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Bill Moyers talks with Shelby
Steele
BILL MOYERS: Here's one of the
intriguing and lingering questions of
the week: how is race shaping politics
this year? The polling in Iowa was right
on - showing Barack Obama winning there.
So what happened in New Hampshire? The
polls predicted another big Obama
victory - Did they just get it wrong --
all of them -- or was there more to it?
One Obama supporter put it this way
in a widely circulated essay on the web:
"The exit polls in New Hampshire were
accurate for the Republicans and for the
second tier Democrats. The only
miscalculation was the amount of support
for Obama. That miscalculation is about
race. Iowa caucus goers stood by Barack,
in part, because when voting with their
bodies, in front of their neighbors,
Iowans are held accountable. In the
quiet, solitary space of the voting
booth, some New Hampshire voters
abandoned Barack."
We'll never know but as now the
contest moves to Michigan, Nevada, and
South Carolina where over half of the
electorate is African American. But it's
not as simple as numbers-race never is.
That's why I invited Shelby Steele to
our studios. Shelby Steele is one of our
foremost public thinkers. His
scholarship and ideas have earned him a
senior fellowship at Stanford
University's Hoover Institution and an
influential audience in the public
square. President Bush honored him with
the National Humanities Medal in 2004
for his "learned examinations of race
relations and cultural issues." for his
bestselling book, THE CONTENT OF OUR
CHARACTER: A NEW VISION OF RACE IN
AMERICA, he received the National Book
Critics' Circle Award and now he is out
with another one. It's called A BOUND
MAN: WHY WE ARE EXCITED ABOUT OBAMA AND
WHY HE CAN'T WIN. And it's well worth
your time.
Shelby Steele, welcome to THE
JOURNAL.
SHELBY STEELE: Good to be
here.
BILL MOYERS: The subtitle of
your book, why we are excited about
Obama. Are you excited about Obama?
SHELBY STEELE: Yes. Yeah.
Actually, I am. Yes.
BILL MOYERS: Are you rooting
for him?
SHELBY STEELE: I can't say
that. You know, our politics are
probably different. But I'm proud of
him. And I'm happy to see him out there.
He's already made an important
contribution to American politics.
BILL MOYERS: But you go on to
say why he can't win. Now, that would
seem to suggest you don't think he can
become President.
SHELBY STEELE: My gut feeling
is that he's going to have a
difficulty-- a difficult time doing
that. The reason I think that we don't
yet know him. We don't yet quite know.
What his deep abiding convictions are.
And he seems to have, you know, almost
in a sense kept them concealed. And a
part of the I think infatuation with
Obama is because he's something of an
invisible man. He's a kind of a
projection screen. And you sort of see
more your the better side of yourself
when you look at Obama than you see
actually Barack Obama.
BILL MOYERS: You say in here
that his supporters want him not to do
something, but to be something.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: To represent
something. What do you think they want
him to be?
SHELBY STEELE: I think to be
very blunt about it, in a lot of that
support is a desire for convergence of a
black skin with the United States
Presidency, with power on that level
the idea is that to have a black in that
office leading a largely white country
would be redemptive for America.
BILL MOYERS: Redemptive?
SHELBY STEELE: Redemptive.
Would take us a long way. Would indicate
that we truly have moved away from that
shameful racist past that we had.
BILL MOYERS: That's perfectly
logical isn't it?
SHELBY STEELE: Yes, it is.
BILL MOYERS: And desirable.
You seem to--
SHELBY STEELE: I want it.
BILL MOYERS: Yeah, sure. And
women want it for--
SHELBY STEELE: Yeah.
BILL MOYERS: In fact I feel
for black women in this. Because they've
got this first time unprecedented choice
of a plausible woman candidate, as a
Democrat, and a plausible black
candidate.
SHELBY STEELE: Yeah.
BILL MOYERS: They must feel a
tension.
SHELBY STEELE: They have to. I
think that the black community in
general has been very conflicted about
Barack Obama. Precisely because he's
been so successful among whites. And
that makes black people nervous.
BILL MOYERS: Yeah. You say in
here, white people like Barack Obama a
little too much for the comfort of many
blacks.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes. Yes.
BILL MOYERS: Why?
SHELBY STEELE: Well, the black
American identity, certainly black
American politics are grounded in what I
call challenging. It's basically, they
look at white America and say we're
going to presume that you're a racist
until you prove otherwise. The whole
concept is you keep whites on the hook.
You keep the leverage. You keep the
pressure. Here's a guy who's what I call
a bargainer who's giving whites the
benefit of the doubt.
BILL MOYERS: Give me a simple
definition of what you call a bargainer.
And a simple definition of what you call
a challenger.
SHELBY STEELE: A bargainer is
a black who enters the American, the
white American mainstream by saying to
whites in effect, in some code form, I'm
going to give you the benefit of the
doubt. I'm not going to rub the shame of
American history in your face if you
will not hold my race against me. Whites
then respond with enormous gratitude.
And bargainers are usually extremely
popular people. Oprah Winfrey, Bill
Cosby, Sidney Poitier back in the
Sixties and so forth. Because they give
whites this benefit of the doubt. That
you can be with these people and not
feel that you're going to be charged
with racism at any instant. And so they
tend to be very successful, very
popular.
Challengers on the other hand say, I
presume that you, this institution, this
society, is racist until it proves
otherwise by giving me some concrete
form of racial preference.
BILL MOYERS: Affirmative
action.
SHELBY STEELE: Affirmative
action. Diversity programs.
Opportunities of one kind or another.
And so, there is a much more concrete
bargaining on the case of challengers.
And you go into any American institution
today and they're all used to dealing
with challengers. They all have a whole
system of things that they can give to
challengers, who then will offer
absolution.
BILL MOYERS: And what are
the--
SHELBY STEELE: Then we'll say
this institution is vetted now. It's not
racist anymore.
BILL MOYERS: One of the worst
things that can happen to you in this
country is to be charged with being
racially biased.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: Racial stigma.
SHELBY STEELE: You never get
over it. On your obituary, it'll be the
first line. And there's almost no
redemption. The good side of that is it
makes the point of how intense this
society is in its desire to overcome
racism and its past.
BILL MOYERS: Yes.
SHELBY STEELE: So it's a good
thing on the other hand. On the other
hand, the bad side of it is that it has
become a form of cruelty. And all you're
doing is terrifying whites. I wrote in
the last book, WHITE GUILT. Whites live
under now, we've underestimated the
power of this. Whites live under now
this threat of being stigmatized as
race. Our institutions live under this
threat of being stigmatized as racist
and they're almost panicked over it.
What makes me sad there is then whites
look at what happened to Don Imus. And
now, they're never going to tell me what
they really feel.
Whites know never tell blacks what
you really think and what you really
feel because you risk being seen as a
racist. And the result of that is that
to a degree, we as blacks live in a
bubble. Nobody tells us the truth.
Nobody tells us what they would do if
they were in our situation. Nobody
really helps us. They use us. They buy
their own innocence with us. But they
never tell us the truth. And we need to
be told the truth very often.
You know, America is a great society,
a great country. Has all sorts-- the
values have gotten us to this place
where we are the world's greatest
society in many ways. Well, those
values, yes, we had a history of
terrible racism. But those same values
will work for blacks. They will help us
join the mainstream, become a part of
it. But whites can't say that because
then they seem to be judgmental. They're
seen as racist. And so, no one says it
to us.
BILL MOYERS: So you can
understand though, why some whites would
look to Obama as a redeemer from that--
SHELBY STEELE: They think that
Obama is a way out of all of that. That
he will bring an American redemption.
And whites are very happy for that
bargain and show gratitude and even
affection for bargainers. Oprah Winfrey
is the classic bargainer who has also a
kind of magic about her that I think
again reflects the aspirations of white
America.
BILL MOYERS: But she never
challenges white America.
SHELBY STEELE: No. She--
BILL MOYERS: She's successful
in part because she makes us.
SHELBY STEELE: She makes you
feel that this aspiration is possible.
That-- it's-- real. White American women
love Oprah. Love Oprah. And so, she
makes them feel that way.
BILL MOYERS: Bill Cosby did
that with his--
SHELBY STEELE: Bill Cosby did
that.
BILL MOYERS: Cliff Huxtable.
SHELBY STEELE: Yeah.
BILL MOYERS: Remember? The--
SHELBY STEELE: But he made a
big mistake, Bill Cosby.
BILL MOYERS: What?
SHELBY STEELE: He finally in
the last few years has one of the iron
clad rules for bargainers is they can
never tell you what they actually think
and feel. They can never reveal their
deep abiding convictions. Because the
minute they do that, they're no longer
an empty projection screen. They become
an individual. And whites begin to say,
well, I didn't know you felt that way. I
didn't know you believed that. And the
aura dissipates. If Barack Obama starts
to say, you know, I really think there's
a value to racial preferences even
though it conflicts with equality under
the law, people are, you know, that
that's a little too-- that's a little
too revealing of who he might really be.
BILL MOYERS: So you're saying
he can not serve the aspirations of one
race without antagonizing the other?
SHELBY STEELE: That's right.
That's right. They're two different
agendas. And so his answer, this is the
answer of all bargainers in a sense is
to remain invisible as much as possible.
BILL MOYERS: What do you mean
invisible? Because he's all over
television.
SHELBY STEELE: He's all over
television. But if you listen to his --
speeches 'change,' 'hope.' I mean, it's
a kind of-- it's an empty mantra. I mean
a surprising degree of emptiness, of
lack of specificity. What change? Change
from what to what? What direction do you
want to take the country? What do you
mean by hope? There's never any
specificity there because specificity is
dangerous to a bargainer.
BILL MOYERS: But, to be a
successful politician in a presidential
campaign in particular you have to
engage a larger public. That's why so
many politicians use ambiguity.
SHELBY STEELE: In Obama's
case, there's more ambiguity. We have a
pretty good idea. I mean, Hillary
Clinton does the same thing, uses
ambiguity. But we still have a pretty
good idea of who she really is and what
she wants to do with the country and so
forth. John Edwards has probably got the
straightest, most concrete message of
any of them. We really know who he is.
But Obama is still more invisible. We
don't quite-- we don't know what he
would do.
BILL MOYERS: You also say he
has a nuanced view of whites. And that
that's a problem for some blacks. I
mean, why is it a problem to have a
nuanced view of other people? I think
that's what we all should have, right?
SHELBY STEELE: Well, then,
we've let whites off the hook. And you
know, you want to make blacks angry,
start letting whites off the hook. Start
saying that they're not all inherently
racist. The fact that we can charge them
with racism and have some degree of
credibility is black power. And so, when
somebody like Obama comes along, he is
undermining the power of his own people
in their eyes.
BILL MOYERS: By?
SHELBY STEELE: By having an
open mind toward whites. By giving them
the benefit of the doubt. By saying I'm
going to presume you're not racist. And
I'm going to treat you that way. I'm
going to believe in the better part of
you. And so, he flatters whites in that
sense. Boy, you know, Al Sharpton
doesn't do that.
BILL MOYERS: Jesse Jackson
doesn't.
SHELBY STEELE: Yeah. They say
you are racist until you prove
otherwise. Itt's ironic. What Jesse and
Al Sharpton do is make whites feel
white. What Obama does is diffuse that.
Is take the anxiety out of being white.
BILL MOYERS: What's the
predicament he faces in particular in
South Carolina which is the first
primary where a huge number of African
Americans will be participating? What do
you see unique to his challenge there?
SHELBY STEELE: Well, you know,
up until Iowa, he had a very hard time
there. And a lot of the black leadership
was apart and torn. Always with
bargainers, in order to win over blacks,
they have to first of all win over
whites, to the point where they seem to
have real power. Then blacks will come
over to them. So if in South Carolina
there is the perception that Barack
Obama is now a real candidate with a
real chance to become the President of
the United States, he'll pull over the
black vote. New Hampshire probably hurt
him with the black vote.
BILL MOYERS: Why?
SHELBY STEELE: Because whites
voted for Hillary Clinton rather than
him. And so, blacks say, Uh-huh, he
can't make it. So, he will-- he has to
win the white vote. He has to seem to be
in command of that in order to get full
support from blacks.
BILL MOYERS: And yet, the
contradiction is you say that to reach
the white vote, he has to do things that
antagonize some blacks.
SHELBY STEELE: Almost
everything he does... with this love
affair he has with white America makes
him very... in black America, it puts
them on guard.
BILL MOYERS: You point out
that the first thing that Barack Obama
usually tells you about himself is that
he was born to a white mother and a
black father. Isn't that part of his
political appeal, is that he transcends
both black and white?
SHELBY STEELE: The fact that
he has a white mother tells white
Americans, signals to white Americans,
that he has to give them the benefit of
the doubt. That he can't think of
white-- paint white Americans with a
broad brush.
BILL MOYERS: He knows one...
SHELBY STEELE: As racist. He
knows in the most intimate way that not
all whites are racist. That i you have
to go individual by individual. Well,
instinctively white Americans perceive
that in him and feel comfortable, feel
more comfortable with him.
BILL MOYERS: And yet, at the
same time, it's not all together
positive, is it?
SHELBY STEELE: I share that
background with him.
BILL MOYERS: You had a white
mother.
SHELBY STEELE: I had a white
mother and a black father as well. And
I'm older than him. Grew up in
segregation and probably had a different
-- certainly had a different experience
than he did. But coming of age as he did
in the Seventies and Eighties and so
forth when this black identity, this
challenging identity was so intense--
BILL MOYERS: Black power,
right?
SHELBY STEELE: Black power.
Here's a kid being raised in an
apartment in Hawaii by a white mother
and two white grandparents with no
connection either to his father as a
father or to a racial identity. And you
know, one of the themes I think that
comes out of his first book, DREAMS FROM
MY FATHER, is - almost an obsession with
establishing himself as an authentic
black. Of the feeling-- of achieving a
sense of belonging. And I empathize with
that. I went through a bit of that
myself.
BILL MOYERS: You say that
children of interracial unions often
live under a degree of suspicion.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: Why?
SHELBY STEELE: Because people
know that you I can remember in the
Sixties, 'well, your mother was white?
Your mother was the enemy.'
BILL MOYERS: And you were
collaborating with the enemy.
SHELBY STEELE: And so, you
were collaborating. By birth, you were
collaborating. You were at the very
least, it was this sense of-- there was
a sense, you're going to have to prove
yourself a little more than the rest of
us.
BILL MOYERS: Was there a
moment you claimed blackness as your
identity? That you definitively made
that choice?
SHELBY STEELE: Well, and this
is I think a difference in my case than
Obama's, in segregation, you didn't get
the choice. It was the one drop rule
that applied. One drop of black blood
and you're black. That was the rule.
That's what kept the wall between whites
and blacks was this one drop rule. So I
was raised with absolutely no ambiguity
about that.
BILL MOYERS: Where?
SHELBY STEELE: On the south
side of Chicago.
BILL MOYERS: Where Obama
eventually became an organizer.
SHELBY STEELE: Yeah. That's
right.
BILL MOYERS: And he was raised
in Hawaii and Indonesia.
SHELBY STEELE: Right.
BILL MOYERS: Because his
mother moved there. And you think that
environment made a different choice for
him.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes. It
intensified it probably gave him a
much more intense need to belong than I
had. On the other hand, that background
accounts for this fine successful highly
educated polished young man that we see
running for President today.
BILL MOYERS: You know, I've
read that and it was very powerful. When
describes four thirty in the morning.
He's just a child. His mother gets him
out of bed out there in Hawaii or in
Indonesia. And she makes him study. She
makes him read.
SHELBY STEELE: She made him
who he was. That's right.
BILL MOYERS: His biography
seems to be his platform.
SHELBY STEELE: But then, he
turns around and says that maybe things
are so desperate for blacks that they
don't need this model. That they can
rely on black nationalism and blackness.
Maybe it will give them, he uses the
word an insularity out of which they can
feel proud.Well, which is it? Is it your
mama or is it Black Nationalism who's
responsible for you being here? I want
to know. I want-- I want you to-- I want
you to-- what evidence do you have that
Black Nationalism works? You know that
what your mother did works. Why don't
you give her credit? Why don't you build
a politics out of that?
BILL MOYERS: But that seems to
be me to be circumstance of birth a
lot of people not born with a mother
like that or a father.
SHELBY STEELE: That's-- yeah.
But that doesn't mean it doesn't - that
that's not something that we ought to
all be pressing for and asking for from
all groups. Particularly groups like
blacks in the inner city. If you don't
have a mother that does that, you don't
have a father at all, what can schools
do later on to overcome that?
BILL MOYERS: Who did it for
you?
SHELBY STEELE: My mother and
my father. Period. I went to wretched
segregated schools that were abusive.
And then, I saw something else. I saw my
mother organize that little community
and shut that school down. And boycott
that school. So, I saw collective
action, too. Collective action --
there's a place for it. It can work. And
they made it a better school. So, I'm
here solely because of my mother and my
father.
BILL MOYERS: What would have
happened if you had rejected blackness
in the way he has?
SHELBY STEELE: In the way he
has?
BILL MOYERS: Yeah. I mean, in
a sense, he's rejected it. You describe
what whites see in him.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes. He has --
in a sense, you're absolutely right. In
a sense, bargainers do that. Bargainers
do business with whites. And they don't
do business with-- usually with
challengers. Barack Obama is the first
black America to bring bargaining into
the political arena. Barack Obama is
saying, I'm going to give you the-- I'm
going to treat you as though you're not
a racist. And I'm going to simply ask
you to treat me as though I'm not black.
Treat me as just-as an individual. Well,
it's a nice bargain. But boy, does it
make blacks nervous. Our blackness is
our power. We think. I don't think it
is. But we have the-- that's the
delusion I think.
BILL MOYERS: What do you think
is your power?
SHELBY STEELE: I think our
power is the same as it is for anybody,
any other group ѿ the collective
energies, imagination of the individuals
within the group. We're no better than
what our individuals achieve. Identity
should be the result of effort and
achievement. It's not an agent. It's not
going to bring you there.
BILL MOYERS: But you can't
escape a part of your identity because
it is about, as you say, blood and
color. You can't escape that.
SHELBY STEELE: You can't
escape it. And I certainly don't want to
escape it. I, you know, I am black and
happy to be so. But my identity is not
my master. I'm my master. And I resent
this, you know, civil rights leadership
telling me what I should think and what
issues I should support this way or that
way. And that's where-- in-- black
America, identity has become almost
totalitarian.
BILL MOYERS: Totalitarian?
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: That's very
strong word.
SHELBY STEELE: It is. It is.
BILL MOYERS: What do you mean?
SHELBY STEELE: That you
subscribe to the idea that the essence
of blackness is grounded in grievance.
And if you vary from that, you are
letting whites off the hook. And we're
going to call you a sell out. We're
going to call you an Uncle Tom.
BILL MOYERS: At the same time
you write, "when someone tells you
you're not really black, you hear their
words as a little murder."
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: What are they
killing in you?
SHELBY STEELE: They're taking
away something that is sacred to me
which is that I'm proud of being-- I
look at the history of my people. And
coming from that kind of oppression,
it's glorious. I mean, look at the--
just in the last century, we've created
a literature - that is on par with the
literature of many nations. We
transformed music all over the world.
This, from this relatively small group
of truly oppressed people. So, that I'm
proud of that. And you get a little
sense of superiority.
BILL MOYERS: Well deserved I
think.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: So how is it that
to be, as you say, a quote true black
involves, and I'm quoting you, "a slight
corruption, a little habit of betrayal."
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: Explain that to
me so that I can understand how you feel
about it.
SHELBY STEELE: If in order to
be black, if I'm going to fit myself
into the current identity, I'm going to
have to betray impulses, desires,
certain aspirations in myself as an
individual in order to squeeze myself
into this identity which is, again,
grounded in grievance. Maybe I as an
individual don't believe that's the
biggest problem that I face. But I've
got to pretend that it's the biggest
problem I face in order to-- stay inside
the group. Stay inside the church as we
say. And I'm going to be a back slider
if I start to say grievance is really
not the central thing.
BILL MOYERS: You say in the
book that to be black means you have to
wear a mask.
SHELBY STEELE: Absolutely.
Absolutely.
BILL MOYERS: Do you wear a
mask?
SHELBY STEELE: All of this
work that you see here came about
because I dropped-- I got exhausted with
the whole pressure to from whites and
blacks to wear a mask.
BILL MOYERS: What kind of
mask? What kind of mask were you
expected to wear?
SHELBY STEELE: I was in
academia. I was expected to be a
challenger. You should be-- you should
have a chip on your shoulder. You should
be angry. If you're not, you're going to
take the pressure off of this
institution and we'll lose. So, that
chip on your shoulder is our power as a
minority group. Well, I just got
completely fed up with that. And again,
the self betrayal that it continued to
force me into, I began to understand, it
was going to be me or the group. And I
was going to have a life or I was just
going to be a kind of surrogate for
blackness. And it was a very difficult--
I was scared to death.
BILL MOYERS: Scared?
SHELBY STEELE: Scared to
death.
BILL MOYERS: Of what?
SHELBY STEELE: Because I knew
the price that that one would pay for
that.
BILL MOYERS: And that price
is?
SHELBY STEELE: That price is
that you I don't want to over
dramatize this or seem to be playing the
violin but you enter a kind of exile
where the group identifies you as
someone who is a threat. And part of
being black is despising or having
contempt for people like me. For people
who refuse to wear the mask one way or
the other.
BILL MOYERS: I understand that
in the context of the Sixties. Black
Power, the Seventies, and in the
Eighties with the Reagan Revolution and
anyone like you who supported the
Reagans, the conservative movement in
this country were called Uncle Toms. I
can understand. But today, it seems to
me, and I may be naive about this, but
it seems to me that-- with Obama, that
Obama is the result of a transformation
in race in this country.
SHELBY STEELE: I-- --
BILL MOYERS: So that you're no
longer penalized for being a black
conservative.
SHELBY STEELE: Oh, boy.
BILL MOYERS: Am I wrong?
SHELBY STEELE: I think so. You
know, it's no accident that 92 percent
of blacks vote Democratic in every
Presidential election no matter what.
The black identity is identified today
with liberal politics and the Democratic
Party. If you're not a Democrat, you're
not all together black.
BILL MOYERS: That's why you
say for Obama, liberalism is blackness?
SHELBY STEELE: Yes. Because
liberalism is what he has to offer
blacks - it's what he has to offer them
and say see I still believe in
challenging. And he's, you know, he
talks in the rhetoric of the civil
rights movement and does a pretty good
imitation of Dr. King often. As he's
putting on his challenging mask in order
to capture the affection of black
America. He has to be very-- has to
touch that very lightly or white America
will say we like you precisely because
you don't do that. You don't challenge.
And so, he has to touch it very lightly.
I've had whites come up to me and
say, I don't know if you ever have any
contact with Obama. But I saw him in the
paper the other day with Al Sharpton. He
shouldn't do that. They didn't
consciously know why they were saying
that. But I-- he's a challenger. Barack
Obama is the anti Al Sharpton. Al
Sharpton is probably his best ally among
whites.
BILL MOYERS: Because they--
when they see Sharpton, they think Obama
is a great relief.
SHELBY STEELE: That's right.
BILL MOYERS: A breath of fresh
air.
SHELBY STEELE: He relieves the
anxiety of being white. That's what
Obama does. And that's why he's-- he has
so much affection.
BILL MOYERS: I know so many
white politicians who have made their
way by accommodation, to corporate
contributions, to wealth, to the
constituency.
SHELBY STEELE: It's the very
nature-- it's the very nature of
politics, which may be why Obama is such
a good politician.
BILL MOYERS: And you say he's
not a revolutionary. He's not a
reformer. And when I read that in A
BOUND MAN, I thought, yeah, he's a
politician.
SHELBY STEELE: Look at his
background. He felt he didn't belong. He
had to accommodate on the black side.
Yet, he knew whites, he had-- he knew
very well how to in a sense manipulate
whites. He knew them better than he knew
blacks in many ways. So-- and that
became a kind of talent. This bargaining
became a talent.
BILL MOYERS: He does have a
talent for politics.
SHELBY STEELE: And he
understands white people. He understands
them. What he says in his-- when he was
a teenager, he realized that one things
whites love is a black who's not angry.
So, he knew that when he was a kid.
BILL MOYERS: And you write
that, "the black identity Obama longs
for means that you must join a politics
that keeps alive the idea of white
obligation to blacks." You think that's
Obama's mission, to keep alive the white
obligation to blacks?
SHELBY STEELE: I think that
that's what he tells blacks. I think
that when he speaks as he did in Selma,
as he did in Harlem not too long ago, he
puts on the challenger's mask. And--
BILL MOYERS: He also, and when
he spoke at Selma, I remember seeing
that on television, he used that
inflection of the southern-
SHELBY STEELE: Yes, he did.
BILL MOYERS: Of the southern
dialect that you don't hear in the rest
of his speeches.
SHELBY STEELE: That's right.
BILL MOYERS: Hillary Clinton
did the same thing by the way. She tried
to.
SHELBY STEELE: Yeah, she was--
it was not pleasant to listen to.
Sometimes, Barack Obama is John F.
Kennedy. Sometimes, he's Martin Luther
King. Sometimes, he's Stokely Carmichael
in 1968. He has these different masks
that are tailored to the audience that
he's in front of. And he does it with
such facility that you, one, can not
help but wonder who's the real-- what's
his voice? What's his inflection?
BILL MOYERS: What do you see
ten years from now with race relations
in this country? Are e we going to
deepen the American dream?
SHELBY STEELE: I think so. I
think that these paradigms I'm talking
about exhaust themselves. We just get
tired of them. We begin to see through
them. If I could see what's the
difference between bargaining and
challenging, it's only because it's so
vivid. We've done it so long that
we're-- it has a familiarity, a
recognizability. And so, I think at some
point we do become exhausted. But we've
played this game so long. And masking is
something that comes inevitably to
minority groups who use it to survive.
It was a survival mechanism in slavery
and segregation. And we're still using
it. We're still entering the mainstream
using it. We will get tired of that. Our
children will and their children will
get-- will be even more tired of it. And
will understand I think that the
challenge of the collective is to
produce individuals.
BILL MOYERS: I understand
that. You know, I'm tired of asking
black people questions about race.
SHELBY STEELE: Yes.
BILL MOYERS: I'd like to know
what you think about Schwarzenegger.
SHELBY STEELE: That's a good
sign.
BILL MOYERS: I'd like to know
what you think about economics. I'd like
to know what you think about money and
politics.
SHELBY STEELE: Yeah.
BILL MOYERS: I don't want to
just know what you think about being
black or--
SHELBY STEELE: That's right.
And I want to talk about those things,
too.
BILL MOYERS: But aren't we
being naive in a culture that is still
racially divided that race is always on
the table, but it's also under the
table?
SHELBY STEELE: Yes. Yes. We
are-- it's still plagues us. And again,
I think Obama was an opportunity to look
at some of the forces that I would
love nothing more, I don't care what his
politics end up being, liberal or
conservative. I would love nothing more
than to see him break through and into,
this is my experience. These are my
values. I know these work because they
worked in my life. They are responsible
for me being here where I am today.
BILL MOYERS: The book is A
BOUND MAN. Shelby Steele, thank you very
much for being on THE JOURNAL.
SHELBY STEELE: Well, thank you
very much for having me. I enjoyed it.
BILL MOYERS: I did too.
BARACK OBAMA: We always knew our
climb would be steep. But in record
numbers, you came out and spoke up for
change. And with your voices and your
votes, you made it clear that at this
moment - in this election - there is
something happening in America.
BILL MOYERS: That's it for the
JOURNAL. I'm Bill Moyers.
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