Anti-Trump protests reflect the hubris-laden myopia that cost Democrats the election.
JAMES Green Jr., 28, is angry. The emotion is not new to him: born and raised as a Black in the southern American city of Birmingham, Alabama, he has seen plenty of days coloured with anger. He is poor and works two jobs at burger joints.But he is angry because Donald Trump, the candidate endorsed by—among others—the Ku Klux Klan, won the November 8 presidential election and will soon run the country. “We are done for,” he says. “I thought Hillary [Clinton would win] and I was praying [for her].”
She didn’t, and Green now plans to participate in an upcoming ‘Not My President’ rally in his city—one among a series of anti-Trump protests that erupted across the country after the election result was announced.
“I’m afraid cultures have been torn apart,”he says, explaining his anguish. “Rednecks are still waving their Confederate flag high and writing n***** go back to Africa.”
The irony of his own words is lost on Green. The Confederate flag he refers to, a symbol of the southern states that fought the 1861-65 American Civil War, was in fact the flag of the Democrats—the party Hillary represents. It was the Democrats who tried to secede from the American Union after the election of Abraham Lincoln, a Republican, in order to defend their right to enslave Black people.
This is one of the many quirks of history that make US politics so befuddling. The war has been over for a century-and- a-half and the country has now had a Black president. But looks can still be just as deceiving.
This story is from the November 28, 2016 edition of Outlook.
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This story is from the November 28, 2016 edition of Outlook.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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