Not Every Moderate Move By Obama Is A "Sista Souljah" Moment

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First Posted: 07- 1-08 01:14 PM   |   Updated: 07- 9-08 05:12 AM

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The "Sista Souljah Moment" has become a cliché without peer in contemporary politics. And like any phrase that is so often used, its value is necessarily diminished over time.

When Barack Obama delivered his Philadelphia speech on race, making his first full-frontal effort to solve the problem of Jeremiah Wright, it was widely hailed as his "Souljah moment." Then, when he later fully severed ties with Wright, Obama was said to have performed the "full Souljah." McCain has also engineered several such "moments" while trying to secure his maverick persona -- so many that writers for both the New York Times and the conservative National Review have called his entire political career one big, long Sista Souljah moment.

Now, as Barack Obama's recent raft of moderate moments (on FISA, Wes Clark, and the "threadbare" arguments of MoveOn.org) seems poised to prompt further exclamations of Souljah-ing, it's worth re-examining what the original moment entailed -- and what it did not. Because while Obama certainly seems to have absorbed some of the lessons Bill Clinton taught Democrats in 1992, Souljah-ing hardly accounts for all of his centrist political instincts.

But history first.

In 1992, then Gov. Bill Clinton strode to the podium at a gathering of Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition with the knowledge that he was about to serve a political ace.

One day before Clinton spoke, the longtime civil rights leader's group had invited controversy by giving a platform to Sista Souljah -- an unremarkable rapper whose name would otherwise have been lost to history -- and who had previously suggested in a Washington Post interview that, as something of a break from the daily cycle of lamentable black-on-black violence after the 1992 Los Angeles riots, "why not have a week and kill white people?"

While other Democrats of the era might have panicked and canceled any invitations to follow Souljah's act at the Rainbow Coalition, Clinton recognized an opportunity. The Southern governor could not only "do the right thing" from a moral perspective and point out the proper goal of eliminating violence altogether (instead of simply race-shifting the impact), but he could also stand up to Jackson's stewardship of African-American activism that many independent -- and, yes, largely white -- voters believed had the Democratic Party cowed.

When Clinton spoke to the group and compared Souljah's tasteless broadside to comments by white supremacist David Duke, he may have stung Jackson, who felt betrayed, though he also assured his electoral viability in PC-averse southern states. (African-Americans were hardly united in support for Souljah's comments, either.) Thus the political cliché was born: the "Sista Souljah Moment." In retrospect, it was a freebie pivot. Unlike other triangulations, one could hold onto previously-held principles while taking advantage of the issue du jour in order to score political points.

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So what does that incident tell us about the politics of the moment? Not as much as some commentators would have you think.

Reacting to Obama's Tuesday remarks about the role of faith in public life, the Bush administration's former point man on faith-based initiatives told the AP that the speech had the potential to become "a major Sista Souljah moment." The only problem with such analysis is that Obama has long talked about the role that faith-based institutions should play in the public sphere, even writing about it in "The Audacity of Hope." And as a community organizer, much of Obama's work centered around working with church groups on Chicago's south side.

So despite their centrist spirit, Obama's remarks today do not represent a sudden shift, nor do they seize on any particular au courant controversy as did Clinton's unwelcome surprise in front of Jackson's group. Nor is Obama's position a "move to the center" so much as it is a recapitulation of a moderate-style position Obama appears to have always held. (As Andrew Sullivan noted, "you could see this coming a while back.")

Speaking on background, a source in the Obama campaign admitted to a certain frustration with the current narrative of their candidate "moving to the center" on issues where the Illinois Democrat has always staked out moderate ground. When talking about a gradual pullout from Iraq during the primary season, for example, Obama took some abuse from the "immediate withdrawal" crowd for his repeated mantra that "we should be just as careful getting out" of Iraq as we were "careless getting in." (And indeed, as represented by the "Responsible Plan" website, that kind of talk is firmly in the mainstream of activist anti-Iraq war sentiment anyway.) In the aftermath of Obama's FISA repositioning, the Obama campaign's fear, however, is that every subsequent moderate noise will be interpreted as a cynical centrist tack.

As for their distancing from Gen. Wesley Clark's criticism of John McCain's national security experience this week -- seen by some liberals as a Souljah-style betrayal --- the Obama camp notes that their candidate always has always gone out of his way to honor the Arizona Republican's military service, and discouraged attempts to do otherwise. And when it comes to yet another potential Souljah-moment -- Obama's implicit criticism on Monday of MoveOn.org's infamous "General Betray-us" ad -- his campaign notes that he objected to the ad at the time of its publication as well. (Well, sort of. After at first refusing to take an explicit position, Obama did eventually vote in favor of a Democratic-authored Senate resolution that sprung up in the wake of that controversy.)

Still, Obama's Monday pounce against MoveOn -- in which he described their tactics as "threadbare" during a speech on patriotism -- seems to fit the Souljah mold most clearly, at least out of the ranks of the many purported Souljah-moments of late in the campaign. Just as the original Souljah moment was a critique that many African-Americans could get behind, there's precious little liberal love for MoveOn's "Betray-us" ad.

"I would guess that if you polled the members of MoveOn, a majority of them would also reject the language of the headline of that ad," progressive writer Todd Gitlin told the Huffington Post. "I would, and I was a contributor. I supported the concept of the ad, and gave money for it, but didn't give money for that [betray-us] text. ... I thought it was stupid. So, I mean this is a freebie."

Just like the original Souljah moment.

The "Sista Souljah Moment" has become a cliché without peer in contemporary politics. And like any phrase that is so often used, its value is necessarily diminished over time. When Barack Obama deli...
The "Sista Souljah Moment" has become a cliché without peer in contemporary politics. And like any phrase that is so often used, its value is necessarily diminished over time. When Barack Obama deli...
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- BaileyWo I'm a Fan of BaileyWo 11 fans permalink

Do you all remember when Obama stated something to the effect -- and I intend to embellish this all I can -- that male members of the dominant culture in the South, poorly educated, frustrated by worsening economic conditions within the working class (and middle class) were turning in their frustration to guns and the bible; thus, implying that the Republican Southern Strategy had been exploiting them, and I might add, exploiting the fact of the predominant personality characteristic that social psychologists have defined as the "right-wing authoritarian follower" that accounts for 51% of the American population and draws them to the conservative movement as well as to the hardened benches of fundamentalist and evangelical churches?

Guns and Bibles. How succinctly stated. What happened to that moment of the "sista souljah"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 PM on 07/01/2008
- harriscrl3 I'm a Fan of harriscrl3 191 fans permalink

Obama is NOT moving to the center or moderate he is who he always was a Pragmatist who had transcended Ideology. Obama is being flushed out. When he was running in the primary he ran more to the left but the conservative nature in his policies the individual responsibility, free market, his faith and religion was always there. Thats why he was comfortable giving a speech talking about the responsibility to their children that AA men was shirking that is nothing new he is just focused more on it fathers day but he did mention it when he went to Georgia and gave a speech in that church. With education he always talk about parents turning off the televsion that govenment can only do so much that parents have to take responsibility. He's always said that he is NOT oppose to all wars. He always said he supported free trade. He is just emphasizing them more in the general but it was always there.

Carol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 PM on 07/01/2008
- FebM I'm a Fan of FebM 37 fans permalink

Well said, Obama has said time and again the only ideology we need is common sense not pigeon hall definition­s...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 07/01/2008
- BigBen I'm a Fan of BigBen 4 fans permalink

And of course his sense is the correct common sense.Othe­rs common sense is just bitter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:19 AM on 07/02/2008
- gonavy I'm a Fan of gonavy 7 fans permalink

Please forgive the question, but would someone please explain to me exactly what "sista souljah" means. I don't get out much and my kids are not yet teenagers, so I am completely baffled by this term. I can say that I find it silly and inappropriate for these white news people to be throwing this term around, just seems wrong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:22 PM on 07/01/2008
- MetryJen I'm a Fan of MetryJen 3 fans permalink

Read paragraph 9. Then click the link.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 PM on 07/01/2008
- gonavy I'm a Fan of gonavy 7 fans permalink

Got it. Thank you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:48 PM on 07/01/2008
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"...my kids are not yet teenagers.­.." You'll be glad to know that this was termed in Clinton's 1992 campaign in response to a controversial remark by that activist/rapper. Too old for today's teenagers. Wiki describes it as:
"....momen­t is a politician's public repudiation of an allegedly extremist person or group, statement, or position perceived to have some association with the politician or their party..."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:36 PM on 07/01/2008
- billkarwin I'm a Fan of billkarwin 17 fans permalink
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Sister Souljah is the stage name of Lisa Williams, a singer who was moderately successful in the early 1990's.

Like many stage names for rap and hip-hop performers, the name appears to be a multi-layered reference. In this case, "souljah" contains "soul" which is often associated with music, especially in the African-American community, but souljah is also meant to sound like "soldier," suggesting strength, duty, and fearlessness.

The Urban Dictionary defines soulja (or souljah) as "anyone who has gone through hard times and fought against adversity.­" http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=soulja

"Sister" simply distinguishes the performer as a woman.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 PM on 07/01/2008
- abby4ever I'm a Fan of abby4ever 237 fans permalink
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Here's the Wikipedia definition, it's probably not precisely right, but it will give you the general idea:

***In United States politics, a Sister Souljah moment is a politician's public repudiation of an allegedly extremist person or group, statement, or position perceived to have some association with the politician or their party. Such an act of repudiation is designed to signal to centrist voters that the politician is not beholden to traditional, and sometimes unpopular, interest groups associated with the party, although such a repudiation runs the risk of alienating some of the politician's allies and the party's base voters.***

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 07/01/2008
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Anyhow it's a term too old for teenagers. It's from the Clinton 92 campaign.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:07 PM on 07/01/2008
- gonavy I'm a Fan of gonavy 7 fans permalink

Well, that timing would explain why I never heard the term before. I was on a ship in the Persian Gulf in 1992.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 AM on 07/02/2008
- gotalife I'm a Fan of gotalife 22 fans permalink

Stick to basketball fraud.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 07/01/2008
- kay I'm a Fan of kay 172 fans permalink

Chin up. He's doing just fine.

Despite not listening to your campaign advice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 07/01/2008
- Totto I'm a Fan of Totto 40 fans permalink

"gotalife"­... apparently you don't

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 07/01/2008

Required reading:

The brilliant Al Giordano at The Field, on O's address about patriotism.

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/thefield/smart-dissent

Read this before posting any comments about politics to this or any other website. You will be glad you did. You will go forward duly chastened and reminded of why words matter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:37 PM on 07/01/2008
- BaileyWo I'm a Fan of BaileyWo 11 fans permalink

Thanks for that recommendation. It was refreshing to read, but even Giordano cannot escape the bonds of the 18th Century construct "Nationalism," unless he was just caving to please his editors and readers in the "politically correct" terms he claimed to struggle against.

As a matter of fact, despite his progressive bona fides, it was obvious that what he had to say was grounded in the apologetics of partisanship, despite all else he had to say.

I will not apologize for Obama's pandering. Now will I excuse broken promises while he is in office simply because Al Giordano laments that he cannot recall any politician behaving in office according to their stance on campaign issues. Al apparently believes that politicians who get their funding within a corporatist administered plutocracy will honor their empty promises simply because he is currently having a hope inspired lapse of reality and is now briefly enamored of the illusion that we are actually a republican democracy.

The guy is a good writer. He is progressive in his ideals -- a commendable intellectual accomplishment. Yet he is lost in an illusion, expressed through his apologetics, that no one would strip from him. He would descend into nihilism otherwise, unless his commitment to The Kingdom of Heaven preempts any absolute faith he would place in the hands of a politician, no matter how hopeful or promising.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:01 PM on 07/01/2008

If you know anything at all about Al Giordano, you would know that he does not "cave" to anyone.

He was recently forced to relocate The Field from its former home at Rural Votes, run by Dem superdelegate Deb K over her censorship of his post on the community organizer Saul Alinsky.

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/thefield/uncensored-the-narrative-is-not-a-story-technology

You got a lot of other things wrong in your comments, but that one was so egregious that it needed to be called out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 AM on 07/02/2008
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Thank you for that link.
It's exactly what I've been trying to express these past few days. Pretty disappointed by AH's opposite stand on this issue. I'm surprised she doesn't see beyond the obvious of what O is doing to win.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 PM on 07/01/2008
- kay I'm a Fan of kay 172 fans permalink

It is great. It's the first time I've read him. Thank you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 PM on 07/01/2008
- lainey I'm a Fan of lainey 44 fans permalink

Senator Obama has remained consistent on issues. He has never claimed to be "progressi­ve." I always go back to the fact that he gave his speech about the war in Iraq at an anti-war rally. There he said "I am not opposed to all wars. I am opposed to dumb wars." The people in attendance must have been confused, but he was clear--he felt that some wars-- like The Civil War and WWII-- were necessary. He believes the fight against militants is real as well. If you wanted a pacifist, he is not your guy. Mr. Obama has always spoken openly about his faith and felt that it should be a member of our national discussion--that even includes those without faith. Also, not everything he does is for political purposes. The man truly believes that those who commit a heinous crime are worthy of the death penalty and he considers raping a child as such. It is time to get over progressive and conservative and find that we are people with different/­varying/nu­anced views. As for Wesley Clark, he is more than capable of taking care of himself. He is a smart man who spoke his mind, not the mind of the campaign. I agree with his assessment and choice of words, but that doesn't mean that Obama has to do so.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 07/01/2008
- Keith52 I'm a Fan of Keith52 36 fans permalink
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Thank you. Let's all just calm down and give Barack a chance to do his work. He has already accomplished some pretty amazing things not the least of which is to kick the Federal lobbyists out of the Democratic party. He has also set the bar high for the Republicans to hang themselves with swift boat rhetoric.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 PM on 07/01/2008
- BigBen I'm a Fan of BigBen 4 fans permalink

And take us away one by one like Rev.Wright said he would.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 AM on 07/02/2008
- openhand I'm a Fan of openhand 31 fans permalink
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Clark said nothing wrong, it was the spin the media gave the interview, so honestly Obama is reacting to the spin, WHICH IS THE PERCEIVED REALITY. So Clark is spot on, but the perception of him is wrong.

We all know this and it would take less than 1.5 seconds for the 2 men to understand each other after the days and hours of controversy over nothing.

With this in mind, we have to win, its important for the planet, and generations to come. Its important to Africa, to the Middle and Far East, Europe, and the Americas and the Poles. If we have to slow down a little, cross the room, spend some time looking at the same thing from a different perspective, then thats what we have to do. We are dealing with a Bush/Cheney crisis that is so awful, we cannot even discuss the proportion of it without self destructing this campaign.

Ghandi, Mandela...­.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 PM on 07/01/2008
- kay I'm a Fan of kay 172 fans permalink

Obama adressed the fake Clark issue today.

He did well with it.

I'm starting to think it was orchestrated, after all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 PM on 07/01/2008
- BEHM777 I'm a Fan of BEHM777 13 fans permalink
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Good article. I wonder which article some of my fellow posters were reading.

BEHusseinM777

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 PM on 07/01/2008
- RadCenter I'm a Fan of RadCenter 27 fans permalink

Reading? Really, you give them too much credit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 PM on 07/01/2008
- Ourrias I'm a Fan of Ourrias 7 fans permalink
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Good politics means also throwing the occasional bone to your base. In Obama's case, that's the liberal progressive wing of the Democratic Party.

After the past week of going out of the way to demonstrate his cowardice in falling all over himself running to the middle, Mr. Obama makes the potentially fatal mistake of taking his base for granted for just a bit too long. He has not only failed to throw a bone in the direction of his base for some time now, but he has gone out of his way to disdain their voice.

Thin ice, Mr. Obama, thin ice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:55 PM on 07/01/2008
- GuyFawkes I'm a Fan of GuyFawkes 28 fans permalink

At least not everyone on this site is deteremined to turn Obama into a Dennis Kucinich clone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 07/01/2008
- ccmd I'm a Fan of ccmd 18 fans permalink

Uhh... I dont get it... You lost me at "seems poised to prompt further exclamations of Souljah-ing, it's worth re-examining what the original moment entailed -- and what it did not." ........

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:51 PM on 07/01/2008
- LJ329 I'm a Fan of LJ329 2 fans permalink
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Moderator's Pick

HuffPost's Pick

Hello, people! Did you do any research about your candidate before supporting him? I did and I agree with this quote from the above article:

"...The only problem with such analysis is that Obama has long talked about the role that faith-based institutions should play in the public sphere, even writing about it in "The Audacity of Hope." And as a community organizer, much of Obama's work centered around working with church groups on Chicago's south side.

So despite their centrist spirit, Obama's remarks today do not represent a sudden shift, nor do they seize on any particular au courant controvers­y... Nor is Obama's position a "move to the center" so much as it is a recapitulation of a moderate-style position Obama appears to have always held. "

"...a source in the Obama campaign admitted to a certain frustration with the current narrative of their candidate "moving to the center" on issues where the Illinois Democrat has always staked out moderate ground."

Those of us who know a lot about Sen. Obama are not surprised by his current positions. He is trying to build unity among Americans (his number one priority) around some core ideas so that he can solve several of the "big problems" facing this country and many of its citizens (like economic inequity, inadequate health care, inequity in the education system, the war). Read The Audacity of Hope. Don't listen to alarmist headlines and inaccurate, divisive blog posts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 PM on 07/01/2008
- Liberal2 I'm a Fan of Liberal2 39 fans permalink

I think you're full of nonsense.

This is the problem: What does "faith" have to do with the national deficit, the trade deficit, the occupation of Iraq, healthcare?????

"Faith" has no place in any government activity. What does Mohammad, Buddha, Jesus, or the Flying Spaghetti Monster have to do with any government activity? If christian thought solved anything..­..Europe would have been free of war for the last fifteen centuries.

The Welfare problem (multi-generations living within the welfare system) was never a "faith" issue. It was caused by forcing husbands out of a house when the family needed assistance to keep from living under bridges and eating out of garbage pails.

When Obama promises that there could be no proselytizing or religious test for employment in an Obamaoid "faith-based" initiative­...kinda takes the "faith" outa' "based", doesn't it????

The way I see it, it's like being a patriot...­.wannabe a patriot? Enlist. Don't pretend having a gun entitles you to prowl around, looking for criminals and terrorists. Therefore, if you want a faith-based initiative, become a employee in a hospital because your "faith" demands you help others. Keep it a personal initiative.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:47 PM on 07/01/2008
- StillIRise I'm a Fan of StillIRise 564 fans permalink
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Proselytizing is generally used in reference to religion, when one attempts to persuade others to believe and commit to a given religious ideology. Faith, on the other hand, is not necessarily rooted in religion at all. I believe that I am a person of great faith, and I try to live my faith every moment of every day of my life. But I am not affiliated with any religious institution. Senator Obama's idea of a faith-based initiative is not rooted in religion; it is rooted in good people of faith doing good for others in need.

Religion demands; faith inspires. There is a difference between the two.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 AM on 07/02/2008
- Totto I'm a Fan of Totto 40 fans permalink

Thanks, LJ329. It appears as if nearly eight years of two alcoholic sociopaths (President and Vice) and their sadistic fantasies, global climate change with dying seas and dying bees, and a corporate media that ignore glaring realities (a seriously out-of-whack world economic system) for, what, Madonna's new divorce attorney(?), has unhinged the few remaining reasonably rational human beings. Perhaps we are also suffering from a hitherto unknown mite or virus.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 PM on 07/01/2008
- robbep I'm a Fan of robbep 23 fans permalink

Obama needs to quit honoring McCain's war record and throwing people under the bus. What Clark said is true and needed to be sad. I respect Clark for standing up to the media and not backing down when it got hot. Obama apologizes for everything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 PM on 07/01/2008
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Okay, everybody, let's have us a little lesson, shall we???
Obama has the most liberal voting record in the senate. This shows that he is not afraid to stand out, speak his mind, and do what he believes is right despite what others may be trying to pressure him into.
Obama has a huge following in this great nation of ours, and him beating "Mc Shame" is so very important to so many of us.
And there are those of us who back Obama who actually understand how American politics function, and see his moving towards the center and appealing to groups (i.e.: Evangelical Christians) as a necessity to winning the general election so that he can get into the White House and continue to fight the good fight that he began in the Senate.
Those of you who took a liking to Obama, yet cannot handle the reality of how American politics functions, and chastise him for doing what it takes to get the position so that he can make the difference that we all want to see in this country, please read a history book sometime, or take a PoliSci course or something.
Bottom Line: If you want Obama to do the right thing, accept the fact that he is doing what is necessary to win the vote so that he can!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 PM on 07/01/2008
- axt113 I'm a Fan of axt113 2 fans permalink

Dems are leading in the polls, Obama is winning in enough states to carry the election and you are still whining about the little issues, what is wrong with you whiners? Right now winning a filibuster proof majority in congress and the white house should be our goal, afterwards we can get all the things we want passed, overturn FISA, get progressive justices into the Supreme court, and so on. Complaining about Obama moving to the center at this moment is not helping us attain our goals for a new progressive majority.

After november fourth we can raise a huge stink about making sure the dems pursue a progressive platfrm, but none of that will make a difference if we don't reach 60 and let McCain win the white house.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:23 PM on 07/01/2008
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