
For the first time in quite a while, I've been rendered just about speechless.
I have no idea how to convey the enormity of what happened last night and how it changes the world we're all waking up to this morning. It is a seismic event that's wholly impossible to overstate and, as such, I have no doubt that I'm not the only one now poring through his thesaurus looking for a way to properly put into words what in reality can't be.
It's not simply that a black man has been elected President of the United States -- although that, even by itself, would be monumental. It's not simply the sound rejection by the American people of the unequivocal failure of the entire Bush era -- although that too, by itself, would be monumental. It's not simply the embracement of unabashed hope and unapologetic intellect and the elevation of their status -- nor the marginalization of the ignorant among us who have, for too long, seen their brand of divisive, fearful politics reach a level of ascendancy within our government and our culture. It's not the symbolism of this moment and its ability to, almost immediately, return America to its rightful place as the shining city on the hill -- the beacon of hope for the world -- nor the fact that in one fierce blow it has proven this country's enemies wrong, in staggering terms, about who we are and what we stand for.
It is, in fact, all of this -- and so much more.
What we witnessed last night and what we're still feeling the aftershocks of this morning is, in a word, history.
An epochal groundswell that wiped away the old and ushered in the new.
A singular moment that, years from now, will be looked upon as the line that divided the past from the future.
Yesterday, "change" was merely a word; today, it's something tangible -- something you can feel in the air.
Who would have thought that any of us would ever see a boisterous crowd gathered in front of the White House, demanding not the violent upheaval we've so often seen in other countries but instead celebrating the symbolic dragging of a corrupt and dying political era to the guillotine? Or the rising up of America's rural areas, cynically pegged as dependably intractable, to join with their metropolitan brethren to plead for revolution in one deafening voice? Or the next generation of Cuban-Americans in South Florida -- the children of parents and grandparents still aching from the loss of their homeland and still preaching a hardline ethos -- finally, respectfully, shrugging off the failed politics of the past? Or African-American men and women with tears in their eyes, holding their children tightly as they point and say, "See, that's what you can become."
Who would have thought that any of us would ever see a true citizen of the world become the leader of the free world?
The election of Barack Obama is a triumph of everything America stands for -- everything we are.
It is the perfect bookend to a dark period in our history, one that began with the destruction of our landmarks and the murder of our people and evolved to become dominated by a dystopian, funhouse-mirror government that was almost incomprehensible in its lack of principles.
And while the challenges ahead are still there, just as they were yesterday -- and though they remain daunting -- we go forward with a sense of purpose like none this nation has seen before.
Because after what we've witnessed, the history we've just been a part of, is there any struggle that's too great for us -- any obstacle we can't overcome?
No, there isn't.
Yes we can.
Yes we did.
Yes we will.
Now, let's get to work.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Wide Awake in America
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43 comments:
Beautifully put.
I woke up this morning and realized that I felt free. I had not noticed how, over the past decade, I had succumbed so thoroughly to a pervasive and insidious fear. And I am not speaking of fear from outsiders.
No, I did not fear the Muslims, as this government so desperately wanted me to.
No, I did not fear change, as this government so desperately wanted me to.
No, rather, I feared this government. Bodily and in my soul.
And today everything seems bright and...CLEAN. As a gen-x'er, for the first time in my life, I understand the concept of patriotism -- divorced from this government's fascist brand of it.
I am so breathlessly thankful.
Very well put, yourself. I completely understand.
I believe in the dream of America again.
I cried... for the first time ever in my life, over an election result. I'm 48; that's a lot of voting.
What a good feeling, waking up this morning.... Blisschick just said it perfectly. And I'm really, really glad I didn't choose "historic event" as my phrase...
I feel as if a weight has been lifted off of my shoulders. I walked around this morning with a new spring in my step and my head held just a little higher. People made eye contact and smiled at each other here in Times Square- there is noticeable PRIDE here in this city for the first time since 9/11. We are not being suffocated anymore. We have a voice. And that is a beautiful thing!
Chez, the thing about you is even when you're speechless, you can't shut up...and I mean that in a VERY complimentary manner to be honest, even if it doesn't sound that way.
I still haven't posted on this on my blog (I posted about last night's events, but mostly it was to talk about McCain). Partly that's because I go to so many African American blogs and so many people from those blogs are among my readers, and I almost feel like it's their party to have today.
I know that might sound weird. Because I know that Obama's election is about the whole country. It was about a wider sense of wanting change. It is, potentially, a unifying moment. But perhaps because I'm so close to the racial issue having a black wife and biracial kids, I know just how big a link in the chain of America's sins has just been cracked. This means a lot to black folks. This is like a political Christmas day. My wife couldn't stop crying last night after McCain gave his concession and we finally heaved a sigh and decided we could trust the election having been called for Obama.
So, for MY part at least, I'm going to wait until tomorrow to gush. And that's why it's good that in your "nearly speechless" moment you had something to say.
But damn, it's a good day to wake up to for once.
So wait....you wanted Obama to win? Glad you cleared that up, Chez.
Jebus Christ people! I can't tell you how good it feels to get this passionate and hopeful about politics and for once NOT having my heart thrown back at me with a big fat footprint on it.
I'm so emotional, every little thing I see or read sets me off again. The salty tears of joy haven't tasted this sweet since the doctors told me my mother would be fine.
I feel tremendous relief, respect and hope. What the hell is happening to me?
that is EXACTLY the post i hoped to read this morning. thank you.
Common sense prevailed and there is a chance that this once great nation can be what it once was again as well as become a partner in a better world.
I am feeling optimistic about this country for the first time in years.
I'm thrilled we didn't vote in McCain/Palin. A dead moose could do a better job than they would've.
I'd like to correct something that's been getting on my nerves: We elected an American who happens to be half white, 43.75% arabic/middle-eastern, and 6.25% black. Why people keep saying Obama's black is beyond me. If his skin color had turned out a bit lighter maybe people wouldn't keep forgetting the truth. ("You gunna vote fer that ****er?" <-- Heard that recently, had to correct him)
It says a lot about the desperation in the culture of blacks in America that they would be so ready to get behind the idea of a man who only claims to be black, but isn't.
http://kennethelamb.blogspot.com/2008/02/barak-obama-questions-about-ethnic.html
http://kennethelamb.blogspot.com/2008/08/update-on-barak-obamas-and-everybody.html
From the second link: "Couldn't get into the college of your choice because you didn't get past the minority set-aside hurdle? No problem; if you feel that your personal, private, "sociopolitical self-identification" is one of the targeted minority groups, well, go ahead and check the box."
P.S. I'm a Native Afrispanic Jamaican American who happens to have white skin and a predominantly European lineage.
As an expat who has spent the last 6 years apologizing for those red states and trying to distance myself from "those americans" I have never felt prouder to be an American. All last night and well into the wee hours of this morning, I watched in shock and glee.
Today, Suresh, the man who runs my local corner store shook my hand and congratulated me. The world shook over night and is proud of us.
After being in NY for 9/11 I thought for sure that it would be the defining historical moment of my lifetime. But now something amazing and powerful and strong is going to be leading the way. The hope, the happiness and the pride I am feeling right now, is just indescribable.
i wonder if this is what the world would have felt like had bobby kennedy not been shot. had he lived, and been elected, is this the revolution the country would have felt 30 years ago? i can't help but think, as we are on this precipice of change, how different our lives might have been if he had been president. i am thrilled, proud, and amazed to have been a part of this monumental election, but i would give us this feeling to have had it all made right from the beginning, 30 years ago. it really brings home how monumental *that* election would have been to our lives. i'm glad america finally got the memo and did the right thing. i haven't been this happy to be american since i was too young to know any better.
While I am happy and proud that many of our fellow citizens woke up and didn't buy into the Mcain/Palin BS, I'm still quite disheartend about all of the anti gay propositions that have passed in Arkansas, California, and Florida to name a few. Can someone please give me an explanation on why gays shouldn't get married, or adopt children other than "the Bible says it's wrong"?
Voting Obama is was one giant baby step, but we still have a long way to go.
Um...anon,
How do you take his Kenyan half (African/black) and get: 43.75% arabic/middle-eastern and 6.25% black.
I'm missing something here.
Kenya is in Africa. Being of African ancestry and being born in America or of at least one American parent makes you African American. Being either African in this country of African American is generally referred to as "black."
And, psssst...he looks awfully black to me. And he identifies along black lines. I don't see that Arabic thing you are seeing
Bravo. :)
Umm, yeah, but he's still black, even if he is only 6.25%
I don't mean to rain on everybody's parade, and I do feel like 16 tons has lifted from my shoulders, but what about the 55 million who voted for McCain? I understand the idiots who just don't know any better, and religious whack jobs (no offense to Deacon), but that still leaves millions of "normal" people who feel that McCain and Palin(!) are the best people to lead our nation.
One of my oldest friends is convinced Obama is a Marxist, and my daughter just met someone who fears he will become the next Hitler. I know Limbaugh and the rest have been spewing this crap for months, but how can anyone with half a brain believe it? Again, sorry to be a downer, but I just don't get it. Although I have to admit, it bothers me a lot less than it did a couple days ago.
drater, i'm totally with you. if you have a valid reason to have supported mccain (by ignoring all the horseshit and truly believing, for whatever reason, in some part of his platform), then ok, i can talk to you. i won't agree with you by a long shot, but at least you've done your research and aren't buying into the propaganda. you may be rich, white, and totally out of touch with reality, but hey, whatever floats your boat. but all the others, freaking out because he's a communist/socialist/muslim/terrorist/etc - WTF are those people smoking? it's that kind of stupidity and lunacy (in life in general, not just the election) that i simply cannot wrap my brain around.
Last night I watched my red(neck) state go BLUE for this historical election, and I was filled with such pride.
I actually felt sorry for the McCain voters for one thing. They are not a part of this momentus occasion. Years from now when the textbooks write of this and when we describe last night to our grandchildren, well, it made me sad that they won't be able participate in that.
I can say I helped elect the first black president and to reject the suffocating hate of the prior war mongering administration. When their grandchildren approach them for the story of that vote, they can say, well, I voted against him, but I'm not a racist...or a war monger...or a moron...but I didn't vote for him. Not exactly something a kid can take to show n tell.
Drater & Jen - My theory is that only racists would fear that Obama really could be communist/socialist/muslim/terrorist etc. (and don't even get me started on muslim as a pejorative).
But the last thing they want to do is think of themselves as racist...or have you think that.
@ deacon blue:
If you'd read the first link I posted, you'd see that Barack Obama's father is from Kenya, but his father is NOT of Kenyan descent, but is rather of Arab descent, much like being from South Africa doesn't make you automatically black (And in fact, a large number of white people have lived there for decades).
Remember, just because someone was born somewhere, it doesn't mean that is where their ancestors are from.
Barack Obama is predominantly of white and arab descent, was raised muslim, is christian (protestant, specifically) and has been for 2 decades+, thinks and proclaims himself as black, yet is about as white as Tiger Woods.
All of that has very little (assuming his professionalism continues) to do with how he will conduct business as President. What's important is how he plans to attack the issues as he's expressed so far, not where he came from.
I think Barack Obama was a decent choice for President, but I can't help but laugh out loud whenever anyone calls him black, because it just isn't true. I have more of about 4-5 European countries and even more Native American in my blood than Obama is black, but I don't go live on a reservation or claim myself as Irish, Danish, German, or anything like that.
nevada blue - i guess you have to be in order to be so scared. our neighbor is scared because she truly believes obama is a muslim, and all muslims are terrorists, and so obviously he is al qaeda and all the terrorists will be hopping the first flight over here to rule the country with him. and she maintains that is not a racist statement, because it's true. if we didn't have to live next to them for the next 40 years, i'd have no problems never speaking to them again.
I woke up this morning and all I could keep thinking of was the Bill Hicks skit from back in '92.
"The Beast is dead! The Republican Beast is dead!"
He may have been a bit pre-mature with his prophecy, but listening to Dick Armey, of all people, admit how far the Republicans have strayed from their core ideologies... I can't help but feel these really are the death-rattles of the the "neo-con occupation" (I won't do it the justice of calling it a revolution) and a rejection of the idiocy of "trickle down" Reaganomics.
I hope...
Nevada, I'm sure racism is a factor, but not whole story. I grew up in a pretty white town, but in our small circle of friends we did have one black guy, and my Obama-fearing friend was pretty tight with him.
I think it's more a knee-jerk anti-"liberal" reaction, and liberal is anything to the left of the Republican party. And I get that, but the "I don't like liberals so I'll believe anything bad that I hear about them, and vote for a woman who wears her ignorance like a crown"* part just escapes me.
* Apologies to Elton John
You talk, Chez, about the revelers in front of the White House. As a Washington DC resident I want to say something about a group of revelers at another location: 14th and U Streets, uptown from the White House.
It was amazing. The streets were full of people dancing, whooping and hollering, waving Obama signs and American flags. They literally packed the sidewalks and the asphalt, throwing red-white-and-blue streamers into the air and shouting "Obama! Obama!"
When cars would come through the crowd would part -- but the cars were part of the festivities. They'd lean on their horns, then roll down the windows to whoop and to give high fives to the people on the streets.
Why is this important? Because at that gleeful intersection at 14th and U, exactly forty years and seven months ago last night, began another event of unrestraint: the riots that decimated Washington DC in the wake of Martin Luther King's assassination.
What greater sign can there be, not only of how far we've come, but of our hope for going yet farther in the future?
I've wondered if this is how people felt the day after FDR was elected...
Anonymous - using a blog to justify your claims is about as valid as saying that when you make toast in France, that automatically makes it 'French Toast'. Just because something was labeled as 'researched and proven' by some guy on the internet doesn't give it the same amount of validity as say Wikipedia - which says that Obama's father was a member of the Kenyan Luo ethnic group. That would make him a descendant of Kenyans, who are not generally considered Pashtun, Persian, or any of the other ethnic subgroups generally referred to as Arabs. This is the kind of small-scale slander ("see black America, don't vote for Obama cause he's not really one of you after all") that I hope dies a bitter death with his victory. In fact, I hope this overwhelming victory reflects a move on the part of this nation to once again embrace values of greatness, reflection, and humility and move away from the greed and whining that have been such a staple of our culture since Reagan was first elected.
I had the privilege of being one of those many students who ran from my university campus in Washington DC all the way to the White House, to celebrate with thousands of other students and young adults, primarily. We were boisterous, jumping up and down, cheering (both gloating about getting rid of Bush and happy about Obama winning). There was pride in what had been accomplished by the country.
Taxi cabs were honking. Cars were honking. Hi-fives were thrown around. And I only saw one person who wasn't happy.
Yet, the person that struck me most was this one lady, about 60 I'd say, sitting on a stool by the sidewalk in front of the White House. She was sitting there, clearly handicapped, but was smiling and happy. She told a man behind me, "I wouldn't miss this for the world."
60 year old woman.
Tell me that doesn't mean something.
Anonymous - One more thing. I have a family friend who knew Barack Obama in grade school in Hawaii. His nickname back then was "Black Barry." Now, if you had that nickname from childhood, you'd think of yourself as black (or possibly depressing) now wouldn't you. Now I need to stop wasting obsessing about this and start thinking about how happy I am to live in America that will soon have a president that actually reflects some progressive values, for a much needed change.
What got Obama Indiana, Virginia and Florida was the high turnout in urban areas. CNN has maps that breaks each state down by county, and all of those states are pretty red-looking except near cities. I live in the suburbs of Richmond, VA and my county was filled with McCain/Palin signs. You crossed into the city, it was all Obama. Richmond had a 78% voter turnout--and 79% of them voted for Obama. So those going on about having triumphed over the racists or changing people's minds ... no. We just got a lot more people voting.
I too feel like I belong to a revolution. The America I used to believe in really is out there somewhere and we all saw the start of it coming back last night. I can say truthfully that I am once again proud to be an American.
I've never believed in a politican like I believe in Barack Obama. Thank the Heavens for him.
Racism's grip on politics is loosening. Now if only homophobia lost its place there too.
I wrote something today while I was at work, but after reading this, it suddenly feels inadequate. Can I just copy and paste this instead?
Once again, spot on. Despite the sarcasm and bitterness that's in some of your writings, I'm glad that your an idealist at heart. I have friends who don't get it; who are stuck in the here and now and have the 'what can you do for me' mentality. Thank you for putting it into words so I have something I can point these friends to and say, "Read this. This guy gets it- the desire for change, the hope, the idealism."
I don't think you'd characterize last night's results with the word "enormity" unless you're a Republican; it means vast outrageousness or wickedness. I'm pretty sure you instead mean "enormousness". It's big, all right. It's huge. But in a good way -- a very, very good way.
Everybody wants to be a critic.
From Dictionary.com:
Enormity: greatness of size, scope, extent, or influence; immensity: "The enormity of such an act of generosity is staggering."
It's all about context.
@ Anon: I've seen photos of Obama's father. The man is black. He doesn't look Arabic to me in the slightest. What photos are are you looking at and/or what are you smoking?
@ Drater: No offense taken. I'm religious but not a "whacko" so I wouldn't have figured you were talking about me or any of my friends and associates.
;-)
I was so glad that Obama was elected. He got my vote in the Primary and at 6:45 a.m. on Tuesday. I've dreaded election nights since the 2004 debacle where I had to pretend Clinton was still president for the first half of 2001.
And yet...and yet to see Prop 8 (apparently) pass in CA and every other anti-gay marriage/adoption proposal handily pass wherever on the ballot makes me feel like the enemy. Even in a Democratic year those that pulled for Obama were also the ones to kick people like me in the face.
So I'm thrilled we'll be ended the Bush nightmare, I'm also saddened to see how reviled us gay Americans still are. And how little Obama was willing to risk to help even in the last weekend. I know we couldn't afford for him to loose the election but he's triangulating like Clinton did and I doubt we'll see much progress from him or the congressional democrats who never fail to loose their spines on gay issues ("Don't worry, we'll pass the legislation *after* the next election with your votes and money!").
So color me somber today...
Wow, I wonder if this is how the Jews felt once they found out the Messiah had come. Hmm, false hope in the power of one man and the promise of a never ending utopia. We've never heard that story before. We'll see where we are in a year.
Bush was given eight years to fuck up, let's at least give Obama four years to fix it.
I congratulate my fellows in the US for finally electing the right man to the job.
As far as I know (and it's little), Obama will not be a great American president for us here in Brazil, but anyway, I was rooting for him mostly for the big picture and not only for our part of the world here.
Just one thing I beg of you, guys: while you remember McCain, because he was a good opponent and seems to be a good man after all, forget that Palin chick for the rest of the political life of your country. That's the kind of person no one needs in any place in the world -- and that much I sure can recognize.
As a friend and ally from the rural regions, I just want to make sure this is noted: Just because we live in the backwoods, surrounded by our hick brothers and sisters, WINCING at most of the vitriolic spew... we are here, and strong, and our voices were heard last night and finally will continue to be heard in the mainstream! Cheers to you Chez and our other understanding friends in the blogosphere. We are rejoicing today!
Not to belabour the point, Chez, but refer to the usage note in that entry. Just skip to the last sentence [bold emphasis mine; italics theirs]:
Writers who ignore the distinction, as in the enormity of the President's election victory or the enormity of her inheritance, may find that their words have cast unintended aspersions or evoked unexpected laughter.
Dude, you are belaboring a really insignificant point. Once again, it's all about context. There's a thing called an "acceptable social variant" and I think it's safe to say that you completely understand what it is I'm saying in the piece anyway. You're just splitting hairs for the hell of it.
On the contrary, I'm splitting hairs because there's a useful distinction of meaning between the words that's worth preserving, rather than letting them blur together. I'm splitting hairs because I believe in the power of precisely chosen words. The mastery of this is something I admire not only about Obama as an orator but also about you as a writer. I hold you both to a high standard because you've given me reason to.
But enough of that. I may quibble over one word of your post, but I agree with every other one you wrote.
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