What do Kermit the Frog and Barack Obama have in common? Besides a funny name, the two have each faced troubles based on the color of his skin.
In this 1970 performance by Jim Henson, as the frog, Kermit wallows in his 'greenness' as though he is an outcast--the other. It is a funny and child-friendly way of dealing with issue with which W.E.B Du Bois, Frantz Fanon, and thousands of other authors, artists, and philosophers have spent their lives grappling.
This past week, Obama was targeted with a peculiar accusation: 'playing the race card.' These allegations come after Obama said last week that McCain's campaign is using scare tactics, because among other things, "he doesn't look like all those other presidents on the dollar bills."
What does it really mean to play 'the race card'? Further, how does one do so?
Perhaps it is more than just acknowledging race as an issue. Maybe it is accusing someone of being a racist or holding racial prejudices. Whatever it is, the race card idea seems to be more of an escape for white people so that they feel less like they might be a racist or hold racial prejudices. Indeed, this idea seems to be less about the black--or other--person in question.
After all, what did Obama do but point out the obvious differences--that we have been talking about all along--between himself and past Presidents? In his Washington Post opinion piece, Eugene Robinson writes, "The latest bit of snarling, mean-spirited nonsense to come out of the McCain camp was the accusation, leveled by campaign manager Rick Davis, that Obama had 'played the race card.' He did so, apparently, by being black."
The notion that race should be avoided is one that hinders any sort of progress. McCain quite often aims to tackle issues head on (the economy, war, oil prices, etc). However, this is not an approach that he takes with race. It's taboo. It shouldn't be talked about--at least not directly.
Race is an issue that no one in this country seems to want to address head on. The implications of the McCain campaign's refutations are that race is not an issue that should be talked about. But, it seems that Obama's success in this campaign season has been more than enough to make it an issue in more public forums. Still, though, race has not been dealt with with proper measures--in a way that will result in progression.
The most disturbing aspect of the recent ploy by the McCain campaign and the ensuing media coverage is that none of these tactics are new. They are things that black people--especially those who pursue and achieve excellence in white dominated arenas--have faced everyday for generations.
At some point in the life of every Black person, there comes a time when he or she accepts ones Blackness as something that is not inherently different or inferior, and most importantly, not something that anyone can change.
Being black, like being green, or--in this country--anything except white is not always easy. But it does not hinder excellence. And, further, it is not new to Barack Obama, nor any other members of the pigmented populace.
In 1903, W.E.B. DuBois wrote in his Souls of Black Folk that the "problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line," and at the core of many issues, whether McCain will admit it or not, is the notion that African-Americans and other minorities have been labeled as 'others'--a label that pervades the psyche of both those deemed 'other' and those against whom the other is determined.
Until race is adequately approached, all minorities can learn a thing or two from Kermit and Barack: being the other is not easy; it cannot inhibit excellence; embrace who and what you are. You'll be the same thing when you wake up tomorrow morning.
