MS NOW-What the July 4 photo of a Black woman surrounded by white supremacists says about America
Hundreds of members of Patriot Front marched in the nations capital July 4, carrying their own flag, several variations of the U.S. flag and a Confederate flag.
https://www.ms.now/opinion/patriot-front-black-woman-photo-washington-metro
Was there a more poignant photo of America at 250 years old than the one Reuters captured of a young Black woman on a Washington commuter train surrounded by white nationalists with covered faces?
There were photos of fireworks on July 4. Photos of the president preening at Mount Rushmore. Photos of the predictably over-the-top red, white and blue patriotic display in Philadelphia before the holidays World Cup match between France and Paraguay. But those spectacles provided a facade that only sees the country as America the Beautiful, when reality is far more complex. The journalist on the Washington Metro who photographed the young Black woman beset by members of the racist Patriot Front provided an uglier and more honest image of this American moment.....
Was there a more poignant photo of America at 250 years old than the one Reuters captured of a young Black woman on a Washington commuter train surrounded by white nationalists with covered faces?
There were photos of fireworks on July 4. Photos of the president preening at Mount Rushmore. Photos of the predictably over-the-top red, white and blue patriotic display in Philadelphia before the holidays World Cup match between France and Paraguay. But those spectacles provided a facade that only sees the country as America the Beautiful, when reality is far more complex. The journalist on the Washington Metro who photographed the young Black woman beset by members of the racist Patriot Front provided an uglier and more honest image of this American moment.....
Besides, Black people never have to go looking for white supremacy to be confronted by it. They can count on it showing up soon enough.
My interview:
âI came to this country as an infant and became a U.S. citizen,â Roswell Encina said. âSo sitting there, on the Fourth of July, I couldnât help but think about the promise of America and the work still required to protect it.â
www.advocate.com/news/people/...
— Christopher Wiggins (@cwnewser.bsky.social) 2026-07-06T17:01:06.221Z
That is the story of that photo: A young Black woman on the Metro going about her business and then finding herself surrounded. While more details about her background and where she was going would be nice to know, those details arent necessary to absorb the symbolism to see that she, in that moment, has a particularly acute case of a chronic problem that infects us all.