I'm SO Happy For You! I'm SO Happy For You!
That's what I want to say to each of us but more so to the black community and especially to the older black generation.
Listen, in the beginning of this campaign, the latter were voting for Senator Clinton in large part because they believed Barack Obama was unelectable due to being black. Once they saw that was not the case when he won in Iowa, most got right behind him and supported him all the way to victory in the end. They came out for him like they came out for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and supported him not only because he was black but because his ideas are good and his intentions genuine.
Yesterday I saw an older black lady going into the store and she had a beautiful and vibrant deep purple Obama shirt on. Favorite color, favorite candidate, and not a shirt I've seen so as I passed by her, I commented on it. I said to her "Ooh, that's our man right there!" but she didn't hear me so I said "Your shirt, I like it but I like him even more!" And she was so surprised and delighted and said "Oh, yes, yes." It was awesome.
Later I thought of that little old lady who in her youth never dreamt a white person would address themselves to her, much less with respect and joy over another black person, much less one coming into power and I could understand the look on her face of perplexement mixed with joy and just being so pleased. She just cannot believe this is happening.
It's what I was talking about a couple of days ago and why I say I want to say to them - the older black generation, more than anybody - "I'm SO happy for you!" This is SO BIG time to these people who lived through hell. It is big to the younger generation as well, although perhaps not as much since they have grown up with blacks "making it" so to speak, but still plenty since they have grown up with the history being told at their homes of what their families went through.
Man, it's like we've been on a death march in this country for a LONNNNNNNG time and all of a sudden, we have actually made it to the other side of the bridge or to the water at the end of the desert. It's a beautiful thing and I AM SO HAPPY FOR YOU, black community and for YOU too, white community. I'm SO happy for us all. This doesn't erase the past nor make everything all honky-dory but we can now finally truly begin in earnest. YES WE CAN!
Listen, in the beginning of this campaign, the latter were voting for Senator Clinton in large part because they believed Barack Obama was unelectable due to being black. Once they saw that was not the case when he won in Iowa, most got right behind him and supported him all the way to victory in the end. They came out for him like they came out for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and supported him not only because he was black but because his ideas are good and his intentions genuine.
Yesterday I saw an older black lady going into the store and she had a beautiful and vibrant deep purple Obama shirt on. Favorite color, favorite candidate, and not a shirt I've seen so as I passed by her, I commented on it. I said to her "Ooh, that's our man right there!" but she didn't hear me so I said "Your shirt, I like it but I like him even more!" And she was so surprised and delighted and said "Oh, yes, yes." It was awesome.
Later I thought of that little old lady who in her youth never dreamt a white person would address themselves to her, much less with respect and joy over another black person, much less one coming into power and I could understand the look on her face of perplexement mixed with joy and just being so pleased. She just cannot believe this is happening.
It's what I was talking about a couple of days ago and why I say I want to say to them - the older black generation, more than anybody - "I'm SO happy for you!" This is SO BIG time to these people who lived through hell. It is big to the younger generation as well, although perhaps not as much since they have grown up with blacks "making it" so to speak, but still plenty since they have grown up with the history being told at their homes of what their families went through.
Man, it's like we've been on a death march in this country for a LONNNNNNNG time and all of a sudden, we have actually made it to the other side of the bridge or to the water at the end of the desert. It's a beautiful thing and I AM SO HAPPY FOR YOU, black community and for YOU too, white community. I'm SO happy for us all. This doesn't erase the past nor make everything all honky-dory but we can now finally truly begin in earnest. YES WE CAN!
Labels: The 2008 Presidential Election