Now that America has finally elected a black president there is a movement afoot to take away the significance of this moment. I was riding along the turnpike the other day and I struck up a conversation with a token booth worker, who I've talked with for the last fifteen years driving this route.
"So we have a black president, huh?" I said to him as I handed him my ticket and money.
"Why do people keep saying that?" he said. "His mother is white! So he's not just black."
"Okay. But he's still black," I said.
"So Tiger Woods is black, too, I guess," he said, chuckling.
"Exactly. He sure is."
What's very curious to me is that before November 6, America was very clear about the blackness of Barack Obama. ...
I've watched a whole bunch of people who never identified with the black community (like a couple on-air people at CNN) who are now all of a sudden black. And I'm watching a lot of white people who may not have considered the idea of a black man leading their nation now attempting to deal with it by de-blacking President-elect Obama.
Well, too late. The die has been cast. Barack Obama is black and there's no getting around it. And it's not my issue, it's one this country established long before anyone of us were even a thought.
The notion was that whiteness was pure and any drop of "black" blood would taint its purity, thus the one-drop rule.
This rule was particularly handy during the Jim Crow era when blacks were forced to sit at the back of the bus, drink from "Coloreds Only" fountains, and couldn't eat, sleep, dine or be educated alongside whites. There had to be a definition of "blackness" during those times to know who had to be excluded. There had to be distinct separation of the races.
Several states-Tennessee, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, North Carolina, Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and Utah-adopted the one-drop statute as law. They even refined the definition of blackness to be either one-sixteenth or one-thirty-second black-meaning if a person had a great-great-great-grandparent who was black, then that person was black.
Think of how ridiculous that is. But that was the law of the land in America and accepted in states where it wasn't a law. It wasn't until 1967 when the Supreme Court banned interracial marriage in Loving vs. Virginia and declared the Racial Integrity Act illegal.
So yes, Barack Obama is black, despite having a white mother, despite having white grandparents, white great-grandparents, etc. He may be a cousin of Dick Cheney's, but he's a black man in America.
And now that he's president I find it funny how many people are trying to claim him. I find it interesting how many times I'm hearing about his white heritage -- as some sort of, "See he's not so bad...his mother is white!"
I'll say it again. Barack Obama is black. Sorry, but you can't have him now that he's president. You can have Clarence Thomas as a consolation prize.
We all have a black president. Accept it. Embrace it.
Additional reading
+ Black in North America: The President & The One Drop Rule


Comments: (382)
Add a comment
By: NOWAY on 11/11/2008 10:05AM
I'm an actor over at Colonial Williamsburg, where many black actors have to portray slaves, and whatnot, and trust me, even though blacks were considered mulatto back in the day, they were still considered black, and were treated like black folks.
And as someone pointed out, why is it that a half hispanic and half white person, can refer to themselves as solely hispanic, or a half white person, and half asian person, refer to themselves as asian, or a half white person, and a half white native american, can refer to themselves as native american, and be accepted as that, but when someone's half black and half white-IT BECOMES A PROBLEM?
I smell a little racism coming from the part of non-black folks who would say that half white, or whatever, and half black folks, aren't truly black, but yet don't say anything about other racial combinations, where a white person breeds with a darker person, yet that offspring identifies with the darker race.
I also smell ignorance and shortsightedness, on the part of black folks, who can't see any of what I said in the above, as it relates to black racial identity.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Leilani on 11/11/2008 10:14AM
In an area I know, the Native American and Hispanic kids are continually having letters written about them. It is almost a monthly letter going out to parents - that some children have head lice.
The white parents all know which kids have the head lice as their tiny children tell them.
Maybe, just maybe some people are avoided because of disease and head lice.
That said, a person I know just lost a relative to TB - the same disease that illegals are bringing over the border. But the press cannot speak of it without appearing "racist".
Maybe, just maybe, these are some of the reasons that blacks were avoided in the past, but heaven forbid that we even speak of it.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Leilani on 11/11/2008 10:40AM
People are taking their money out of the stock market - in part because they don't trust this guy and you are so smug that he is now the First BLACK president?
Even he knows that blacks are not the majority and he needs WHITES and ASIANS to keep their money in the stock market.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Lanell on 11/11/2008 10:50AM
I don't understand why the preoccupation with whether or not a person is of mixed nationality. There are very few blacks in the United States who are not mixed.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Tachea on 11/11/2008 11:12AM
If you have an ounce of black in you, you are black. Obama also considers himself black. It's funny how we referred to the bradley effect the entire time of the 21 month campaign, some whites wouldn't vote for him because he's black, CNN,MSNBC,FOX, and all of the other networks says what a historical campaign for the first black president, but STEVE the plumber for some reason see's a white man now. If it makes you happy he's white then who cares because i don't. I just see my new president.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: evett726 on 11/11/2008 11:14AM
President elect Barack has a swag like Denzel Washington in the movie Malcolm X, before jail and after. And First Lady Michele has the spirit of his wife. Played by the actress Angela Bassest.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: smiley1 on 11/11/2008 1:17PM
Barack Obama is late for the Inauguration. He has to get a cab quick. He is waiting on the corner next to another man who is white. Who do you think will get a cab first?
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Richard McCue on 11/11/2008 11:49AM
Welcome to the beginnings of the post racial era in America. When I was a child people talked about "passing" - that is passing for white. When I was an adolescent there were debates about being black enough to be a radical and thus be praised for rioting. Since then the street creed that all authentic blacks are gangsters has raised it's (profitable in the music business) head. Yet, somehow, even the outgoing administration had prominent "black faces" - Powell and Rice - representing the USA to the world. What we have demonstrated is that melanin content has nothing to do with moral worth or intelligence. What defines "black" enough to be "black" now is cultural. "White" culture is defined as logical and prosperous and one that works. (Ignore messy reality this is the archtype.) When Mr. Obama, with a nice brown (sort of a dark cocoa really) face succeeds by being logical it is a collision with the archtype. It is almost as bad as a non-alcoholic voluntarily teatotaling Irishman. (Aye, now, there is an archtype stereotype worth talking about for the amount of damage it has done.) What we now have is an opportunity to remake the American archtype to reflect the addition of Powell/Tiger Woods/Obama/Morgan Freeman to the mix. The trigger phrases "get it done" and "just the facts" and "we can do it" are American, and color neutral. The "public culture", the "received culture", is going color neutral. "Micks" celebrated JFK. "Blacks" can celebrate Obama. Neither celebration trumps their Americaness. How funny it takes a presidential election to demonstrate this.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Nikki on 11/11/2008 12:15PM
Steve, Barack Obama is human first. However, just because he was raised by white grandparents does not mean he forgot where he came from or where he was going.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: uniondale,NY on 11/11/2008 12:37PM
Instead of wasting a whole blog debating if Barack is Black or White, what does it matter at this point? All Americans need to see him or anyone of any race is as Human. Stop trying to divide people by color and race, apparently the young people don't care and this prejudice frame of mind will eventually change. Europeans see us all as Americans, so we need to stop seperating people by race to determine the so called "superiority or inferiority" of a person. I am a black female, born around the time Barack was brought in this world. In order to make this country great, we need to unite together and stop these divisive discussions about race. This country is in turmoil right now, people of all races are losing their homes, jobs and means of livihood. This is such a trivial issue to discuss, when we have troups dying in IRAQ and AFGhanistan of all races, black, white, latino, asian, caucasian. Today is Veterans day, lets honor all races for their contribution to this country and stop the hateful conversations about who is more blacker or whiter in this country.
Reply to this Comment | Report This