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President Barack Obama – What Does It Mean?This January, Barack Obama became the President of the United States.It
was truly a remarkably moment in our history, for a wide variety of
reasons. Obama’s inauguration marked a dramatic reversal in our
national politics, likely ending a generation of conservative
Republican domination in Washington. It brought a successful conclusion
to a new kind of campaign, one based in savvy use of the internet for
political fundraising and organizing. It captured the collective
imagination of a whole generation of young Americans, inspiring youth
political engagement in ways not seen in this country since the era of
John F. Kennedy half a century ago.But more than anything,
Barack Obama’s inaugural was remarkable—amazing, astounding, almost
unbelievable, considering the long arc of American history—because a
black man just became the President of the United States.
The sheer enormity of the moment almost dwarfed the particulars of the
day—the words of Obama’s excellent speech, the pageantry of the
inaugural spectacle, even the immense numbers of people who turned out
in Washington to watch the event in person.The
sheer enormity of the moment was borne of the long and difficult
history of race in this country. That story, of course, is much bigger
than Barack Obama. Much movement toward racial progress occurred before
Obama ever arrived on the scene, and much more remains to be made in
the future. But it’s hard not to wonder whether what happened this year
changed the meaning of race in America, forever.The youngest of
Obama’s voters, those in their late teens and early twenties, may be
the least surprised about what happened this year. They grew up in a
world in which the rigid racial boundaries of our past were just that—a
part of our past - something that they primarily learned about in
school while studying the teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. or
experiencing the segregated South through the eyes of children in To
Kill a Mockingbird. (Not to say that they didn’t confront vexing racial
issues of their own, but the lines weren’t drawn quite as sharply as
they were in earlier eras.)But we don’t have to look too far
into our nation’s past to begin to see the dark racial legacy that made
Obama’s election such a stunning revelation to anyone older than about
35.As recently as the 1990s, hip-hop icon Tupac Shakur rhymed,
without generating much controversy, that “although it seems heaven
sent / we ain’t ready to see a black president”; the country divided
bitterly along racial lines when a jury found former football star OJ
Simpson not guilty of murdering his white wife.As recently as
the 1970s and 1980s, white citizens rioted over school desegregation in
supposedly liberal northern cities like Boston, while widespread
demonization of black people loomed large in public debates over
welfare, crime, and affirmative action.As recently as the
1960s, it was illegal, in many southern states, for whites and blacks
to marry each other, to share the same hotels or restaurants, to use
the same bathrooms or water fountains. Before 1965, black people who
tried to vote in many parts of this country faced violent intimidation
or even death.All of this in Barack Obama’s own lifetime.All
of this, without even mentioning the even deeper past of slavery - a
debate which helped spark The Civil War - and abolition, Reconstruction
and Jim Crow, the three-fifths compromise and the “twenty negars” sold
into servitude in Virginia in 1619—that’s one year before the Pilgrims
landed at Plymouth Rock.And yet, despite all this—or perhaps,
in a strange way, because of it—a black man named Barack Obama this
year became our president. This year, perhaps, American history
changed.
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