Wednesday, September 13, 2017
#BlackOpinionsMatter: Jemele Hill
Donald Trump might not be a white supremacist, but he did hire a lot of them to work in his administration. Donald Trump might not be a white supremacist, but he has demonstrated white supremacist sensitivities over and over again.
No one made him try to destroy the lives of 5 innocent black kids. No one made him knowingly lie about President Obama's birth certificate. No one made him call Mexicans rapists and murders. No one made him open his mouth and spew his anti-Arab and anti-Muslim hatred. No one made him find the good in the self professed white supremacists who terrorized Charlottesville. No one made him pardon the virulent racist Joe Arpaio. Donald Trump alone chose to do all of these things.
I stand 100% behind Jemele Hill. For 8 years "real Americans" and "Evangelicals" believed (and spread) every ignorant conspiracy theory about Barack Obama. None of them were led to FEMA camps. None of them had their guns taken. None of them were forced to convert to Islam. These lies were spread by racists at Fox news and other conservative media outlets and accepted as facts.
Jemele Hill judged Donald Trump by his actions. He has no one to blame but himself. This time last year "real Americans" loved brash outspoken speech, hated the P.C. culture and weren't snowflakes. What happened?
Jemele Hill was reprimanded for calling a spade a spade. She was hired to give her opinion, and now that her personal opinions don't sync up with the powers that be at ESPN she is in jeopardy. This is a prime example of why people of color need their own platforms. "Real Americans" elected a confessed pu$$y grabbing reprobate to the most powerful office in the world, but are ready to kick an opinion journalist out of her job for tweets she made on her own time.
"Real Americans" wonder why athletes are refusing to stand for this hypocrisy. #BlackOpinionsMatter
Tuesday, September 12, 2017
The Democratic Party: An Uneasy Alliance
The Democratic party's inability to move past the 2016
defeat and agree upon a cohesive message moving forward has given rise to a
cottage industry of "think pieces" by racially isolated suburbanites
who believe the biggest obstacle to their progressive economic agenda is social
justice.
These articles get published every few weeks anywhere leftist ideas are disseminated. The theoretical underpinnings of these "progressive" screeds hinge on the faulty notion that the Democratic party could abandon issues of importance to minority communities and maintain the same level of electoral support from these constituencies. This is a fallacy. The moment the Democratic party becomes indistinguishable from the Republican party on social issues apathy and disenchantment with the political process will reduce minority voter turnout.
The Democratic party is like a community that has undergone
a major expansion. It grew big, but it didn't grow closer. The smaller our
circle was the more we identified with those inside it, but as our community/party
got bigger we found ourselves walled off from each other living in our own
insular communities. Many of the authors of these articles suffer from living
in a small circle. It's hard for some of them to understand how damaging their
words are. When progressives view social justice and the economic interests of
minority communities as distinctly different from the economic hardships
working-class whites face it almost assures both problems will continue.
Just like every family has secrets, political parties also push hard truths to the side. There are progressives asking people of color and members of the LGBTQIA community to ignore systemic racism and bigotry. These allies are asking us to place their economic program ahead of our existence in America. This approach centers white feelings. No one would tolerate a doctor telling them that ignoring their pneumonia is a viable treatment for it, yet this is how some on the left seek to treat discrimination.
These articles get published every few weeks anywhere leftist ideas are disseminated. The theoretical underpinnings of these "progressive" screeds hinge on the faulty notion that the Democratic party could abandon issues of importance to minority communities and maintain the same level of electoral support from these constituencies. This is a fallacy. The moment the Democratic party becomes indistinguishable from the Republican party on social issues apathy and disenchantment with the political process will reduce minority voter turnout.
When well-meaning suburbanites reduce political matters
connected to identity to an inconvenience it creates dissention where none is
needed. There are factions inside progressive politics willing to wager that
pushing social justice to the back burner will entice more working-class white
voters to leave the Republican party. This is also fallacy. Yes, there were
Trump voters who previously supported Barack Obama, but they, like many dyed in
the wool conservatives, were not waiting for scholarly arguments about
Keynesian economic policies. Donald Trump sold them the idea that he could end
the era of political correctness and multiculturalism. We have to be honest
about how appealing that promise was to people made uncomfortable by America's
changing demographics.
Just like every family has secrets, political parties also push hard truths to the side. There are progressives asking people of color and members of the LGBTQIA community to ignore systemic racism and bigotry. These allies are asking us to place their economic program ahead of our existence in America. This approach centers white feelings. No one would tolerate a doctor telling them that ignoring their pneumonia is a viable treatment for it, yet this is how some on the left seek to treat discrimination.
The left's electoral future will be bleak if ignoring the
suffering of the Democratic party's most loyal constituency becomes an
acceptable strategy. Democrats already have horrible mid-term election
participation. There's no need to give social activists a reason to stay home.
The Democratic party has to walk and chew gum at the same time. We have to
stand strong against bigoted policies while offering progressive policies that
make it easier to get access to capital, education and healthcare. Justice
for people on the underside of institutional racism, sexism and class
structures isn't negotiable.
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