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Talib Kweli: Why I Support Barack Obama 
Published Tuesday, February 05, 2008 3:23 PM
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By Talib Kweli

It is the last year of the Bush administration and thank God. I usually rail against being described as simply "political rapper", and I haven't voted since Bill Clinton first ran for President. I was following the tradition that Black Americans have had of voting for democrats since we got the right in 1964 (temporarily). Then, Clinton, as presidents go, seemed better than Bush Sr., but I did not like his policies in Sudan or the constant bombing of Iraq.

I also did not like the way our government dragged us thru the Lewinsky scandal. I felt betrayed by the system, and I stopped voting, no longer accepting of the lesser of two evils. I knew the two party system was designed to fail us. I knew that politicians must lie for a living, because it would be impossible to make good on their promises. I knew about the lobbyists and the PAC. I did not make it my issue, but if someone asked me, I would explain why I didn't vote.


Most of the time people talked to me like I lost my mind, but every once in awhile someone understood. I knew that our ancestors fought and died for the right to vote, but I didn't feel like voting for the lesser of two evils in a broken system was the proper way to honor them. It was pageantry, and I wasn't with it. I wasn't with Vote or Die, because I knew that voting itself, with no real knowledge of who is paying these candidates to run million dollar-a-day campaigns, is far from a revolutionary act. I haven't even started to talk about the Electoral College that they taught us about in grade school. In this republic, delegates’ votes are counted, and states with more land have more votes.


You can technically have more votes, but lose the election. When the verdict is in question, the Supreme Court decides, as they did when Al Gore clearly won the election but lost due to bipartisan bullshit. The bankers of the world pay our politicians, and often tailor laws and regulations to line their own pockets. I have often stated that I cannot participate in a system that not only is designed to see me fail, but corrupts itself as well. 

This was all before Barack Obama threw his hat in the ring. I, like many, appreciated his effort from the sidelines, watching him do the dance on the news. I found myself relating to him and enjoying hearing him speak, but I still remained distrustful of politicians in general. I felt like I could serve my community in many ways on a grassroots level that proceeded politics. I started to see the Obama campaign doing that grassroots work. I hear him speaking about poor people, the environment, things that I haven't heard from politicians who have electability.

My criticism of the political system is that it siphons out rational thought because who have to be all things to all people. You can't stand for anything doing that. I remember when Obama spoke out against the war, early. I think the time he spent as a civil rights attorney on Chicago's south side gives him a unique perspective. I often hear about his lack of experience, but his experience is one that I most closely identify with. I'm not saying I could be president, but I am saying that our government could use a new energy. In order for a revolution to happen, you need revolutionary writers, soldiers, teachers, poets, musicians, garbage men, cab drivers, politicians, across the board.  Everyone will not always agree, but the things we agree on, we should strengthen. When I was younger, none of this really mattered. Now I have two beautiful children, and Barack Obama is an incredibly positive influence on them. I want them to know they can be anything they want. 


With that said, I still feel the same as I do about the political system, and one man can't change it. But this man deserves our support nonetheless. I appreciate what he's doing, and there comes a time in history when change is necessary for all of us to prosper. I can't be critical of a society that is scared of change, but be stubborn in my ways for the sake of it. I support Barack Obama and encourage others to take a real look at his campaign so they can come to their own conclusions. I am not delusional about what the office of the president represents, but my support for him is just that, support for someone speaking my language amidst an ocean of doubletalk. Thank you for you time.

Talib Kweli, MCEO, Blacksmith

 


Comments

 

odeisel said:

at a certain point at least you gotta stand for something. you can't just sit it out
February 5, 2008 3:30 PM
 

jalamc048 said:

no excuse not to vote... thats jus dumb
February 5, 2008 3:31 PM
 

Talib Kweli Writes Open Letter, Supporting Barack Obama : HipHopDons.com/RapBlueprint.com said:

February 5, 2008 3:45 PM
 

stayhumble said:

I feel you TK-i voted because it's my right not because i think Obama is gonna change anything.  We all know that there is a much bigger power running all of this and if you don't, i'll just label you as 85%(dumb, deaf & blind!)!!!  But i vote-
OBAMA-"on my mama"
February 5, 2008 3:54 PM
 

Talib Kweli - Open Letter, Support für Obama « Obama, Kweli, Talib, Barack, Letter, Supports, Support, Open « SWISS SECTION said:

February 5, 2008 3:57 PM
 

Princinnati said:

I'm voting Obama for more than the obvious reasons. Go to barackobama.com to get your info on his issues.
February 5, 2008 4:08 PM
 

chetter057 said:

Talib, I've always been a big fan of your music, but check this...
Obama's wife is a member of the CFR, and is basically doing the same thing as ms. clint, which is running on Mr. John Edwards platform... At first I thought edwards was kinda fake, but he based his whole campaign on fighting poverty in America. You gotta check out Mike Huckabee, even though he's a Republican, check out his speeches on poverty and how he'd create more jobs by stimulating the economy with investing on infrastructure... Being an ex baptist minister kinda freaks me out, but his ideas and faith seem like a good foundation for his decision making... he believes in cleaning the enviroment and eating healthy too....

but whatever, we'll see what happens after the primaries
February 5, 2008 4:17 PM
 

Esq. of LastLeveL said:

I've got alot of respect for Talib as both an emcee, and a person. I am one of the few who do identify with what he was saying, but even still, I vote. I vote because it's my right. I vote because people have laid down their LIVES for this. Most importantly, I vote because I want to vote. I haven't been particularly happy with any of the former candidates in previous elections, but I am happy about Obama. Not just because he's a black man, no, that'd be idiotic. Because, to me, as a politician he stands for more than just the economy, the war, the oppresion. He stands more for the people than anyone I've seen in recent years. I get the feeling that I'm more than just a statistic. He's not perfect, no one is, but I'm comfortable with casting my vote to him. I feel you too Talib, if you want to change a system you have to do more than fight it from the outside. You need to break it down, inside, out.

www.myspace.com/rjwalkeresq
February 5, 2008 4:30 PM
 

JRucker said:

Talib Kweli... I salute you on your entry. I hope people read it more than once to see where u are coming from and where you are going with this.

February 5, 2008 4:36 PM
 

PEACETOTHEREAL1 said:

White America is not ready for Obama. I believe there are many people voting for Obama now who will not vote for him when it counts. Wait and see.



www.myspace.com/thirdsupremelegend
February 5, 2008 5:08 PM
 

DJ_SHONA said:

amen kweli! despite the system and the ills of this nation and world we still gotta put our faith and trust in something, otherwise what do we live for, what do we wake up for? obama relates to us more than anyone else ever has. while he's a politician, he's the best chance we got.

"I am not delusional about what the office of the president represents, but my support for him is just that, support for someone speaking my language amidst an ocean of doubletalk."

that's why i'm voting for obama.

kweli for pres in 2012!! and a cabinet made up of mos, common, chappelle, badu, ?love, black thot and dead prez
February 5, 2008 5:57 PM
 

Just_In said:

How do u trust someone named Huckabee? If a another republican gets in office again we are FUCKED!

@Peacetothereal1
More white people will go out and vote for Obama than we would, I would put money on that...
February 5, 2008 6:00 PM
 

Moorish Brother said:

Everybody is so souped this political season......history shows regardless who wins things won't change THAT much......
but, it would be cool to see an intellectual brotha running the show.....Good luck, Obama..

Peace Moors
February 5, 2008 6:14 PM
 

Boss Up said:

good article
February 5, 2008 6:33 PM
 

odeisel said:

i fyou are registered independent don't let them turn you away.  you can vote absentee ballot and change your party for the primaries and have your vote counted.
February 5, 2008 6:49 PM
 

v4vendetta said:

Negroes crack me up thinking they are so progressive by voting for Hillary. The blood dripping from her and Bill's hands is enough to fill the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans! I see Hillary and Mccain squaring off in the general election because the devil wants that to take place with mccain winning and becoming Prez. I have seen this script many times before. Ron Paul would be the best hope for America but the sheeple don't know he exists. All I can say at this point is keep your powder dry, pimpin.  
February 5, 2008 8:28 PM
 

MisterFrankBones said:

@v4vendetta

Im with you on that one.  I can sense sincerity in obama.  Great composure when he speaks.  You can easily get a feel for him.  Fuck hilary watching her speak..you can sense the fakeness..it seems Obama wants the presidency for the people first.  Hilary..it seems its her reputation..then the people.  As for my brothers and sisters..the hispanics that vote are embarrising me greatly going for hilary.  Obama being a minority and having a pops from another country should be enough alone to co sign him.Bill Clinton signed that nafta taking a ton of jobs away/  There is alot of racism between black n brown on the west and south..and its a shame...Minority vs Minority = Upper Class White folks a win
February 5, 2008 10:49 PM
 

TruthSeeker55 said:

I agree with most of what Talib said, that voting for a lesser of two evils is BS. However I somewhat disagree with how he feels about Obama. I want to believe in Obama but I just don't trust most politicians. (I just found out today that the nuclear industry donated over $800,000 to both Obama AND Clinton.)  Obama wants "change" but not enough. For instance, it's great that he wants to change education, but unless he is down for revamping the ENTIRE system, it's a lost cause. Unless Obama is talking about revamping the ENTIRE monetary system, it's a lost cause. The democrats and the republicans are one in the same. They are like two mob families battling it out for control of the country. No matter which side wins it is the people that loose.
February 5, 2008 11:17 PM
 

ONEdeepNOsleep said:

co-sign @misterfrankbones

i dont know why hispanics voting for Hilary either..black suffered hispanics suffered shouldnt u want to vote for sum one u relate to....plus Hilary jus want to make history she talks about that more in her speech then Obama (i) nevered heard Obama talkin about bein tha first black pres. Hilary want to make history in bein tha first women pres. an bein tha first husband an wife bein pres...... u want change Barack tha vote
February 5, 2008 11:37 PM
 

Mornin Man said:

good viewpoint... I make it my business to vote in every election. People also gotta realize in these elections we're not just voting for candidates for public office. Sometimes we're also voting on things like school referendums & judges. I can understand (but don't agree) people losing faith in the system & not voting. But for those who don't vote, I hope you're doing SOMETHING that's going to bring about or maintain positivity in your life & where you live.
February 6, 2008 12:37 AM
 

poe said:

February 6, 2008 12:39 AM
 

ChinCheka said:

Being an educated proud Mexican American that can vote I would never ever vote for the Clintons. Its fine and dandy that she wants to be the first woman president and all of that but she has way too much blood on her hands. I think as all humans not just americans, black, white, brown, green whatever we need to look at things from a global perspective, The human race is headed towards some very serious times that may endanger ALL of us as a species on earth. For the most part I am talking about global warming but there are other forces at work too. War and the senseless killing of others all around the globe are very real threats too. The U.S needs to take the lead... since we have become the worlds police I mean bully and make the changes to energy infastructre and other things to show the rest of the world that it can be done and with little economic impact. We do not need the same stat-quo "leaders" that we have had in the past. Jimmy Carter included. I am not sure if Obama is the person that will take the lead and get us out of Iraq or for that matter make a "green" economy a viable option. I am not saying dont vote for him because of these reasons. Who am I to tell you who to vote for? But what I am saying is we need a president that will make America right again. I am not sure if anyone can do that.
February 6, 2008 1:17 AM
 

YusufM said:

I won't vote for my oppressor and I don't feel any obligation to vote in an undemocratic election and plutocratic government.  The historical, present, and future position of President of this country is oppressive to brown and black people.  If this system is not overhauled, nothing will change....we have to think and do our homework.

Barack, like the other candidates, is a defender of U.S. capitalism and imperialism.  He's as aggressive on the imagined war on terror as Bush, he just want to do it the right way.

-Barack voted to reauthorize the death penalty and voted to reconfirm condoleezza rice's (war criminal) position as Sec. of State.

-Barack says he want to get out but leaves open the door for a longer stay "if the Iraqi government meets the security, political, and economic benchmarks to which it has committed" and settles on the deceptive language of a permanent stay in the form of "a minimal over-the-horizon military force in the region to protect American personnel and facilities." (see Barack's manifesto from Foreign Affairs at http://www.pierretristam.com/Bobst/07/wf070607a.htm).

Barack wants to "…expand our ground forces by adding 65,000 soldiers to the army and 27,000 marines." He also wants to "…consider using military force in circumstances beyond self-defense [can you say CIA] in order to provide for the common security that underpins global stability - to support friends, participate in stability and reconstruction operations, or confront mass atrocities."

-Barack wants to increase military aid by 50 billion a year by 2012.


Just read the URL,

BARACK OBAMA & THE BUSH DOCTRINE: SHARED ASSUMPTIONS, TACTICAL DIFFERENCES & COMMON GOALS

(and I'm a brother...)  I love you Talib, but I think your support speaks to the real sense hopelessness people feel, so I understand.  I'm tired of getting by, let's create real change and honor genuine definitions of success, not the one's our oppressors offer...peace.
February 6, 2008 2:00 AM
 

YusufM said:

I feel you truthseeker55!  great analysis!
February 6, 2008 2:02 AM
 

odeisel said:

no president in his right mind would remove troops from that region.
February 6, 2008 6:48 AM
 

bigchief206 said:

You can't use the system of oppression to change the system of oppression. It takes change it takes revolution. And unless Obama is going to push government weapons and war vehicles into our community and the education to use them. He's not for me.

Obama is just going to perpetuate the status quo. He's going to be the leader of an evil system of capitalism. He's a capitalist. How many politicians use to be lawyers? Or should I saw how many politicians should be lawyers? The best liars.

I actually kind of feel sorry for him. The only reason why a black man is this close to leading the white man's system is because Bush got this country into something they can't get out of. When this system comes crashing down not by the hands of the revolutionaries but because it imploded on it's own arrogance and selfishness, a black man is going to be the one blamed for it. Not the white man who put this nation in the position in the first place.

Our people are worst off than we were in 1964 because collectively we're more ignorant about our own oppression. They've had the gas ovens burning for years and we don't know it.

Black people we better smarten up and move back to Africa or get Indian or Chinese visas.
February 6, 2008 8:21 AM
 

bigchief206 said:

and why is everyone saying it's our right to vote? it's not our right to vote. it's our right to be free and not oppressed and if you're willing to vote for someone who is only going to perpetuate your oppression and not fight for your own freedom both mentally and physically then go ahead and vote. probably the same tom jumping in front massa when a slave got a hold of the rifle. smarten up. this voting shit is ridiculous people vote and think they're doing something you're not doing shit. they want you to vote because they want you to feel like you're doing something like you're apart of this system so you don't revolt. this is more of an aristocracy than democracy. he mentioned the electoral college those are the people who decide the presidency. our vote doesn't mean anything. and i voted for measure to improve schools but guess what the black schools still get shitted on. before you vote you better see how this money is getting spent because more than likely it isn't being spent in your community. this is capitalism there is no such thing as democracy on this earth. stop being fooled by this media propaganda this government propaganda.
February 6, 2008 8:30 AM
 

odeisel said:

hey big chieff when you gonna pick up your rifle and start the revolution? black people make up very little of th eus population.  if there was true democracy do you really believe  sicne you obviously espouse th ewhole oppressor nothing, that we would have anything? this is the system you have. if you dont like it change it or move. stop bitching. You vote for the delagates.  you pick th edelagates and on the ballots it says who the delagates are  pledged to.  it's clearly delineated.
February 6, 2008 8:53 AM
 

YusufM said:

Odeisal,

We will always be inferior if we push aside our needs because we make up a small amount of the population.  Our needs are universal needs - human right needs.  

What do we have?  We suffer from America more than any group.  America thrives off of the oppression brown and black folks.

"This is the system you have."  - if enslaved Africans felt that way, they wouldn't fight for freedom.

Move?  We are captured Africans who did not come here by choice.  But I agree...we need to start thinking about a relocation...

When are we going to stand tall?  Odeisel said the same thing a lot of thinkers say.  In fact, i'll put it in Audre Lorde's words:

"For the master's tools will never dismantle the master's house.  They may allow us to temporarily to beat him at his own game, but they will never enable us to bring about genuine change.  And this fact is only threatening to those women [oppressed] who still define the master’s house as their only source of support"
February 6, 2008 9:16 AM
 

Water Ur Seeds said:

No matter who is in Presidency... shit wont change.

The President is jst A mouth piece. They cant jst change major things i.e the war and troops in certain war zones.

They would/and still will all take the same steps the other ones would.

The only things they can/will change are things like the amount of funding for schools get and illegal immigrants etc

The country is run by different advisers, i.e Bush didnnt wake up and say 'Hey Im gonna go to war' He was advised to.

Its all a bunch of bullshit, jst live Ur life and make the most ov it
February 6, 2008 10:46 AM
 

ClassicLOveTUne said:

Very well written...i love the way that man thinks lol....
February 6, 2008 4:33 PM
 

Intelekt said:

Maybe it's not the system that's wrong. Maybe it's the people running shit. No system is perfect, and I think we have a decent system. It's got flaws, sure, but it's the assholes in these positions that are doing us in, plus the fuckin special interest groups and billion dollar corporations who have the money to buy whatever they want. I think Obama seems like a good dude, and I'm with him. He can't change the system "ENOUGH," or "OVERHAUL" the system... SO WHO CAN??? You can't do a complete overhaul of the USA government in four fuckin years, unless somehow God became president lol. In a nation this big and complex, don't expect ever to get a such a radical change in a couple of years... that is unless you wanna try to pull enough people together to start a large-scale, long and violent revolution. Good luck with that. Baby steps people, baby steps. Let's do what we can to help change things at least a little bit.
February 7, 2008 7:43 PM
 

YusufM said:

The power relationship between the dominated group and the dominating groups has never changed through electoral politics...ever!  We've been taking baby steps for 142 years (end of civil war)

The American Revolution took 8 years.  The colonist freed themselves from the British through war, not participation in the British Parliament.  When revolution becomes impractical in a society, oppression is at its highest point.
February 7, 2008 8:59 PM
 

websince1982 said:

it will be an interesting new world if obama takes it

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February 7, 2008 9:16 PM
 

cinas1 said:

I (speaking on behalf of myself not the group) feel that Obama lacks the experience right now where it counts and that is in Foreign Relations..Y? Because we r at WAR.. U gotta be a different type of individual to stand up to these hard hearted hate the West leaders in these countries who are vying and waiting patiently to take our place as world power. "They smile n your Face".... u no the song!!
February 8, 2008 2:06 PM
 

ImperiousEnt.com said:

Come read and comment about Obama at ImperiousEnt.com.
February 8, 2008 5:11 PM
 

bigchief206 said:

It's the system! It's not the politicians it's not the lobbyists or the bureaucrats....it's the system. It's not the police or the justice department. It's the system and once we realize how corrupt this system is and stop supporting it and start mobilizing and educating ourselves. That's when real change is going to come. The only thing that's going to change with Obama in the White House is the race of the president. We have to watch out for these Uncle Tom's they'll kill you faster than a White Supremacist.
February 12, 2008 6:16 AM
 

bigchief206 said:

to odeisel:

"I began revolution with 82 men. If I had to do it again, I do it with 10 or 15 and absolute faith. It does not matter how small you are if you have faith and plan of action." - Fidel Castro
February 12, 2008 7:55 AM
 

YusufM said:

I'm with you 100% bigchief206!!!!!!!
February 12, 2008 9:00 AM
 

bigchief206 said:

That's 2 about 8 more to go.


www.myspace.com/thebigchief
February 13, 2008 6:50 AM
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