Here we have it:
In one corner, Hillary Clinton and the people who are with her. In the
other corner stands Donald Trump who is trying to make America great again.
Who loses? Almost everybody, especially black
people.
We're all screwed come November 8. |
We’ve taken more Ls than any other group in the
history of wins and losses yet we bounce back stronger every single time. Having the Obama family occupy 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue since January 2009 has been what is considered peak
blackness – and for my daughter, Barack Obama is the only President of the
United States she has lived through. If you’re thinking of ages and realizing
how old I am, consider that Jimmy Carter was our POTUS when I was born and by
the grace of God we survived the Reagan years without completely reverting back
to the evil days of segregation.
It’s also been said and proven that after a period
of peak blackness comes a really nasty period of conservative backlash. Get
your personal affairs in order and debts paid off and under control ASAP before
January 2017!
It sounds like I am all-in for the Democratic Party
candidate, right? Wrong. I’m not quite with Hillary, and someone needs to tell
Donald that America is already great with its best days ahead instead of the
rear view.
Case in point:
As most of you do not realize or are too cowardly to acknowledge, black
voters in most election cycles are the most educated voters. I’m not saying
that just because we needed someone who looked like us (President Obama in 2008
and 2012, or Jesse Jackson in the 1988 primaries although it helps), but after
getting screwed more than a Duggar or Gingrich wife after a Heritage Foundation
convention, we have an idea of moving forward and still harbor a bit of hope in
a truly great nation albeit one that capitulates many of our advances in
science, technology, entertainment, politics, sports, and culture only to spit
out the originators. You may want to keep in mind the people who have taken off
their all-white robes and hoods recently via social media were the same ones
quoting every other line from Friday – and doubly so if they went to Conway
High with me in the 1990s. [Sidebar: I genuinely love all 400+ of my Class of 1997
classmates with everything in me and will proudly support most of their
endeavors. Understand that I am just keeping it real about the undercurrents of
racism and softened bigotry that we grew up with and some willfully endorse
even if they are complicit in their silence.] Every day gets better because
we potentially learn from our past and wisely apply those lessons to the
present. That improved future is what we work so hard and pray so heavily at
night: my daughter will be left with a
better world than I inherited back in 1978, hopefully one that isn’t damaged
beyond repair.
Why am I not quite with Hillary? Keep reading and
I’ll defend that position from the rabid liberals on my left including the ones
who felt the Bern and now only huddle around a dying spark.
Remember kids, a picture is worth a thousand words. #dreambig pic.twitter.com/tGTxNhTKBX— A. Cedric Armstrong (@cedteaches) July 30, 2016
Maybe because I recall how attack dog – and onetime
Arkansas governor – former President Bill Clinton savaged President Obama in
the early stages of the 2008 campaign, particularly in South Carolina and her
tepid response in reining him in. Never a natural politician, Hillary comes
across as disingenuous to us: before Beyoncé,
how many of us knew that the presumptive candidate for POTUS 45 carried hot
sauce in her purse? Better be Louisiana hot sauce – you know we put that shit
on everything! Even so, where would she have gone to stunt? Uncle Ray’s fish
fry? I would surely have hoped she used it as Arkansas’ First Lady at the
Chick-a-Dilly in El Dorado or the AQ up in Fayetteville or Nick’s over in
Carlisle.
If I catch Mrs. Clinton playing dominoes at
Stylemasters or King of Fades in Southwest…let’s just say, it’s pandering at
the highest level disrespecting our game. I love Pimpin’ Bill, but she needs to
stay in her lane and make those calculated decisions that benefit all of us.
Don’t forget I know who called us super predators despite all of the goodwill
from FMLA and not popping trunk on Bill after snitching-ass former Baylor
University president Ken Starr dug up all the scallywags he was knocking off.
I may hold my nose to vote for her November 8, but I
may write-in President Obama instead for a third term. Is that possible?
Obviously we cannot hop in a time machine to go back
to a simpler (whiter) period, as if anyone born black before 1989 would like to
travel in it.
Like the Republican Party since the Nixon
administration (Reagan and GWB have special categories for their own sins),
Donald Trump only caters to working-class white males who have been fed a
steady diet of animus thanks to Limbaugh, Hannity, O’Reilly, Beck, Breitbart,
Alex Jones, Fox News, Stormfront, and other right-leaning media sources on the
surface. For him, that demonizing of a changing nation has been a winning
ticket that I personally do not see him overcoming for the general election. In
addition, his divisive rhetoric is causing unification unseen since the Civil
Rights Movement received television air play. The irony of this is that the
standard bearers no longer claim to be the party of Lincoln as much as the one
of “life, liberty, and lower taxes” as the Saline County GOP headquarters
proudly uses as a banner! I guess affluence and low taxes mean more than making
short-term sacrifices to become greater.
America has become greater in the four hundred years
we’ve been here regardless of our origin. While many of us were voluntarily
coming over for freedoms unavailable in the Old Country, my ancestors were
loaded onto crowded ships, bound, and enslaved for the better part of 240 years
only to be legally discriminated against for another 98 years. It has only been
sixty-three years since black people have been free – on
paper; in practice, we still have to kick down doors daily as professional
ass-kickers.
These are the people who preach hard work as a
virtue yet my ancestors built a nation on their backs for free .99; the men and
women who yearn for self-preservation in a past that never really happened and
kidnap our movements if not damn them as “terroristic” or “un-American” such as
the aforementioned Civil Rights Movement and #BlackLivesMatter. They stand firmly against abortion until their
pastor’s blonde haired, blue-eyed daughter is pregnant with a black baby; avow
a version of universal health care until the Patient Protection Affordable Care
Act of 2010 known as Obamacare; raise a huge stink about bathrooms in Target
when the loudest voices are sometimes the ones molesting children in the
privacy of their own homes; and so forth.
Ask some of them if they have
separate restrooms at home for males and females.
What makes America great? Simple: Diversity, the rights to disagree and
protest, the right to protect ourselves responsibly, and the opportunity to
make a dollar out of fifteen cents.
For starters, why would Mr. Trump borrow known
segregationist and former Alabama Gov. George Wallace’s “make America great
again!” slogan if he didn’t know how to harness the power of words? To birthers
such as himself and a large number of people I used to work with at Wal-Mart,
“Make America Great Again” is a clarion call for disaffected white people to
take back what is inherently theirs as if the USA were their literal Israel to
be retaken from the Egyptians, Babylonians, Carthaginians, Romans, and the
like. If you don’t believe me, then explain the Tea Party takeover of Congress
in 2010 and the largely ineffective leadership since then.
Until he lays out specifics with any of his
programs, particularly those domestic policies that benefit the majority of us,
it is hard to see how America being transformed back to the 1920s or post-World
War II is going to benefit anyone except straight married white men, who were
the recipients of the GI Bill, the Homestead Act, and a number of school and
real estate laws geared toward their station as the privileged class.
A silent voice is one that complies with whatever
evil occurs because it chose not to rock the boat. If you’re not fighting
against systemic oppression, then you’re the problem.
More, having a (__________) friend or neighbor does
not excuse the avarice shown to our fellow man:
I cringed when Mr. Trump gave a shout-out to a man labeling him “my
African-American” because deep down, his actions likely meant my N-word: saying the slur would have cratered what
potentially a billion-dollar campaign of empty promises, evasive policies, and
shown how out-of-step he really is relative to those of us who have to budget
biweekly to pay for our houses, fuel, daycare, and the like.
Furthermore, America is already great. Are all of our days
perfect? Of course not. What I expect from either candidate is an optimistic presentation
of how to improve our situations without having to resort to juvenile insults
or scratching our heads from information overload.
Sister Simone just showed you America is already great. Remember that year-round, not just during the Olympics. |
In truth, I am not quite with Hillary but I damn
sure don’t want to go back to a time when many of you think America was great.
That means no Google, no Apple, no Facebook, dial-up internet if we’re lucky, exorbitant
high interest rates from the bank, separate water fountains, and shady
employment practices. In the meantime, I might as well reflect on the past
eight years of peak blackness and choose a POTUS 45 that will continue to carry
a legacy of freedom and all of the other things that make Americans unique.
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