Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Pride and prejudice


I'll be honest with you, I never thought we'd see this day in my life time. I never ever thought we'd ever have a black man be the nominee of the Democratic party in my lifetime. I knew for certain we'd never see a black man be the nominee of the Republican party and we probably never will. But I always thought that it would be another 100 years or so until we had progressed enough to vote for a black man to be our next Presidential nominee. But here we are with Barack Obama as the presumptive nominee of the Democratic party and I feel like I am not only witnessing history, I feel like I am about to burst with pride.

I was born in 1962 when the civil rights movement was just getting into gear. For the first ten years of my life I lived in the projects in Detroit. I was in the minority in my old neighborhood, there were only three white families in Smith Homes Housing Projects and ours was one of them. I grew up surrounded by black folks, my best friend was a black kid named Aaron Lewis, and we spent many hours playing, talking, eating, and in each others homes. As close as he and I were there was always something between us, and it was the unspoken knowledge that right then, and for the foreseeable future as far as we knew, that white people would always have the upper hand and would always run things.
But tonight things may finally have changed for the better.

For a country that once enslaved black folks and counted them as 3/5ths of a human to now have a black man as the presumptive nominee of one of it's major political parties is astounding. This has never happened in Great Britain, France, Brazil, or any other major democracy outside of Africa, so it's a historic day.

I started out backing Dennis Kucinich in this long Democratic party primary season and then when he started flirting with hitching his wagon to Ron Paul I dropped my support of him. Then he dropped out and I tossed my support behind John Edwards because I like his populist message, then he dropped out. At that point, frankly I was afraid to publicly back Obama for fear that I'd curse him too, but I went ahead and joined his camp and I never looked back. My first choice didn't get the nomination and neither did my second choice but I ended up backing the best choice.

And it's time for you Hillary supporters to join the rest of us in backing our presumptive nominee. No more holding out hope against hope that the super delegates will switch to her campaign. It's over. Obama won and if you care about your party, about this country, about ending the war, about ending Republican and corporate malfeasance, about keeping a woman's right to choose safe from the right wing religious nut bags, about reclaiming our civil liberties and restoring our reputation in the world, then you better get on this train. You need to support the man who history has chosen to be our first black President. Senator Obama has electrified a good portion of this nation and with your help we'll put him in the White House even if it pisses off the citizens of West Virginia (sorry June) and Kentucky.
When I was a boy people referred to blacks as n*ggers, jigaboos, monkeys, and animals. Now, 4o some odd years later people will finally call a black man "Mr. President." How effing cool is that?

12 comments:

Bradda said...

Pure history in the making. Unfortunately it was overshadowed by Hillz refusing to accept reality. What should be a front page story on every paple in the free world will be a 2-part story. "Obama Wins!" "Clinton Stays?" Congragulations Barack Obama, soak it in sir for we have alot of work to do.

Jess Wundrun said...

I love your title. And I'm with bradda. I wish we were dancing in the streets tonight but everywhere in the lefty blogosphere is not jubilation for our victory but tiptoeing around Hillary supporters feelings.

Freida Bee said...

¡¡¡¡¡YEEEAAAA!!!!!

Little Merry Sunshine said...

What a night! I agree I never thought I'd see this happen, but I couldn't be happier.

dguzman said...

No one needs to tiptoe around this Hillary supporter's feelings.

It's WAR now--and I'll fight as hard as I can for Obama.

Snad said...

You know, this "tiptoe around Hillary supporters' feelings" rationale, if that is what it truly is, infuriates me more than anything that has gone on so far with this campaign.

"Be careful. Those females get awfully upset when they don't get their way!" Now, THAT is sexist!

Rock on Obama. I'm breathing easier today, but I'll breathe even easier when he picks someone OTHER than Hillary for VP. It is, indeed, time to MOVE ON!

Crayons said...

Dr.
I'm starting to hear a new tone of voice in the mouths of my angry, sarcastic, outraged, despondant friends. I'm hearing my own voice change. It's like the Munchkins are coming out, wherever they are. Maybe we can all start working toward something together again. This working against has gotton too heavy.

Dean Wormer said...

Your post made me a bit verklempt.

I made my youngest watch that speech last night. He's not that interested in politics yet (his older sisters are) but I told him he was watching history and it would be something he would tell people when he was old and grey.

Unknown said...

As a black man I have to say, I am utterly and completely impressed with a lot of white americans. To see groups of older "white" people hugging in the streets yesterday and excited and across the U.S. once Barak was elected shocked and impressed the hell out of me. This is truly a moment in history where I think things will get better for us racially. God bless you guys.

Sherry Pasquarello said...

i think it's so damn great that at 56 i am here to see a black man as the nominee and i pray, president.

i am a white middle-aged blue collar woman from pennsylvania

AND an obama supporter!

barbie2be said...

frankly, i can't wait to see those darling little girls of his running around the presidential residence in their footy pj's with their favorite teddy bear in their arms.

Missy said...

It is a wonderful thing. Obama-bastic!

Let's keep ramping up that equality, respect and love for all