cornel west on obama

topic posted Tue, February 12, 2008 - 11:36 AM by  Cornel
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Cornel West is one of the few people whose opinions I really take seriously - and not just because he's got a very cool name. Below is an article from the Chicago Defender. The article explains both Dr. West's initial skepticism and why he is now on board with Obama:

Dr. Cornel West pushes for Obama, ‘new world order’
by Rhonda Gillespie
[ www.chicagodefender.com/view.php ]

To hear him talk about the 'skinny guy with the funny name' who is the first African American poised to take the helm of the nation as the 44th U.S. president, you'd never know that Dr. Cornel West, initially, was skeptical of Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.).

The Princeton University dynamo with the unmistakable persona, replete with a funky afro and distinguished black-rimmed glasses, had been invited to Chicago by Rev. Michael Pfleger to bring the gospel message Sunday at his St. Sabina mass. But West ended up doing so much more. From the St. Sabina pulpit,West told of a nation entombed in an era that he said is marked by a loss of sensitivity to the plight of the most vulnerable citizens.

“We have been living for 40 years in a political, moral and spiritual ice age,” he told the congregation that included a number of candidates vying to take or retain office in the Super Tuesday elections. But a melt down, a phenomenon West, 54, said he didn't think he'd witness in his lifetime, is on the horizon. The professor of Religion called for a new world order, one that would begin with the election of Obama.

He continued his ardent push for Obama, talking to a crowd of volunteers and supporters at a downtown Obama campaign office Monday. West greeted the crowd by thanking them for “wisely choosing the right side of history.” He went on to tell the diverse gathering, “Because we're here not just to make history, we want to change history. We want not just to change history, we want to change it in a certain kind of way.

And Barack Obama is the leader…And what we will see is a change that involves what Sly Stone calls 'everyday people.'” But West wasn't always a staunch Obama supporter. “Initially I was very suspicious of my brother…because it looked as if, early on, he was such a darling of the mainstream media. And anybody who is a darling of the mainstream media warrants deep suspicion from me,” the acclaimed author and noted academe said.

But after having a conversation with Obama that West said delved into, among other things, the Senator's regard for the plight of Black people in the U.S. and the trailblazing strides made by Negro forefathers, West was sold. Now, like so many who have cleaved to the freshman senator's message of hope, West is one of Obama's most outspoken, prolific supporters. “I had a chance to look more closely at his record,” West said of his double-take of Obama.

He was struck by Obama's work for ex-offenders, the legislation he championed. “That was just my ignorance. I had to learn about the brother,” the Democracy Matters author said of his initial Obama assessment. As West pointed out to the Blacks, whites, Asians, women, men, young adults and baby boomers in the campaign office, Monday, Obama's support cuts across many social, ethnic and gender divides. In the Iowa Caucuses, a convincing number of white Americans propelled the mixedraced Harvard graduate to victory.

While women gave Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) a win in New Hampshire, the close race (39 percent Clinton; 37 percent Obama) showed that Obama was not a long shot. Nevada's primary, which was a win for Clinton in voting percentage, further substantiated that Obama was the first viable Black candidate for the presidency. Obama walked away from Nevada with 13 of 25 available delegates there. Then came the Jan. 26 South Carolina landslide defeat, furthering the Obama campaign's bite.

There, Obama won with 55 percent of the vote to Clinton's 27 percent. The Illinois senator garnered 52 percent of the non-Black vote in South Carolina, according to election data. And following the 21-state election day Tuesday, Obama remains in a tight heat, trailing marginally in the delegate count. Having experienced the tragedies of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, enduring the war in Iraq, and having to rebuild and restore major metropolises in the wake of the ravaging Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, West said the nation is looking for change.

“People see the country is in deep decline. People are hungry and thirsty for a hope and a uniter. And lo and behold the candidate who emerges is a Black man,” West said, rousing the crowd. Obama's message, called one of hope and unity, is credited by some with breathing life back into the Democratic Party. A registered Independent, West's support and vote for Obama is telling. He cautioned against being pro- Obama for race sake. “There are some people actually supporting the brother for the wrong reasons. But I'll take em,” West said, only half joking.

To support OBama simply because he is Black, “well that's not a good reason,”West said. “I'll take the vote and educate later.” It is not clear whether his support of Democrats begins and ends with Obama, but it is unquestionable that West is all aboard what has become Obama's vessel of hope.
posted by:
Cornel
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  • Re: cornel west on obama

    Tue, February 12, 2008 - 11:57 AM
    <Cornel West is one of the few people whose opinions I really take seriously >

    cornel west is a black nationalist, marxist --
    next thread....
    • Re: cornel west on obama

      Tue, February 12, 2008 - 12:12 PM
      In fact Cornel West is one of the very few living Americans who can accurately be described as a genuine intellectual.
      • Re: cornel west on obama

        Tue, February 12, 2008 - 12:18 PM
        <In fact Cornel West is one of the very few living Americans who can accurately be described as a genuine intellectual.>

        he's a genuine PHONY. that is about all.
        • Re: cornel west on obama

          Tue, February 12, 2008 - 12:30 PM
          he's a genuine PHONY. that is about all.

          Seth,

          I love when you say stupid shit like this. Your judgment of peoples intellect simply exposes your total and complete ignorance.
  • Re: cornel west on obama

    Tue, February 12, 2008 - 12:17 PM
    >>To support OBama simply because he is Black, “well that's not a good reason,”West said

    Obama is one-half black , just as Tiger Woods is one-half black. Obama uses the word "we" a lot and fewer "I"s. This, I believe, is because he speaks for his team. He speaks for what "we" can and will do in the future together.
    • Re: cornel west on obama

      Tue, February 12, 2008 - 12:19 PM
      < He speaks for what "we" can and will do in the future together.>

      if i wanted tony robbins elected, i would have donated to him. Obama is a cheerleader of what is looking and sounding more and more like a cult every day. cult leaders don't get elected president.
      • Re: cornel west on obama

        Tue, February 12, 2008 - 12:24 PM
        what a whiny, anti-semitic, motherf*cking phony cornel west is:

        In 2000, economist and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers became president of Harvard. In a private meeting with West, Summers allegedly rebuked West for giving too many high grades in his classes and neglecting his scholarship.[4] Summers allegedly suggested that West produce an academic book befitting his professorial position. West had written several books, some of them widely cited, but his recent output consisted primarily of co-written and edited volumes. According to some reports, Summers also objected to West's production of a CD, the critically panned Sketches of My Culture, and to his political campaigning.[5] According to West's book Democracy Matters, Summers wrongly accused him of canceling classes for three straight weeks during 2000 to promote Bill Bradley's presidential campaign. West contends that he had missed one class during his tenure at Harvard "in order to give a keynote address at a Harvard-sponsored conference on AIDS." Summers also allegedly suggested that since West held the rank of University Professor and thus reported directly to the President, he should meet with Summers regularly to discuss the progress of his academic production.[6]
        West reacted angrily to Summers' comments and told the media Summers had "attacked and insulted" him and shown him "disrespect"[citation needed] by telling him how to teach his classes and by implying that his recent work was without merit. West viewed Summers' low regard for his intellect and abilities as an example of racism prevalent in society generally[citation needed].
        Summers refused to comment on the details of his conversation with West, except to express hope that West would remain at Harvard. Soon after, West was hospitalized for prostate cancer. West complained that Summers failed to send him get-well wishes until weeks after his surgery, whereas newly installed Princeton president Shirley Tilghman had contacted him frequently before and after his treatment.[6] In 2002, West left Harvard University to return to Princeton. West lashed out at Summers in public interviews, calling him "the Ariel Sharon of higher education" on NPR's Tavis Smiley Show.
        • Re: cornel west on obama

          Tue, February 12, 2008 - 12:32 PM
          Seth,

          You fool, you didn't even read this. And where did you get it from?

          Being critical of Ariel Sharon does not constitiute anti-semitism you idiot. More nonsense from you.

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