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On Inauguration Day, Obama could outlaw torture. It would be a tribute to those slaves who built his new home, the White House.

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How Obama Can Help Redeem the White House

By Amy Goodman, Truthdig. Posted November 13, 2008.


On Inauguration Day, Obama could outlaw torture. It would be a tribute to those slaves who built his new home, the White House.

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Alice Walker is the first African-American woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. But Monday, I called her to talk about a true story. The Obamas had just visited the White House. The first African-American elected president of the United States had visited his soon-to-be residence, a house built by slaves. Walker told me: "Even when they were building it, you know, in chains or in desperation and in sadness, they were building it for him. Ancestors take a very long view of life, and they see what is coming." The author of The Color Purple, who writes about slavery and redemption, went on, "This is a great victory of the spirit and for people who have had to live basically by faith."

Many decades ago, Alice Walker had broken anti-miscegenation laws in Mississippi by marrying a white man. She is a descendant of slaves.

While Barack Obama is not -- he is the son of a Kenyan man and a white Kansan woman -- his wife, Michelle, is, and so, too, are their daughters, Sasha and Malia. Michelle Obama's ancestors come from South Carolina; her grandfather was part of the great migration north to Chicago.

Melissa Harris-Lacewell, associate professor of politics and African-American studies at Princeton University, reflected on the Obamas' forthcoming move: "There are two African-American girls, little girl children, who are going to grow up with 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue as their home address. That's an astonishing difference for our country. It does not mean the end of racial inequality. It does not mean that most little black girls growing up with their residence on the South Side of Chicago or in Harlem, or Latino boys and girls growing up at their addresses, that the world is all better for them. But it does mean that there is something possible here."

Construction of the White House started in 1792, with sandstone quarried by slaves in Aquia, Va., then transported up the Potomac River and hauled into place by slaves. The White House Historical Association lists several of the slaves on that historic construction crew: "Tom, Peter, Ben, Harry and Daniel, three of whom were slaves owned by White House architect James Hoban." Stonecutters, or sawyers, "on government payrolls, such as 'Jerry,' Jess,' 'Charles,' 'Len,' 'Dick', 'Bill' and 'Jim' undoubtedly were slaves leased from their masters." Randall Robinson, in his book The Debt, wrote of slave labor in the construction of the U.S. Capitol: "The worn and pitted stones on which the tourists stood had doubtless been hauled into position by slaves, for whom the most arduous of tasks were reserved. They had fired and stacked the bricks. They had mixed the mortar. They had sawn the long timbers in hellishly dangerous pits with one slave out of the pit and another in, often nearly buried alive in sawdust."

Looking forward, Barack Obama can make history in another way. The executive orders he issues will set the tone of his presidency and could usher in a new era. Human-rights groups are calling for the closing of the Guantanamo prison camp and CIA "black sites," where torture has been commonplace.

Which brings us back to slavery. When Frederick Douglass, the renowned abolitionist, was young, he was enslaved on a plantation on Maryland's Eastern Shore, called Mount Misery, owned by Edward Covey, a notorious "slave breaker." There, physical and psychological torture were standard. That property, today, is owned by Donald Rumsfeld, the former secretary of defense who was one of the key architects of the U.S. military's program of torture and detention.

With the stroke of a pen on Inauguration Day, President Obama could outlaw torture. It would be a tribute to those slaves who built his new home, the White House, a tribute to those slaves who built the U.S. Capitol Building, a tribute to those who were tortured at Mount Misery.

Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.

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Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!

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Yes
Posted by: adempatriot on Nov 13, 2008 4:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Powerful article. I agree with every word. Thank you, Amy Goodman.

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ANOTHER WAY TO REDEEM IT -- BUILD THE SERFS SOME BOMB SHELTERS
Posted by: salt-of-the-earth on Nov 14, 2008 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama has lots of underground shelters beneath the White House. Comfy, lots of food and water. He can stay down there in luxury for months and months, even years if need be.

Maybe that's why he's so eager to start WWIII with Russia, China and Pakistan?

Russia has lots of bomb shelters for THEIR people.

But our government DOES NOT CARE ABOUT US. In facat, OUR GOVERNMENT WANTS US DEAD. Why? Because Americans are too uppity, and there are too many baby boomers who are ready to collect Social Security and there isn't any money because they spent all of it. And the plan of the elites is to reduce the world population from 6.5 billion to just 500 million, and they want to start with America.

We need to bombard Congress and DEMAND they start building us some BOMB SHELTERS -- that this comes first before anything else, the mlitary budget, the free healthcare they are talking about. They need to slash everything to the bone and start building bomb shelters.

Who knows, it might even start the economy back to health, put a lot of people to work.

AFTER the bomb shelters are built, THEN Obama can go back to his plans for war. Until THEN, I think he's got a lto of nerve flaunting the plans to use our tax dollars to start a war that is going to result in all of us DEAD.

These people have too much NERVE. I'd like to run them out of the country, send them to Russia, and let them explain over there why they were plotting to shock and awe their country away.

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Marjorie Cohn adds to the signing, forbidding torture,by extending
Posted by: NYCartist on Nov 17, 2008 2:52 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to none of the various "inhumane" and other acts on prisoners, giving specific suggestions. Marjorie Cohn has her own website;is a law professor and President of the National Lawyers Guild.

Amy Goodman really captured the feeling of it very quickly by pointing out the slaves were first names only. (Men. My question always is: where were the women? Women get left out of history a lot. As an artist, I'm very aware of it.)

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Another Reference to Slavery For Obama to End
Posted by: drricklippin on Nov 22, 2008 6:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I was fortunate enough to be invited to the White House for "high tea" to help raise money for breast cancer research I noted that all the food servers were older black males serving of course mostly white guests..I have also seen this on TV during state dinners.

Now I do not want good people to lose good jobs but this part of the White House staff is a reminder of the days of slavery

So let Obama end it.A number of smart previous Presidents should have done so decades ago.

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa

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The Reason Obama Won't Hold the Guilty to Account
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Nov 28, 2008 8:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush doesn't need to issue a de jure pardon for his accomplices, because Obama has already issued a de facto pardon. The new president will not pursue war and human rights criminals because that would implicate members of his new team, plus the husband of his secretary of state.

Bill Clinton's administration invented "extraordinary rendition," more prosaically known as kidnapping, forced disappearance, conspiracy to violate human rights and torture by proxy.

Any investigation, and subsequent prosecutions, cannot rely on a de facto statute of limitations for offenses prior to 20 January 2001, so Obama will scuttle the whole concepts of rule of law, accountability and respect for human rights. While he might halt the outrages, he will neither regain the respect of the world and the tolerance of our potential enemies by prosecuting the guilty, nor deter future wrongdoing.

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I second the suggestion
Posted by: racetoinfinity on Nov 29, 2008 1:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here, here! (to your suggestions for Obama's first day in the White House.

It's some kind of cosmic irony that Rumsfeld owns the same property as that sadist who "broke" slaves. (Or maybe a sad testament to the persistence of a sadistic ruling class).

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Torture is already illegal
Posted by: mutualaid on Nov 30, 2008 8:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's needed is accountability for the design and implementation of the torture policy.

That's the only way to end torture: by not allowing those who broke the law in order to torture to go free.

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Actually, not fully Yes
Posted by: thekid on Dec 1, 2008 3:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all due respect, I think Miss Goodman in stretching this out, tries to tie two things together that aren't.

The horror of slavery, and the fact that the White House was built by slaves, will not be addressed by the removal of torture-although that is something that Definitely needs to be done.

The fact is, that you have the first President who is African American, living in the White House, and the history of the White House will never be the same-with all due respect to Alice Walker, those who were forced to complete this building, sigh, did not know of this future, Emancipation was at least a Century plus away.

The removal of Torture, is a tribute to the ideals of the United States, which to quote the President Elect, "Has seen so much, and come so far, but we still have a ways to go."

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Torture is already illegal. You just have to enforce the laws.
Posted by: gunboat diplomat on Dec 2, 2008 10:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What kind of nonsense?

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