Bob's Your Uncle

Because of something Ralph Nader said on Election Day -- he asked whether Barack Obama was going to be an Uncle Sam or an Uncle Tom -- I feel obliged to take note of an interview (as posted on YouTube) that Nader did shortly afterward with Fox Report news anchor Shepard Smith, who was shocked by the remark.

Here's my transcription of the interview, followed by my own conclusion. I've also embedded the YouTube video because it conveys the nuances of tone, showing at least to my eyes and ears that Smith was calm, levelheaded, and wholly different from his bombastic colleagues at Fox (despite what looks in print like an excited opening that attempts to bait Nader).

SMITH: Guess who's here? The Independent Party candidate Ralph Nader. This is his second run for the presidency since he played spoiler in the close 2000 contest. This year he was on the ballot in 45 states, plus D.C. This year he was polling about one percent. Ralph, you spoke to Fox News radio's Houston affiliate today and said this [sound excerpt of Nader]:

To put it very simply, he is our first African-American president, or he will be. And we wish him well. But his choice, basically, is whether he's going to be Uncle Sam for the people of this country or Uncle Tom for the giant corporations.

Really. Ralph Nader, what was that?

NADER: It's very simple. He has gone along with corporate power from the moment he entered politics in the [Illinois] state senate. Voted for the Wall Street bailout. Supports expanding the military budget that is desired by the military-industrial complex. Doesn't really have a tax-reform thing for the ordinary fellow in this country. Opposes single-payer full Medicare for all because the giant HMOs, Aetna and Signa, do. Doesn't have a living wage [policy]. He's supposed to be respectful of the poor. Hardly mentions them in his speech. It's all the middle class.

SMITH: You talk "respectful" and you utter the words "Uncle Tom"? Are you kidding me?

NADER: That's the question. Yeah, that's the question he's got to face. He's the first African American --

SMITH: He didn't have to face it until it came out of your mouth. I just wonder if you don't realize you had a number of supporters out there. You were running a percentage [sic]. This year you were reduced to irrelevant, and I just wonder now if that's what you want your legacy to be: The man who on the night that the first African-American president in the history of this nation was elected you ask if he is going to be Uncle Sam or Uncle Tom.

NADER: Yeah, of course. He's turned his back on a hundred million poor people in this country -- African Americans and Latinos and poor whites -- and we're going to hold him to a higher standard. It's just not an unprecedented career move in[to] the White House. We expect more of Barack Obama. It's his big chance --

SMITH: You were reduced to irrelevance here. You weren't able to play spoiler. Will you run again?

NADER: Look, I don't like bullies like you. I can't see you. You can pull the plug on me. I'm look at a dark camera.

SMITH: You said "Uncle Tom. I didn't say it, sir. With respect, I did not say it.

NADER: I said, that's the question he has to answer. He can become a great president, or he can become a toady for the powers that have brought both parties to their knees against working people in this country, and have allowed our country to be highjacked by global corporations who have no allegiance to this country other than to ship its jobs and industries to fascist and communist dictators abroad who know how to keep their workers in their place. This is reality here. This is not show business. It's not celebrity politics. There are people suffering in this country. We expect a great presidency from Barack Obama, and we're going to try and hold his feet to the fire.

SMITH: I just wonder if in hindsight you wish you used a phrase other than "Uncle Tom"?

NADER: Not at all.


My own take is that I understand Nader's points about policy and agree with him, but he should have offered some kind of apology for the personal nature of his attack on Obama, or at least said something to clarify what could be heard -- and doubtless was heard not just by Smith -- as a racist remark.

(Crossposted at HuffPo)

November 7, 2008 10:13 AM | | Comments (3)

3 Comments

I donated to the Obama campaign early on but I stopped when he started taking money from big business. Nader made a valid point. He may have chosen the wrong words to do it but it's a very valid point. Is Obama going to continue helping big business to the expense of us little guys?

It really amazes me how people are already saying negative things about Obama --what's the f#^ing deal? Too angry to enjoy the moment? I just listened to what Nader had to say vs. reading about it and frankly I like the guy less now than I did 20 minutes ago. What a loser he has turned out to be, and an arrogant one to boot. He could have easily made his point about corp. influence without resorting to a plainly racist term like "Uncle Tom." I doubt he even listened to Obama's acceptance speech. I think Nader is an angry irrelevant man who just sunk his own 1% ship. Pathetic...

Ralph Nader should be shunned.

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Me Elsewhere

'WILD SIDE' STILL ROCKS 

Nelson Algren was one of the great American authors of the 20th century, it is no exaggeration to say, and among the most neglected. Consider his underrated classic, "A Walk on the Wild Side." The title -- popularized and co-opted as an idiomatic phrase by Hollywood and Madison Avenue (institutions Algren loathed) -- is familiar to most anyone who speaks English or knows Lou Reed's lyrics. But the novel itself? Hardly.

BUSTER KEATON REVISITED 
Buster Keaton: Tempest in a Flat Hat is not a biography. "This book is merely a fan's notes," Edward McPherson writes in the introduction, although his publisher ignores the disclaimer and calls it a biography on the cover. In fact, the book is a bit of both, a difficult combination to bring off unless you're David Thomson, who set the standard with Rosebud, his penetrating rumination on the life and career of Orson Welles, which was nothing if not a distillation of every obsessive thought he ever had about the myth and the man and all his movies.
LAUREN BACALL, STILL SALTY AT 80 
When Lauren Bacall writes that her singing voice ranges "somewhere between B minus sharp and outer space," she's being candid and funny. It's not every stage star with two Tony Awards for best actress in a musical whose vocal talent offers so little promise. (OK, Harvey Fierstein excepted.) Still less would one admit it.
THE STARS ACCORDING TO BOGDANOVICH 
Peter Bogdanovich's superb collection of movie-star profiles and interviews -- a sequel to Who the Devil Made It, his interviews of top film directors -- begins with an affectionate tale about Orson Welles that reminds us just how intimate the author's connection to Hollywood's greatest has been. But contrary to what we've come to expect from dime-a-dozen celebrities and celebrity interviews not worth two cents, the tale avoids bromidic egotism and journalistic platitudes.
SAMMY'S WHITE DREAMS 
Four decades ago Lenny Bruce sentenced Sammy Davis Jr. to "30 years in Biloxi," stripping him of "his Jewish star" and "his religious statue of Elizabeth Taylor." Now we have two new biographies of Davis that spring him from ridicule, if not from doubts about his legacy, and restore a measure of dignity to a black entertainer whose huge fame and success never overcame his devout wish -- indeed his lifelong effort -- to be white.
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This page contains a single entry by Straight Up | published on November 7, 2008 10:13 AM.

Obama Book Bubble was the previous entry in this blog.

Hidden Burroughs-Kerouac Novel Surfaces;So Does Malcolm Mc Neill's 'lost art of Ah POOK' is the next entry in this blog.

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