Feet of clay
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Hickam Air Force Base. I got hired, and started the next day. The company I worked for was Geronimo Service Co, curiously based in California and Las Vegas. It was a pretty sleazy outfit, and eventually got itself kicked off the base for corrupt activities. I still fondly reminisce about having a hand in their departure, a story for another day. The workers stayed, doing the same jobs for the new employer.
I enjoyed the job for the most part, working with "local" guys - mixtures of "Hawaiian," "Japanese," "Chinese," "Filipino," and just about every other group imaginable. There were a few "Haoles," the term used for "white" people, but no one of "African" descent. Haole is pronounced howlie, and has both a derogatory and neutral connotation, depending on the context.
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My favorite memory of working at Hickam is the day when a couple of crews were working together to get a house ready for its new occupants. The Air Force officer's wife who was moving in showed up, and after a few minutes came up to me and said, "Excuse me sir, but is your name Geronimo?" I was wearing a blue uniform "aloha" shirt with the company name on it, as was everyone else on the crews, about eight people. I told her no, that it was just the company name. She said, "Oh, because that man over there is also named Geronimo, and everyone else here seems to be named Geronimo." It was one of those "You had to be there moments," and we really had great fun with it. Few are those among us who are asked if they are Geronimo.
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Not long after I began teaching I moved to the northeast part of the island, to an area known as Hauula. It was a beautiful spot, a retreat owned by a "Tibetan" lama. It had 40 banana trees, about 10 coconut trees, mango, papaya, and breadfruit trees, and a vegetable garden. I hardly had to shop for groceries at all.
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They busied themselves with normal teenage girl banter until a couple of stops later when an "African-American" guy boarded the bus. He sat in about the middle of the bus, and immediately the girls started whispering and laughing among themselves, saying things like "See the popolo," and "Check out the popolo," and so on. Popolo is the local term for "African-American," and is more derogatory than "nigger." It refers to the black berry of the Solanum nigrum plant.
I've spent a good amount of time in the "American" south, mostly Arkansas and Texas, and was born in the brutally "racist" city of Chicago, but have never experienced such "racial" cruelty as I did that day on the bus. The guy knew what was going on, but just sat there helpless. He didn't move the whole time he was there - didn't look left, didn't look right, just stared straight ahead. The girls, as I remember, were all of "local" mix, and if I remember right, seemed to be of Native "Hawaiian" and Haole mix, known there as "Hapa-haole." The Native "Hawaiians" have suffered genocide and oppression relatively as great as their indigenous counterparts on the "Mainland," but that doesn't insulate them from the universal bigotry against those of us who descended from slaves in the "New World."
Into this cultural milieu our current president, Barack Obama, was born. He grew up partly in "Indonesia," but his formative years were spent mostly in "Hawaii." There is no "racial" majority in "Hawaii," with "Japanese" "Americans" being the largest minority - about 24% when I lived there. Here's a more current breakdown.
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I can't imagine what it must be like to be of mixed "racial" background, at least as it is perceived, to have been abandoned by your father, raised in "Polynesia" by a "Caucasian" mother and grandparents, and to be seen as "different" in a place of such ethnic diversity. What seems clear about Barack Obama is that he is a conciliator to a degree rarely seen, to the point where he seems to have lost his sense of his own foundation, attempting to be all things to all people.
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Still, I believe Barack Obama is about as good a person as we can get to serve as president. Who would we get that would be better? Al Gore? Hillary Clinton? John Kerry? John Edwards? Joe Biden? How about Christopher Dodd? Hardly. We all carry the baggage of our youth, of our circumstances in life, our DNA, our heredity, our environment. And of our own feet of clay. The job may be too great for any one person: The "leader" of the "free" world.
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I wrote something similar to this post in May, in response to an article in Salon.
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The great Ray Kane.
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This is worth reading. This too.
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