Malek: Yup. I guess the underlying issues I'm trying to tease out of this are:
* White candidates aren't expected to give intraracial lectures on personal morality. The expectation that a black candidate talk about broken homes reminds me of FoC demanding that Muslims constantly denounce the actions of other Muslims they've never met. A lot of white people worry about a black leader siding with black people over whites in some kind of zero sum game, and a black candidate has to assuage those fears.
1* The idea that Obama's ascension would empower the traditional players
2 in and ideologies of black political influence was always crazy. Yeah, he was very close to a liberation theologist. But his stated attitudes towards racial conciliation were always very different
3 and he dominated the black vote
without using the transactional politics that makes Sharpton, Jackson, et al potential kingmakers.
4[1] Democrats in general, too. That's what the Sistah Soljah moment was about. That's what the supremely silly Farrakhan stuff was about. I don't remember an explicit suggestion that he do this
5 but the "celebrity tells fellow blacks to shape up" meme is well established.
[2] Sharpton and Jackson seem like assholes and the position of De Facto Minority Spokesperson creates all sorts of conflicts of interest, but I'm wary of anyone in politics who spends a lot of time criticizing them. "Oh, I'd love to engage with and help the black community, if only those guys weren't in the way!" Right.
[3] The thing that stuck with me about Obama's big race speech was how he acknowledged everyone's grievances as legitimate, including the white people who feel like they're the ones being treated unfairly. My reaction to those people is a lot more rolleyes oriented, but from a pragmatic standpoint he's probably got the right of it.
[4] Huckabee did a similar thing on the right, using home school networks to bypass the old guard evangelicals like Robertson and Falwell.
[5] It's entirely possible that Obama's saying this stuff because he believes it and thinks it's important. He's the son of an absentee black father and wrote a memoir about it. But it's hard to believe anything in a prepared speech during a campaign would be apolitical, and it would keep me from having fun and overanalyzing it to death.