Now I bet there's a headline you thought you'd never see.
On Wednesday (28/5/14) US President Obama gave a big foreign policy
speech in front of the graduating class at the West Point military
academy which I've still not seen. I will need to get around to looking
at it though mainly because I was under the impression that Obama
doesn't have a foreign policy. Instead he seems to view big world events
such as the wars in Afghanistan, Syria and beyond simply as threats to
the re-election chances of his Democrat Party that need to be avoided.
However I gather one of the main thrusts of his speech was a shift away
from hard US military power towards soft cultural power.
In the hours prior to Obama's speech it was announced that Maya Angelou
had died and Obama's message was almost drowned out by figures of
America's political left including the White House's own Twitter account
paying gushing tribute. If - like most people - you are not familiar
with her work Maya Angelou was a moderately talented American diarist of
the mid-twentieth century.
The majority of Angelou's fame though came from the fact that she had an
extremely brutal upbringing in America's racially segregated south.
This involved her being raped as a child and seeing her rapist killed by
her relatives before dropping out of high school to become a drug
addict and prostitute. Angelou's style of writing was very good at
conveying simple emotion which allowed her to rally America's
emotionally repressed white liberal left to "the plight of the negro"
helping generate support for the burgeoning civil rights movement led by
Martin Luther King during the 1960's. In short Angelou is a perfect
example of a soft power tool which is why her books were so heavily
promoted and she was allowed to trade on that reputation for the rest of
her career.
Although the way Angelou's work was used during the civil rights era was
generally quite positive the way it was used in later years -
particularly in Africa - actually ended up being quite damaging. This is
particularly true when groups such as women and Black people of all
nationalities whose suffering she was intended to highlight were
encouraged to look to her for inspiration. As a victim of tremendous
abuse in order to survive Angelou had to find a way to rationalise that
abuse and that led her to almost crave more abuse. So encouraging
oppressed people to follow Angelou's example strikes me as encouraging
them to tolerate their oppression rather then finding a way to end it.
This is obviously hugely attractive to politicians like Hillary Clinton
who require a large section of the population to continue being
oppressed so they will vote for leaders who claim to understand their
suffering.
The thing that really gave me a headache about the turn of events though
was that Rihanna revealed herself as someone who has been inspired by
Angelou and there are certainly similarities between the lives of these
two of life's victims. Mainly though this highlighted to me that the US'
soft power efforts that Obama wants to increase currently seem focused
on using one of the most famous women in the world to remind everyone
that the Americans can behave like complete dicks.
(Originally Posted) 17:10 on 30/5/14 (UK date).
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