class warfare there never will be.
I guess I have to second the original question: who is this guy?
Get over it Condi. Act like the intelligent grown-up you are supposed to be.
For those who were wanting Rice as a presidental candidate in 2008, thank the Lord you didn’t get your wish. Furthermore, she is another example of the people “W” surrounded himself with, second raters.
I’m glad John Bolton is speaking out.
I don't think Rice's comments were any big deal, it would be folly to think blacks are not race conscious, and a bit much to complain when a black mentions racism, because blacks don't have it as bad as Jews, Syrians, etc. A history of slavery is a pretty strong historical element. Nor do I think Rice was being a "victim".
BINGO!
It's time for the candidates to dig out their copies of A Natiopn of Victims.
Until the leaders tell people to pull themselves up and stop whining, we'll have these whinefest campaigns.
They will never get over it until they bleed us dry. Ask them if they feel the same about the Black Chiefs in Africa that sold them to the slavers. Along with that, America only had 5% of the slaves.
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