Inspired by this thread, but really, this is aimed at the flood of comments I have been seeing all over these boards lately.
Barack Obama is the first black president. Accept it.
He has. When he was living, learning and loving on the hard streets of Chicago as a very young man, struggling to come to terms with his identity, no one was posting on boards that he was half black. He was just black. Period.
Not black because he wasn’t descended from slaves?? This is a new twist on some craziness for real. A black man born and raised in the U.S. has to be descended from slaves to be black enough? That makes me have to say this
Get the fuck outta here. I have to say it straight out. I call bullshit on every one on this board that is acting all wide eyed talking about, “Why is Obama being called black”. I call bullshit. Accept that he is black.
And not O.J Simpson black. Nope. Cool, swagger, real, respected by the black community at large, black radical background, coming to age over the pages of a Malcom X autobiography, embracing his beautiful blackness unforgivably* black.
He is going to put his beautiful black wife, (descended from slaves, no less!) into the white house and she will be First Lady of this nation.
Join us in celebrating. And stop cele - hating. (ha! I just made that up.)
And now, with all that emotion and rage out of my system, I will admit to something here.
It feels good to have a black man not playing down his blackness. The truth is, it hurts my feelings sometimes when someone is ‘mistaken’ for black, or whatever and they are all, “I am not black!” Black people have been trodden upon, told we are not beautiful, looked down upon and treated like a bottom of the barrel. Barack not saying he is ‘cablanasion’ or some such, even though he could on a technicality say he is ‘half black’, he doesn’t say it. Having read “Dreams From My Father”, it gave me a good feeling deep inside to see a man I recognized. He didn’t seem like a creation through the ‘acceptable black man machine’. He seems a lot like lots of black men I know. So that makes me feel good.
*Thanks to David Alan Greir for the term ‘unforgivable black’.