Needless to say, unless Obama wins the election, almost no black person in the United States will recognise the validity of the result. But things are worse than that: even if he is elected, any opposition to any of his programmes will be considered prima facie evidence of latent or disguised racism. In either case, there is little evidence that the Obama candidacy is pointing the United States in a "post-racial" direction or anything resembling it. What the black community - and, for that matter, the white liberal community, including almost all the media, which clusters around Obama's banners - seems not to have noticed is that the United States is slowly becoming far more multiracial than in the past. Hispanics have become the largest single minority in the United States, surpassing blacks by two percentage points and still growing. Other non-white communities are also expanding, particularly the Chinese and Indians. (The Indian-American community, nearly 1m strong, is the most prosperous minority group in the United States, and its younger generation - best embodied by Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal, a Republican - are starting to enter the higher end of professions and politics.) While some Hispanics and Asian-Americans are Democrats and will vote for Obama, they will do so because they are Democrats, not because he is black. And in time they will find their own political voice, perhaps not as "minorities" at all but as Americans who happen to be one colour rather than another.
In that sense the Obama candidacy, regardless of its outcome, may represent a concluding chapter in the American drama, although not in the way its black or white supporters seem to think.
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