Comment: Why the "A" word is deadly serious

William Loren Katz
Guest blogger

Earlier this month, Republican Governor Mike Huckabee at the National Rifle Association heard a backstage noise and joked that it was Senator Obama diving to the floor to avoid gunfire.

A week later came some imitators: Senator Clinton underscored her point that one never knows whether one's luck might take a fortuitous turn, by citing Robert Kennedy's assassination in June 1968, just two months after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

The next day, an editorial cartoon of Senator Obama impaled on a sword, bearing the caption "My Own Words," was featured in Pennsylvania's Wayne Independent. That Sunday, "fair and balanced" Fox TV News weighed in. As she signed off, co-anchor Liz Trotta urged "that somebody knock off Osama, um, Obama -- well both, if we could."

Good night and good luck, indeed.

The obligatory back-steps followed. Huckabee apologized, Clinton expressed regrets to the Kennedy family (not to Obama and his family), and Trotta apologized "to anyone I offended."

Mentioning the "A word" during any election season is no joke. Gunmen have ended the lives of four presidents: Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley and Kennedy. Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan narrowly escaped assassination attempts.

Candidate Robert Kennedy was slain, and candidate George Wallace was so severely wounded that he had to bow out of his campaign.

With a black candidate in the field, any assassination reference has an even more sinister ring that cannot be stilled by "regrets." After the Civil War dozens of southern African American office-holders and the white officials allied with them were slain by Ku Klux Klan nightriders.

In less than a dozen years unrelenting white Southern violence, intimidation and murders ended Lincoln's "new birth of freedom," reversed acts of Congress and nullified three Constitutional Amendments.

In the middle of the 20th century, dozens of racist murders of white and African American civil rights workers aimed to again block justice and equality. And on a Sunday afternoon in 1965 Malcolm X, defying death threats and lacking police protection, died in a hail of bullets in New York City.

If lynching is included, violent opposition to African Americans' pursuit of either public office or other citizenship rights has rolled up a body count in the thousands.

History proves the "A word" is deadly serious.

- William Loren Katz is an author, historian and educator based in New York. An earlier version appeared on Portside. www.williamlkatz.com