|
We've seen this week how the Bush Administration "hired" a controversial, nationally heard black radio show host to do PR work for them; Armstrong Williams, by dint of his blackness, was deemed the best choice to get the word out on NCLB, to make it seem legitiamte, to gloss over or merely lie about its flaws, and for this the DOE paid him 240,000 big ones.
Which points to an unfunny truth: Bush and his team have a deeply cynical view of race. To them, appealing to minorities is just a ploy, not a commitment. To think that Black America would get on board a program and a governing body which consistently works against their better interests simply because one of their own (just ONE) said it was okay bespeaks a kind of racism and a underestimation of the intelligence of the black community.
How come no one in the media is connecting the dots between how the Bush team handled Williams and their appointments of Condi Rice and Alberto Gonzales? In Gonzales's case, the media, to a man, always plays up how Alberto is the living embodiment of "The American Dream," how he worked himself up from poverty and....well, look at him now! The fact that he approved torture of the members of other minority groups is bounded over in the rush to proclaim "Latino Makes Good!" Does Bush really think that just because Latinos might see a fellow Latino on television and in the papers, taking the title of (gasp) Attorney General, they'll fall in line behind him? Do they really think Blacks and Latinos are stupid?
I find it perplexing that nobody seems to be making that connection. It's not like Armstrong Williams was an anomaly; this is how the Bush team handles members of minority groups. It's why minorities, who traditioanlly vote Democratic, keep getting appointments in Bush's cabinet.....however, if you look at Bush's policies, they consistently work against poor people and minorities. The only way they can get minorities to line up behind those policies is to get figureheads like Rice, Gonzales, Williams, Blackwell, et al. to shill for them, and they're cynically counting on those minorities to not hear what those people are saying and simply see their skin color.
Recently, I read a article with radio show host Tavis Smiley, NPR's newly-departed resident celebrity. He bemoaned that the Bush cabinet was more racially integrated than NPR, which was supposed to be the mouthpiece of the left. I hope Smiley's attitude isn't catching on, because that would seriously indicate a lack of critical understanding of the reasons behind Bush's appointments.
|