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Recursion

(56,582 posts)
Tue Dec 13, 2016, 09:15 AM Dec 2016

Read Coates's Atlantic piece. Now.

Last edited Tue Dec 13, 2016, 10:06 AM - Edit history (1)

Look for this passage towards the end, which floored me:

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/01/my-president-was-black/508793/

By some cosmic coincidence, a week after the election I received a portion of my father’s FBI file. My father had grown up poor in Philadelphia. His father was struck dead on the street. His grandfather was crushed to death in a meatpacking plant. He’d served his country in Vietnam, gotten radicalized there, and joined the Black Panther Party, which brought him to the attention of J. Edgar Hoover. A memo written to the FBI director was “submitted aimed at discrediting WILLIAM PAUL COATES, Acting Captain of the BPP, Baltimore.” The memo proposed that a fake letter be sent to the Panthers’ co-founder Huey P. Newton. The fake letter accused my father of being an informant and concluded, “I want somethin done with this bootlikin facist pig nigger and I want it done now.” The words somethin done need little interpretation. The Panthers were eventually consumed by an internecine war instigated by the FBI, one in which being labeled a police informant was a death sentence.

A few hours after I saw this file, I had my last conversation with the president. I asked him how his optimism was holding up, given Trump’s victory. He confessed to being surprised at the outcome but said that it was tough to “draw a grand theory from it, because there were some very unusual circumstances.” He pointed to both candidates’ high negatives, the media coverage, and a “dispirited” electorate. But he said that his general optimism about the shape of American history remained unchanged. “To be optimistic about the long-term trends of the United States doesn’t mean that everything is going to go in a smooth, direct, straight line,” he said. “It goes forward sometimes, sometimes it goes back, sometimes it goes sideways, sometimes it zigs and zags.”

...

He counseled vigilance, “because the possibility of abuse by government officials always exists. The issue is not going to be that there are new tools available; the issue is making sure that the incoming administration, like my administration, takes the constraints on how we deal with U.S. citizens and persons seriously.” This answer did not fill me with confidence. The next day, President-Elect Trump offered Lieutenant General Michael Flynn the post of national-security adviser and picked Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama as his nominee for attorney general. Last February, Flynn tweeted, “Fear of Muslims is RATIONAL” and linked to a YouTube video that declared followers of Islam want “80 percent of humanity enslaved or exterminated.” Sessions had once been accused of calling a black lawyer “boy,” claiming that a white lawyer who represented black clients was a disgrace to his race, and joking that he thought the Ku Klux Klan “was okay until I found out they smoked pot.” I felt then that I knew what was coming—more Freddie Grays, more Rekia Boyds, more informants and undercover officers sent to infiltrate mosques.

And I also knew that the man who could not countenance such a thing in his America had been responsible for the only time in my life when I felt, as the first lady had once said, proud of my country, and I knew that it was his very lack of countenance, his incredible faith, his improbable trust in his countrymen, that had made that feeling possible. The feeling was that little black boy touching the president’s hair. It was watching Obama on the campaign trail, always expecting the worst and amazed that the worst never happened. It was how I’d felt seeing Barack and Michelle during the inauguration, the car slow-dragging down Pennsylvania Avenue, the crowd cheering, and then the two of them rising up out of the limo, rising up from fear, smiling, waving, defying despair, defying history, defying gravity.
9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Read Coates's Atlantic piece. Now. (Original Post) Recursion Dec 2016 OP
Link? Mika Dec 2016 #1
D'oh! Sorry. Fixed. (nt) Recursion Dec 2016 #2
I am rec'ing Uponthegears Dec 2016 #3
Thank you. lovemydog Dec 2016 #4
When they got out of the car that day... sheshe2 Dec 2016 #5
i always thought Obama purposely held back on the way he talks about race JI7 Dec 2016 #6
I read the one in GD ismnotwasm Dec 2016 #7
i think a lot of non black and especially white people need to read his writings JI7 Dec 2016 #8
I've read it over the past two days. Highest recommendation. kwassa Dec 2016 #9
 

Uponthegears

(1,499 posts)
3. I am rec'ing
Tue Dec 13, 2016, 10:25 AM
Dec 2016

Every OP that links to this article.

It is as important a piece of journalism as has been written since the election.

So I repeat your title line:

"Read Coates's Atlantic piece. Now"

lovemydog

(11,833 posts)
4. Thank you.
Tue Dec 13, 2016, 12:42 PM
Dec 2016

Ta-Nehisi Coates is such a brilliant writer.

These eight years I haven't felt as much of an exile in my country.

President Obama will continue working for a better present & future. So will my friends, family & I.

sheshe2

(87,193 posts)
5. When they got out of the car that day...
Tue Dec 13, 2016, 03:41 PM
Dec 2016
It was watching Obama on the campaign trail, always expecting the worst and amazed that the worst never happened. It was how I’d felt seeing Barack and Michelle during the inauguration, the car slow-dragging down Pennsylvania Avenue, the crowd cheering, and then the two of them rising up out of the limo, rising up from fear, smiling, waving, defying despair, defying history, defying gravity.


I cried out for them to get back in the car.

The passages that you posted sent chills up my spine. Will go read.

JI7

(90,365 posts)
6. i always thought Obama purposely held back on the way he talks about race
Tue Dec 13, 2016, 11:20 PM
Dec 2016

because he did know how many white people would react.

but i do think his personal experience with his white relatives who embraced him and his black background was unique. especially in the time he was born and grew up in.

ismnotwasm

(42,436 posts)
7. I read the one in GD
Wed Dec 14, 2016, 11:38 AM
Dec 2016

Which is getting no love.

I took my time, read Every last word--a type of poem and a type of warriors song.

I kept thinking, oh my God, oh my God. I plan on re-reading it.

Even Coates's criticism of President Obama seemed to come from-- Some purer place, beyond my ability to quite reach.---I hope people read it.

kwassa

(23,340 posts)
9. I've read it over the past two days. Highest recommendation.
Thu Dec 15, 2016, 12:34 PM
Dec 2016

Full of quotable sections, full of precise observations of Obama's strength and unique positioning, and of the whole election process.

The best writer on race alive today. A great essayist.

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