Obama should’ve stayed out of this one

Christina M. Tapper
ZORA
Published in
4 min readDec 3, 2020

--

Photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images

ZORA Fam,

During these last four years, I wondered why former President Barack Obama was relatively quiet as our nation morphed into a raging dumpster fire. I don’t expect politicians to be saviors, but I thought the Hope Evangelist could help extinguish some fears with a few inspiring sermons like he did back in the day. Now, with a new book to promote, A Promise Land, Obama can’t stop talking. Though, I really wish he would.

In a recent interview with the Snapchat political show Good Luck America, Obama cautioned activists against using “defund the police” messaging. He said:

“If you believe, as I do, that we should be able to reform the criminal justice system so that it’s not biased and treats everyone fairly, I guess you can use a snappy slogan like ‘defund the police.’ But, you know, you lost a big audience the minute you say it. Which makes it a lot less likely that you’re actually going to get the changes you want done.”

With comments like that, a former community organizer, now among the Black capitalist liberal elite, can lose an audience too. Obama’s critique of activists’ language points to how out of touch he is, namely that he didn’t call “defund the police” what it is: a demand. It is not a slogan of the confectionery kind, nor is it abstract like Obama’s 2008 “Change We Can Believe In.” (Though, to his credit, Obama did mobilize folks around “Yes we can” during his first presidential campaign. But we must also remember he co-opted it from Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta’s “Si, se puede,” a grassroots rallying cry for the United Farm Workers Association in the 1970s.)

To Obama, “defund the police” is simply a catchphrase. He misses the point. It is, as Missouri Rep-elect Cori Bush says, “a mandate for keeping our people alive.”

➡️ Read: What ‘Defund the Police’ Really Means

Not one to radically galvanize around the urgency that a moment or movement calls for, Obama operates from a don’t-shake-the-table political stratosphere. His track record is indicative of this. This summer, Obama convinced NBA unionized players to go back to hooping amid a work stoppage. In 2016, he said Colin Kaepernick and others who take a knee should think about the pain they’re causing military families. During the Ferguson uprisings in 2014, Obama’s observations about policing poor communities were problematic. He is a reformist, a declaration he made clear in his most recent comments, who works to uphold a law enforcement system (while making a few tweaks to it) that destroys Black lives and futures.

The demand to defund the police, as ZORA contributing writer Arionne Nettles points out, lies on a spectrum. Some folks see it as a compromise, a reform itself, if plans to reduce law enforcement budgets and reallocate money to community and social services involve keeping cops around in decreased numbers. Others see defunding the police as a transitional step toward eliminating the whole system and working to replace it with restorative justice models that don’t involve cops or prisons.

Ultimately, abolishing the carceral state, to create a safer, more just, and healthier world, is where our focus and fight should be. And that — to borrow a few slogan-ish words from Obama — is the change we should believe in.

Take care,
Christina M. Tapper, deputy editor

Zero to 💯

Who kept it 100 this week? Let’s take a look.

Sasha Obama Makes makes (another) Tik-Tok appearance 💯/💯
The youngest of the Forever First Daughters is showing off her moves (and her fly ass nails) in a Tik-Tok video with her friends. In October, a Tik Tok of Sasha lip-syncing JT’s verse from the “Said Sum” remix by Moneybagg Yo and City Girls went viral. We just love to see Sasha having fun!

Morgan Jerkins Named to Forbes 30 Under 30 💯/💯
ZORA’s own senior editor was recently named to Forbes’ 30 Under 30 class of 2021 for her contributions to the literary world. Congrats, Morgan! Your ZORA fam is so proud!

Marsai Martin Sets Guinness World Record 💯/💯
The Black-ish star done broke a record, y’all. She was recently named the youngest executive producer of any major Hollywood production for her role in the comedy Little, which she produced at 14 years and 241 days old. What an inspiration.

Noma Dumezweni’s Magnificent Performance in The Undoing 💯/💯
Nicole Kidman and Hugh Grant may be the leads on the HBO hit show, but Dumezweni, who plays a stoic but unrelenting attorney, is a true scene-stealer. Her “muck” monologue and explanation of white entitlement had me glued to the TV.

This DJ is Giving Us All the Jams With His Mixes: 💯/💯
Jimir Reece Davis, aka Amorphous, has an impeccable ear. Already he’s gifted us with Beyoncé’s “Formation” x Missy Elliot’s “She’s a Bitch,” Victoria Monet’s “Moment” x “Floetry’s “Say Yes,” and Rihanna’s “Kiss It Better” x Luther Vandross’ “Never Too Much.” Let me not forget the way he went in on the transitions between Bey x Missy x Mary J. Blige x Monica, here.

The Best of Us

ICYMI, here are some of our favorite ZORA stories

30 Years of White Supremacy Told Through My Hair by Leah Olson

Here’s What You Should Know About Saturn Return by Ashleigh D. Jay

A History of Mediocre White Men (and How They Get Ahead) by Adrienne Samuels Gibbs

Netflix Revitalized the Corny Christmas Special With Black Joy by Ronda Racha Penrice

What it Really Takes to “Level Up” in Love by Ayesha K. Faines

🗣️ The Last Word 🗣️

“When someone shows you who they are, believe them.” ― Maya Angelou

You’re subscribed to receive emails from ZORA. You can adjust your settings via the link at the bottom of this email.

--

--

Christina M. Tapper
ZORA

Rule breaker, champion of women and education, and recovering sports journalist.