race & healthcare reform: distraction or reality?

A couple weeks back I wondered how much of the current outspoken opposition to health-care reform is related to race and racism.  At least one commenter thought I was off base, that focusing on race misses the actual concerns of those opposed to President Obama’s proposed reforms.

Not one debate I heard from anyone opposing him referred to the president’s race. His defenders are the only ones using the race issue to obscure and dismiss legitimate complaints and questions raised by the proposed legislation. It’s not whitey fearing the black man it’s citizens cringing in fear of the loss of freedom due to a huge unconstitutional intervention by the federal government.

Not that he’ll ever read this blog, but if he did David Brooks would likely agree with this comment’s sentiment.  In a recent New York Time op-ed Brooks claims the while the vocal backlash to health-care reform may have racial elements, it is better understood through a populist lens.

Barack Obama leads a government of the highly educated. His movement includes urban politicians, academics, Hollywood donors and information-age professionals. In his first few months, he has fused federal power with Wall Street, the auto industry, the health care industries and the energy sector.

Given all of this, it was guaranteed that he would spark a populist backlash, regardless of his skin color. And it was guaranteed that this backlash would be ill mannered, conspiratorial and over the top — since these movements always are, whether they were led by Huey Long, Father Coughlin or anybody else.

And yet.  So much of the angry and frightened language coming from those opposed to the president’s proposed reforms is tapping into issues of race.  There are surely elements of populism in these protests but does this overrule the obvious expressions of racism?

Writing for Religion Dispatches last week, professor Johnathan Walton asserts that it is the president himself- less than his policies- that has provoked such fear among the president’s white opponents.

This is why, it would seem, Barack Obama’s body standing behind the American presidential seal has a critical segment of America losing its hold on reality—a reality, I would argue, few have ever been forced to acknowledge up to this point. Whether it’s the birthers, tea-baggers, deathers, indoctrinators, or “You lie!”-ers, they have neither veiled their racial animus nor cloaked their white nationalism. The prevalence of racist images of President Obama brandished by protesters juxtaposed with calls of “taking our country back” are reminiscent of D.W. Griffith’s fictional America as depicted in Birth of a Nation. And the pride with which this segment of society has rallied the troops around its shared sense of whiteness reveals that their skin color is the one true object of pledged allegiance and determinant of professed patriotism.

So which is it?  Is it a simple coincidence that those most opposed to the president’s proposed reforms are white?  Or, as Walton claims, is there something troubling about the way this public debate has devolved?

From my vantage point there have been too many examples of racially-charged commentary to ignore.  While it is entirely appropriate to oppose this president’s policies based on one’s politics, the ugly rhetoric by those like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh make it important to distance one’s political opinion from those who peddle fear.

I continue to wonder whether Christians in American can transcend (or subvert) the way health-care reform has been debated thus far.  For those with nothing to fear but a loving God, how might an issue as complex as this one be discussed?  I’m not sure we’ve seen the church in America rise to this significant occasion.  Will we?

3 responses to “race & healthcare reform: distraction or reality?”

  1. Considering that Obama received 96 percent of the black vote, doesn’t it make sense that they would also support his health care plan?
    Lets face it bad news sells. If there are hundreds of people holding up signs the news media are likely to focus on the most provocative ones. If hundreds ask questions they will likely replay the over the top statements.
    Just because we don’t see rational conversations displayed on TV doesn’t mean they aren’t taking place. The same can be said for the church. For every positive story in the news about churches I bet there are a thousand negative ones. Instead of entering a debate where they will likely have little impact I think Christians have been busy actually doing things to help those in need. Volunteering time, donating money and opening their buildings for rehab programs. I think many would be brought to Christ if we started talking about the good Christians are doing instead of only focussing on the negative.

  2. It’s funny that we’ve got all these people saying now that it’s NOT about race (whjch I think is true, race is not really THE underlying motivation. Fear is) and basically just trying to stop ANY and ALL conversation about race. Which seems to me to be a White person’s response to race in America.

    So, Beck is not a racist we hear. He just loves to throw out any accusations that he can to get attention. Fair enough. But then what does that say about a sizable percentage of his (and Limbaugh’s, et al) audience that he would throw out all of this ridiculous race-baiting language? He knows what he’s doing and it’s sick.

  3. I feel that it is split both ways – some people are opposed to his policies because of race, and others are opposed to it because of the perception that he will try to change American values (IE. he is a socialist). In reality, both arguments really stem from the same root: fear. Fear of difference, and fear of change. It is why people talk about how they wish America was the way it was when they grew up, or why people try to hang onto a great many traditional values. Tradition is a great thing when appreciated correctly, but when clung to out of fear, it can become an anchor.

    We cannot ignore these fears, we need to address them. We do, however, need to call them what they are. We as Christians can do a lot to combat this if we really stand up and say ‘we are not afraid.’ Then we can cut through the pointless arguments and get at the true issues behinds peoples accusations against the President.

    To do this, it will take the whole church standing up and walking forward with confidence knowing that Christ is the great king, and no action by any power is outside of his providence. That is something that would really make us stand apart.

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