African Americans: If You Fear for the Presidents Life, Welcome to Our World [View all]
In the aftermath of the shooting in Virginia yesterday, Bernie Marcus, co-founder of Home Depot, appeared on the Fox Business Network and said that he is so worried about the life of the President of the United States.
I can hear African Americans all over this country tell Marcus in response, Welcome to our world. From the day Barack Obama won the Iowa caucus in 2008, they worried about the life of the man who would become our countrys first African American president. It was such a prevalent feeling that the television show Blackish featured it in a powerful episode in response to police shootings.
That fear wasnt limited to African Americans. A lot of white people felt it too as, over the course of eight years we heard, for the first time in modern history, talk of second amendment remedies and watched tea partiers regularly show up at rallies with a Confederate flag in one hand and a gun in the other.
But we cant leave it there. This is not one of those things that lends itself to false equivalence. Barack Obama constantly spoke of the need for us to show more empathy, expand our moral imagination and listen to each other. He also walked his talk. While Obama regularly pointed to differences he had with Republicans over policies, he never maligned, belittled or threatened the opposition personally. In other words, the fear about whether or not he would survive his presidency was based primarily on the fact that he was a Black man facing a racist insurgency.
Trump is the one who encouraged violence at his campaign rallies, talked about how he could shoot someone on the street and his supporters wouldnt abandon him and said this about his opponent, If she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, folks. Although the Second Amendment people maybe there is, I dont know.
Read More:
http://washingtonmonthly.com/2017/06/15/african-americans-if-you-fear-for-the-presidents-life-welcome-to-our-world/
Watch the video...heartbreaking. I felt the fear as well.