Michelle Obama Reinforces The "Fairytale" Fairytale

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Huffington Post   |  Rachel Sklar
First Posted: 01-14-08 02:50 PM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 02:45 AM

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As I wrote in my previous post, I have been appalled and dismayed at how the media have glibly mis-characterized Bill Clinton's "fairytale" comments as being about anything other than Barack Obama's position on the Iraq war, which was clearly the context in which the comment was made. Despite that, the media, commentators, the Obama campaign and now Michelle Obama, explicitly in a televised speech, have mis-characterized that comment to imply (nay, flat-out say) that Clinton called Obama himself a "fairytale," as well as his message of hope and redemption for disenfranchised minorities.

This would be fine if he had said that. BUT HE DIDN'T. So leaving aside the merits of what he did say regarding the Iraq war (which Obama has disputed), the fact remains: The media, TV commentators, the Obama campaign and now Michelle Obama - a very smart woman who has to know exactly what she is doing - is perpetuating that misinterpretation in order to imply that the Clintons are trying to tamp down on the African-American dream.

This is not an exaggeration. Here are Michelle Obama's remarks, verbatim, from her speech tonight:

Sometimes we feel it's better not to try at all than to try and fail. These are complicated emotions, left in our heads and hearts from years of struggle, emotions we must face if we're going to overcome as a community if we want to lift ourselves up. We must do it in the face of those who will attempt to play on those emotions for our own purposes, to discourage us from believing what is possible...to dismiss this moment as an illusion, as a fairytale.

I like Michelle Obama a lot, and I consider her a woman of integrity, so this bothers me -- because it is NOT WHAT CLINTON SAID. And it is certainly not what the Clintons are seeking to do, to keep black people -- or any people! -- from having hopes or aspirations for the future. Come on. That is so patently unfair and plays to the basest of emotions: fear. Isn't that what Obama spoke so eloquently against in his speech after Iowa? Is that really how his campaign wants to whip up support in South Carolina, by whipping up a fervor against the Clintons - on false grounds?

Okay, it's here that I can hear you say, "but what about the Martin Luther King comment? What about 'shuck and jive?'" So fine, let's address this. Sometime late last week, the Obama campaign quietly released a memo detailing five examples in which "either Clinton, her husband Bill, or campaign surrogates, are said to have made comments that could be interpreted as racially insensitive." Okay then, let's look.

One of these is the fairytale thing - clearly about Iraq, not race. Next is Andrew Cuomo's "shuck and jive" comment — in the context of discussing all the candidates as a group, generally, having nothing to do with Obama (and see this list of generic colloquial uses of the phrase, and also how it's equated to "hem and haw" here on HuffPost from 10/06). Inadvertent slip or diabolical insinuation of racially-charged phrase into conversation designed to make the world call him a racist? Right. I'm for the benefit of the doubt where this is concerned. Next there is the assertion that "Bill Clinton implied that Hillary Clinton is stronger than Nelson Mandela." Well actually, here is the FULL context, left out of the Obama memo: Clinton said that he's met Mandela and Yitzhak Rabin, loved them both, but if it came down to it he'd STILL pick Hillary as the steely-eyed person to have in his corner. Guilty of hyperbole? Absolutely. Guilty of racism and anti-Semitism? Jake Tapper didn't seem to think so when he reported it last Tuesday, because he didn't mention it, just that Mandela and Rabin were pretty tough dudes. Okay, three down. New paragraph.

Next we have the drug use incident. First, Bill Shaheen wonders darkly if Obama's youthful drug-dabbling will be trumpeted by the Republicans. It's a matter of public record — made public by Obama himself — but still, it's seen as a dirty trick and the Clinton campaign distanced itself from the mention. Then Mark Penn and Joe Trippi are on Hardball, and in mentioning the incident Penn specifies the drug use to cocaine. Trippi leaps into frame and says accusingly "You said cocaine!" thereby drawing attention to it loudly, repeating and emphasizing it himself. It has always boggled my mind why everyone slammed Mark Penn and not Joe Trippi for this. Anything Clinton stood to gain by a so-called Obama smear would have accrued to Edwards' benefit. But I have also always been confused because Obama copped to the use himself, holding himself up as an example of someone who'd overcome trouble in youth to go on to great things. I have scratched my head over this before.

Finally we have the "Martin Luther King was all right, but he didn't pass legislation" comment. Boneheaded and tone deaf? For sure. Something that only someone really really wonky trying to make a very prosaic point might say and not realize they were being boneheaded and tone deaf? I dunno. I mean, it's really boneheaded and tone-deaf. Even more so the JFK comment that he was assassinated before he could effect legislation. Boneheaded! Like, cringeworthy. But not technically wrong. Movements effect change, force hands. That's what MLK did, in a movement that reached JFK, and then LBJ. But still....BONEHEADED. Of all the comments, this is the only one that I think has any real teeth. But even so, boneheaded does not equal racist. There's a big benefit of the doubt to be offered here. I'm sorry, before I am willing to impute hateful, racist motivations to anyone, I need more evidence than this.

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Look how much effort is expended trying to put a genie like this back in the bottle. It's probably too late — the media were too careless about pushing the "fairytale" misrepresentation early on, and are now too careless about clarifying it (it's different saying 'Bill Clinton says he was misconstrued' than 'We've examined the record and he was misconstrued').

As for the Obama campaign, the media should call them on the crucial context they fail to include. Why edit out the Rabin reference from Bill Clinton's remarks to focus on Mandela? Why continue to cite the fairytale ref when it was clearly not meant to implicate race? Do we really want "could be construed as racially insensitive" to be the new tripwire, especially with such flimsy evidence? It's just such a terrible charge to make, the bar for making it needs to be much, much higher. Absent real George Allen-like evidence, it seems to be unfairly made.

That is all I'm gunning for here, folks — fairness, accuracy, adherence to a common standard — that's it. I think it's incumbent on the media, when characterizing Bill Clinton's "fairytale" remark, to get it right and put it in context. I think it's incumbent on Michelle Obama, when refuting that comment in public, to refute the statement made, not the misrepresented version that has been unfairly propagated. I think it's incumbent on the Obama campaign to be very careful when asking the open-ended question (so favored by Fox!) in asking the uber-loaded question: "Is Clinton using a race-baiting strategy against Obama?" (and, btw, check out the provenance of that question, "passed on" to Politico's Ben Smith by Donna Brazile, who also happen to "pass on" five examples of why that might be so). I think it's incumbent on the media to keep an eye on how the facts are presented in the process, lest they somehow change. That's how it's supposed to work in the reality-based community.

This is how I see it, and I fear for a campaign where words are suddenly so potentially loaded that no one dares utter them unvetted. Can that be good for the discourse? Is that really how race is discussed? Is the threshold for crying foul really that low?

As for the media: You guys -- we guys -- have no excuse. It's pathetic to beat yourself up for reporting consistent, across-the-board poll numbers but not even bother to check what Bill Clinton may have said before you paraphrase him. Those are the standards that matter -- and holding both campaigns accountable to them, equally. I don't believe that should be a fairytale.

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- rblackbird I'm a Fan of rblackbird 11 fans permalink

Thank you, Rachel, for your perceptive and honest argument.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 AM on 01/15/2008
- SKayum I'm a Fan of SKayum 2 fans permalink

I am a little disappointed by this story. Not by the media's irresponsibility - I already knew that part. But Michelle Obama was one of the few things I liked about Obama's campaign.

Sure some may say she's just being opportunistic, and what's wrong with that in a presidential campaign. But considering the way Obama supporters, slightly less manic and unconditional in their praise than Clay Aiken fans, treat Clinton's every move, this veers a little on the side of hypocrisy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 01/15/2008

And two things in closing

1)I agree with the poster who said "Media is Entertainment" - Be damned with accuracy and verify facts. The spin news shows are glorified versions of Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood. Web-sites are even worse. - Nobody reports anymore - its all about entertainment and moving pundits in and out of the room. To think that any of the newspapers or the political shows will write accurately or with truth is naive. This includes this web-site as well

2) Sister Soulja comment back in 1992 proves that Clintons have always used subtle ways to manipulate voters and send messages that are cloaked with a powerful form of race card usage. Its the way they have always operated - As Herm Edwards says in his classic quote "You play the game to win"


Oh, Didn't Dick Nixon send the same subtle message to white voters when he didn't call Coretta King - Puhlease !! We were born at night but we weren't born last night.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 AM on 01/15/2008

That's the problem with the Lily white media - they don't understand that comments, however, absurd or foolish they may be - hurt. Shuckin and jiving - nappy headed ho or Obama is so clean and articulate they all mean something and are said with a racist or hurtful tone. because they are said without a filter - its the true thoughts of white people who despite their best intentions are racist and insensitive. Trent Lott said the same thing about the greatness of Strom Thurmond and his racist policies as well. Cuomo is in the same boat.

Cuomo knew exactly what he was saying because he was speaking without a filter. Just like Don Imus and his nappy headed ho comment or the Golf Commentator who was speaking about fellow golf pros lynching tiger woods. He was pointing out specifically to Obama and that's the bottom line. Shuckin' and jivin' (or shucking and jiving) is a slang term primarily used by African Americans. It refers to the speech and behavioral mechanisms adopted in the presence of an authority figure [1]. Shuckin' and jivin' usually involves clever lies and impromptu storytelling, used to one-up an opponent or avoid punishment [2]. Such behavior is believed to have originated in the era of slavery [3].

To say he didn't know what he meant or was referring to all the candidates is absurd. Was it smart for him to say that? No!! Did he mean it when he said it - yes!! I don't care if he shouldn't have said it because he had time to think about his political future. That's revisonist garbage coming from a spin liberal.

Its up there with Joe Biden's comment about him being clean and articulate. A backhanded compliment and a disgrace to African-American politicians - but this is what these guys think in their minds. Sad part is people who look into the intentions or hearts and souls of politicians to find an answer. That's spin crap. Lott, Cuomo, Imus and Biden are all insensitive white people without a true understanding of their hurtful comments. they should know better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 01/14/2008

Michelle Obama is utilizing this moment to appeal to her core voters. It happens in politics all the time. I can't blame her - she will do whatever she needs to do to get her man votes. It doesn't matter how - she's going to seize the opportunity.

I'm sort of surprised at how naive and innocent people can be when it comes to politics.

Bottom line - Obama is taking his opportunity and running with it. Just like George Bush did with the Willie Horton ad. Or Ronald Reagan when he seized the microphone in New Hampshire or Walter Mondale with "Where's the Beef". You have an opportunity - you take it and you win and you institute change. Period!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 PM on 01/14/2008
- Taratrue I'm a Fan of Taratrue 4 fans permalink

You people are all sick and racist. I used to love black people but not anymore. I am serious. I have worked in the past for civil rights myself. You have NO memory and are showing horrible dosrespect for a couple that have worked all their lives for the people. I have posted numerous times articles showing what Hillarys experience is, the long list of what Bill did while in office to promote the black race and help raise them up. You want to forget someone who has actually done something for our race and turn to someone who has done NOTHING but work in a neighborhood community center.
How ungrateful. You should take a look at this video and then look at yourself.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgtIqeV-6mk&feature=related

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 01/14/2008

How much do they pay you to defend their bull*&^%? Is 30 pieces of silver enough to maintain white privilege in America?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 PM on 01/14/2008
- strangelet I'm a Fan of strangelet 24 fans permalink

Rachel -- it's hopeless. Media hacks will never police themselves, because politics -- like everything else now in the US -- is entertainment, and a good game of "let's you and him (her) fight" is always more entertaining than a simple description of facts.

It's also hopeless to expect that any amount of factual rebuttal will change the minds of those who "know better". To those who really hate the Clintons, any remark that could *possibly* be taken negatively will be, complete with explanations about how it had to be intentional. I mean, look at the remark from Contrabass.

"Re. the Rabin/Mandela comment, I think the images Clinton used, coming from as shrewd and perspicuous a politician as he, were not inadvertent. Same with Hillary's MLK/LBJ reference.
When referring to Mandela and Rabin in contrast to his wife, Bill Clinton throws in a white guy to cover his tracks,...­."

Let's consider an alternative hypothesis -- that Bill Clinton is sufficiently non-racist that when he was looking for examples of hard-nosed, but admirable, politicians in his experience, he thought of a Jew and a black man. Do I know this is true? Certainly not. But I have just as much reason to believe it as Contrabass has to believe his theory; that is to say, no reason at all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 PM on 01/14/2008

"Martin Luther King was alright but he didn't pass legislatio­n"........­.did I MISS something???

Apparently I did..... as I thought Ms. Sklar was trying to help clarify the Clintons' statements and the mischaract­erizations of them in the popular press.

Please note that the quotes are not mine, they are Ms. Sklar's.
Two of Ms. Sklar's own phrases come to mind:

1:)NOT WHAT CLINTON SAID!!
2:)REALLY Boneheaded­....like..­..cringewo­rthy

Were I Sen. Clinton I might ask..."wit­h friends like this....wh­o needs enemies??"­..........­..........­.......tm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 PM on 01/14/2008

Re. Hillary - here's a joke she made about Gandhi in 2004.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/01/06/elec04.s.mo.farmer.clinton.ap/

During an event [in St Louis] for Senate candidate Nancy Farmer, Clinton introduced a quote from Gandhi by saying, "He ran a gas station down in St. Louis."

Rachel, I wish you would stop taking politics so literally, and naively accept that a politician's framing of his/her statements actually represent what s/he is really trying to convey.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 PM on 01/14/2008

I don't think the Clintons are irredeemably racist. But I do think that they have figured out that using racial allusions to cast aspersions on Obama's viability is an effective tactic.

Obviously, in today's America, racist statements cannot be made directly for fear of making the speaker, rather than the adressee look ridiculous.

But remember the Sister Souljah moment? Clinton “standing up to” a black woman's comments to indirectly attract white votes? If you have any doubts about my reasoning, look up "Sister Souljah moment" in Wikipedia - it has become a cliche.

Clearly, the Clintons are not averse to using race in a negative way to serve their own political ends.

By injecting loaded images or stereotypes into a discourse, the Clintons have once again made the calculation that they can corral the votes of whites, especially those in the older demographic.

Re. the Rabin/Mandela comment, I think the images Clinton used, coming from as shrewd and perspicuous a politician as he, were not inadvertent. Same with Hillary's MLK/LBJ reference.

When referring to Mandela and Rabin in contrast to his wife, Bill Clinton throws in a white guy to cover his tracks, but since the listener already has the image of the venerable black man in his mind, and(if s/he is sympathetic to Bill)subconsciously makes the connection between HRC's supposed superiority to Mandela and consequently, what must be her overwhelming superiority to Obama.

This is a pretty basic "framing" technique. See George Lakoff's "Don't think of an Elephant".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:49 PM on 01/14/2008

You know how bad it's gotten when your five point rebuttal doesn't even include the latest gaffe from the BET dude.

I frankly don't know (or much care) who gets the nomination at this point -- I like them all (including what's-his-name John Edwards). And I guess I can point to the silver lining in this episode by saying that Hillary is demonstrating that she will do anything, say anything to win the presidency should she get the nomination. After all, when was the last time we had a candidate that did THAT?

And I know that Hillary is doing Obama a favor of sorts. After all, the Republicans will do the same thing should Obama get the nomination and if he can't take it from a friendly competitor, how's he going to take it from John McCain or Rudy Giuliani or Mitt Romney?

But, honestly -- I was born at night, but I wasn't born last night. The crap from the Clintons is bad for everyone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:19 PM on 01/14/2008
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