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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsI'm going to talk about Trump's racism, but I'm not distracted from anything.
...Trump's latest vile attacks on the Obamas are indeed an attempted distraction from something or the other he's desperate for the American people to not dwell on.
But it's also another reinforcement of white, republican political leaders' deliberate retreat from the promises of the civil rights era; not as some leveling of the playing field as many of them like to couch their demagoguery and sophistry; but as a pronounced diminution of the value and contributions of black people in this country, and even an elevation of actual traitors to this nation who were invested in slavery and genocide.
There has never been a full realization of the promises behind the 14th Amendment which intended to grant citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the U.S., including formerly enslaved individuals, and ensure equal protection under the law. Or the 15th Amendment, prohibiting the denial of the right to vote based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
Instead, there's been a wanton clawing back of those federal protections in successive republican presidencies since the Reagan era, aided vigorously by like-minded republicans in Congress and on the Supreme Court.
Thing is, Americans already witnessed to the injustice and abuses of the past voted these republicans into office. It's not as if aliens landed from another planet and brain-boxed these people. Sure, republican politicians have honed their political appeal to the lowest denominator and have either discovered, or advantaged a well of racism in America that never went away.
We saw this during the Obama presidency with the 'backlash,' as many journos described it, against the notion of a black man and his supporters making rules and norms for a white majority, of which, many were assuming their race's (or religion's) eternal dominance over the rest of the country.
So much noise was made about affirmative action, as if blacks in America had achieved more than a tenuous parity with their white counterparts which was balanced on a disingenuous promise of equality that never occurred to millions of white in the country, and was never actually accepted by the multitudes who were made to grudgingly relinquish their spaces to people they'd been conditioned to believe were beneath them; made to be subservient in ways they'd never before even contemplated.
I remember well, my first opportunity to rise to the level of management in the retail store where I worked as a young man, and being told that I would be transferred to D.C. in a predominately black neighborhood, and asking (and getting such defensiveness) why the company seemed to be unable to keep black managers in the suburbs.
I explained to him that I grew up in this community, and in fact, had attended the high school directly in back of the store. After a few hours I was called back into the office and informed that my retail management training would begin in that very suburban country, not the suggested deporting to someone else's hometown; but not without a lecture from him about how 'offended' he was by my complaint.
I told him that, 'I appreciated his offense,' and I don't know how that went over with him, but that one act of defiance propelled me into several decades of upwardly mobile successes in that industry into retirement.
We got to a certain point in repairing the damage done in this country, with successive presidents honoring and assisting the advancement of black people through a society still inclined to discrimination as opportunism against people who can't remove the color of their skin to accommodate or negate their bias against them; and someone decided it was fine and dandy to appeal to those antipathies as a way to political power.
That's the essence of the republican party today, with their appeals to the worst of the worst, parading out the same tired, corrosive racism that their great-grandfathers once used to subjugate an entire race of people to their will.
But while this nation may well still have a well-spring of insecure losers who think blaming people of color for their own lameness makes them lions and kings; if you look around, these fools are surrounded. THAT'S why they're squealing and slopping about like stuck pigs.
They're sensing the end of their delusional political front they erected to avoid measuring their weakness and cowardly lameness against the people they've been telling themselves are 'DEI' and inferior to their sorry selves. it's been really something to see what the republican party has become as they parade around in what they believe are their best suits, and shit all over themselves as we watch.
Dominance and superiority over others is something these people exercise, not something they inherently possess. As one of my writing influences, W.E.B. Du Bois wrote so eloquently at beginning of the last century in his book, 'Souls of Black Folk' :
Keepthesoulalive
(2,183 posts)But no mention of the black man executed by ice. He wants to change the narrative, dont let him.
I am one of the few left who experienced segregation, my cousins in the south told me which water fountain I should use. He floods the zone with bull hoping to distract from the worst leadership the country and the world has seen in our lifetime. I know his game con artists are constantly telling you to look over there as they pick your pocket. Jeffrey Epstein
bigtree
(93,722 posts)...but THIS is MY thing.
And I won't let it just wash over me and let it pool up somewhere else where others wade, and others drown in it,
Keepthesoulalive
(2,183 posts)White women benefiting from affirmative action, new master same as the old master. Racism becoming acceptable again, black women dying because they cant get medical care. I am no longer raw I am just pissed and determined. I can see this 2nd chapter of insanity has been painful for you and I wish you peace. The thin veneer has worn off and the world sees the ugly.
bigtree
(93,722 posts)...and I took my writing to my mother and she said, matter-of-factly that, 'It's all been said before.'
I told her that it needed to be said again, and she laughed a bit.
You know, she kept everything I sent her that was published and bragged about it to her friends. Eventually, she could see the walls closing in on her generation's struggle and progress that you can see in her mementos from the marches, protests, and such she attended in that era.
I see it as a generational challenge. Vigilance, and all that.
I'm only dismayed because I began to believe in that progress; believing in my fellow humans. Of course, you only experience these kinds of setbacks when you've been pushing forward.
Keepthesoulalive
(2,183 posts)Who would believe a con man. Most people dont learn they would prefer to believe a lie even though they will suffer along with people they consider less than. The South did not prosper until they tamped down their racism. Gas was 29cents a gallon and folks were picking cotton for 50 cents a day a coke was 7 cents. They just voted themselves back into poverty.
bigtree
(93,722 posts)...we had an interruption in responsible leadership that respected civil rights which created the vacuum in which these bigots emerged.
I was watching a PBS special about school desegregation, and there was a scene where three women who had been the first in their state/town to integrate a public school went back and walked up the hill where there had been a gauntlet of troopers, reporters, and folks yelling epithets and slurs as they walked up to the school back in those awful days.
One of the things which struck me was the point where they had made it up to the school, surprised how long the driveway seemed today; and the one question that was on all of their minds was, 'why?'
Why would folks act that way toward children seeking to learn at the same school as their white counterparts?
The most revealing thing was found in their recollection of how they had eventually succeeded in establishing themselves at the school - the first school year after integration found these 20 or so black kids with this formerly all-white school all to themselves because the majority of the white kids had been pulled out by their parents.
In fact, most of the white parents and legislators who had been invested in segregated public education in their southern state were willing to just shut the entire system down to avoid integrating and sending their children to school with black kids.
Turns out, the following year, most of the white kids were allowed by their parents and the community establishment to come back to the school(s) in overwhelming numbers and the process of integration that we take for granted today was allowed to proceed.
I remember how, in my town in the early 1980's, how employers were already wary about hiring because of a recession, but there seemed to be a lot of lingering racism which was institutionalized in the remaining imbalance in the levels of power and control of businesses and institutions hadn't yet caught up with the population changes.
About 4 or five years later, as my own children's generation was graduating from high school with their fully integrated and opportune class, employers opened the floodgates and allowed this educated and motivated community to fill the much needed slots in a rapidly expanding economy.
In many ways we never looked back; never looked back. In about a blink of an eye, the barriers which seemed so impenetrable in the recent past seemed to evaporate overnight as the truths of integration outstripped all of the hype and conjecture about racial relationships which had so gripped our community for decades.
It was like that in the past, on a different degree of transformation with the schools and in employment after the passage of equal employment laws and school desegregation efforts. All of the sudden the barriers in folks' minds just fell (for most, it seemed).
At the end of it all, we're just left to wonder -- reflecting on all of the anxiety and angst we'd felt about crossing those artificial barriers to our successes -- just, why? Why did this happen, if it was all so possible to just let it go? Why was all of this perpetrated on a people? Opportunism? Evil? Hysteria?
I don't know. It's the way some humans are, I have to suppose.
What I do know is that it takes leadership from the top, as Johnson provided, to motivate a nation to unite; conversely, as we've seen, it takes just one demagogue to tear it down again.
Keepthesoulalive
(2,183 posts)They could not bear to see a popular educated black man representing their country. People who i believed were friends turned into gun humping racist nuts. Some even joined the unite the right rally in Charlottesville. A monster came up from the racist swamp with conspiracy theories and Fox amplified them. This has been under the surface just waiting for sunlight and here we are.
malaise
(294,130 posts)Dominance and superiority over others is something these people exercise, not something they inherently possess.
Keepthesoulalive
(2,183 posts)Sometimes what is not a big deal for me because I am used to it can cause folks on the internet to go crazy. It is a firestorm on YouTube, he has pulled the picture and blamed it on someone else because you never pull off the mask or sheet. There is a gentleman Paul Lance who puts the blame where it belongs and I am afraid he is going to have a stroke. As the old saying goes about pictures and words.
leftstreet
(39,501 posts)cachukis
(3,748 posts)Machiavelli opined, a leader should inspire love and fear. When in doubt fear works better.
We lack leadership that demands respect and trust. Trust must be called out, not in foxholes, but in the workplace, bars and churches.
Obama brought out the vote, but his agenda enraged the opposition. They could not handle his class and integrity. It destroyed their false superiority. Trump brought their pride in their weaknesses they refused to admit, to a full fledged exhibition.
Let us hope we can make sure it is their last gasp at relevance. I am worried the destruction of our government with infiltration of bad actors may delay or prohibit a full recovery.
Let us inspire the next generations, who accept diversity, to reclaim the progress the trumpers are working to erase.
