There’s more than one kind of discrimination

Matt Towery's picture

OK, let me get this out first. Do I think it’s still tough being an African-American? Absolutely. I’m not naïve. Things aren’t nearly as troublesome for American blacks as they were, say, back in the 1940s and ‘50s. But there are sure plenty of prejudices and other barriers, mostly economic, that remain for people in the United States who happen to enter the world with certain skin pigmentations. Heartbreaking and absurd, yes, but true.

And yet, just as Barack Obama’s presidential campaign has (again) brought racial prejudice to the fore of American consciousness, so, too, has it displayed that race isn’t the only baseline for bias and discrimination.

John McCain is learning about another bias — that against older Americans. Oh, how he’s learning about it. The release of his medical records has been like feeding time at the zoo among much media.

Perhaps most telling is many press accounts about the records, after they make clear the judgment of physicians that McCain is healthy, then go on to drop ominous hints about his skin cancer recurring, or other possible ailments that might hinder his performance if elected president.

One analyst even “reassured” us that McCain almost surely suffers from no psychological affliction — no “reprogramming,” among other things — from his days of internment in a North Vietnamese prison camp. Unbelievable.

Then there’s gender discrimination. Hillary Clinton is the poster woman for that one. Those folks are crazy who think the old boys of the Democratic Party aren’t rejoicing over her defeat, and over her latest gaffe, when she offered Robert Kennedy’s 1968 assassination as one key example of how presidential races can turn unexpectedly.

Polling numbers tell us that even women who are under 45 seem to care little about supporting a woman for the Democratic nomination.

“Well,” you might ask, “why should a woman vote for a woman just because she’s a woman?” Good question. But explain then why the same question isn’t being asked of black voters following the exit polls that show nearly 90 percent so far having voted for Barack Obama in Democratic primaries.

I know the answer. Blacks are a minority that has suffered directly and at times purposely because of their race — forced to use separate public bathrooms, as just one symbolic example. Anyone whose family or ancestors have been treated as second class people can rightly, perhaps righteously, feel an upwelling of pride at the thought of a black becoming president.

There’s another bias in this country — regional bias. Though it’s become less fashionable to say so out loud, many Americans still view the South as being knee-jerk racist, not to mention generally backward and unsophisticated. Southern accents still get plenty of good ribbing. After all, they don’t call former President Clinton “President Bubba” for nothing.

So given the realities of this campaign, why is it that the Republicans — having no hope of capturing the African-American vote this go around, and likely to lose the younger vote, and also likely to lose in places where Southerners aren’t thought highly of — why is it that the GOP can’t recognize the one way to possibly stay in a contest that, otherwise, Barack Obama may well win?

There’s going to be a lot of women aged 45 and older, most of them having been Hillary Clinton supporters, who are ready to view the political maneuverings of the national Democratic Party — those that edged Clinton out the door — as the cynical actions of a male-dominated, Northeast-dominated Democratic Party.

So why in the world did John McCain’s vice-presidential “beauty contest” parties, such as his Memorial Day soiree, have in attendance only slick-looking white men?

McCain obviously hasn’t been advised to find a qualified woman to be his running mate. And that makes his advisors suspect, in my view.

The American people are crying out for something different. There’s a reason they have become captivated with a bright African-American senator and a gutsy female former-first-lady-turned-member-of-the-Senate. They want something different.

If the GOP doesn’t get the fact that McCain’s ticket must feature some diversity, they can hang it up for 2008. Whether it’s Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison or even North Carolina Sen. Elizabeth Dole, surely there is someone to fit the bill. Surely.

[Matt Towery served as the chairman of former Speaker Newt Gingrich’s political organization from 1992 until Gingrich left Congress. He is a former Georgia state representative, the author of several books and currently heads the polling and political information firm InsiderAdvantage.] COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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Submitted by oldbeachbear on Fri, 05/30/2008 - 8:14am.

might be a good match.

Submitted by too bad on Fri, 05/30/2008 - 9:33am.

that out to do it!

TonyF's picture
Submitted by TonyF on Fri, 05/30/2008 - 6:13am.

call me "Shirley".

O wad some Power the giftie gie us,To see oursels as ithers see us!
(R. Burns)
If we could see ourselves as others see us, we would vanish on the spot.
(E. M. Cioran)


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