Garry Wills in the Nov. 8, 2012 New York Review of Books:
[U]nder the vague general feelings about Obama—reports to pollsters
that he is not quite one of us, perhaps not a citizen, not a
Christian—there were radioactive centers too hot for a candidate to
handle directly. He could, nonetheless, profit from their broader toxic
waves, an unconfessed (sometimes, perhaps, unconscious) force. It was
rightly said that a historic boundary had been crossed when a black man
was elected president. That breakthrough partly escaped but did not
cancel a long sad record of historic American racism. A proof that many
were not willing to live with this new level of tolerance is that twice
as many conservative Republicans (34 percent) now say that Obama is
Muslim as the number who said it when he was elected (16 percent). The
number of Republicans in general who say it is 30 percent.
That
is not because more evidence has emerged in the last three years, or
because the evidence has been more carefully considered. It is because a
number of people are digging in their heels even more firmly against
where the nation is going. As I say, there is no open racism in the
Romney campaign. But it has to be fiercely concentrated on other things
(like the economy) to turn its eyes from what sizzles below the surface,
and sometimes not very far below.
Dinesh D’Souza’s book Obama’s America became number one on the New York Times
best-seller list, and the film based on it has played in over a
thousand theaters, yet its chapter on Obama’s mother revives one of the
oldest racist stereotypes, that a white woman must be a slut if she has
sex with a black man. A “documentary” with that same theme has been
mailed to thousands of voters in key states, screened by Tea Party
groups and by Phyllis Schlafly’s Eagle Forum Council. Guess which man
the audience for these, and for hundreds of obscurer tracts, will vote
for?
Romney, of course, does not cultivate these voters. He does
not have to. He does not denounce them, either. He needs them. He cannot
disown a third of his party—and those are only the hard-core Obama
revulsionists. Who knows how far the penumbra of softcore revulsionism
has spread among the less candid or more cautious harborers of it?
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