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Cha

(305,136 posts)
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 01:35 AM Jun 2015

"Ten days that turned America into a better place" Michael Cohen~ The Guardian~



Snip//

Some day, people are going to write books about what happened over the last 10 days in the United States. It began with a depressing reminder of what is, perhaps, the worst of America. A disturbed young man, armed with an easily obtainable and high-calibre handgun, shot down nine people in cold blood. It was a shocking act, but largely because Americans have become so inured to the daily carnage of gun violence that the only types of incidents that stand out are those that are uniquely horrific.

Of course, what made the shooting in Charleston, South Carolina, so particularly notable was the where and why – a white gunman, nine African-American victims, a historic black church in the cradle of the former Confederacy. Dylann Roof’s crime was distinctively evil, but the sentiments underpinning it were depressingly familiar. They reflect the original and ongoing sin of this nation – the more than two centuries of mistreatment, prejudice and discrimination visited by white America upon black America.

But then something amazing happened. Practically overnight, America had a national epiphany. For decades, the Confederate flag, which has flown on the grounds of the state capitol building in South Carolina and across the south, became recognised for what it truly is – not a symbol of regional heritage, but a painful, modern symbol of racial exclusion.

Within days of the shooting, politicians across the Deep South couldn’t run fast enough to the nearest microphone or television camera to denounce a flag that a week earlier they would have self-righteously defended. Corporations from eBay to Wal-Mart quickly joined in, announcing their newfound realisation that the stars and bars causes pain. By the end of the week, there were serious discussions taking place in both north and south of removing all vestiges of Confederate reverence – statues to southern generals, schools and highways named after Americans who, at their core, were racists and traitors.

MOre at the link~ http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jun/28/ten-days-that-made-america-a-better-place

http://theobamadiary.com/2015/06/28/two-must-reads/

26 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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"Ten days that turned America into a better place" Michael Cohen~ The Guardian~ (Original Post) Cha Jun 2015 OP
K & R Iliyah Jun 2015 #1
Mahalo, Iliyah! Cha Jun 2015 #2
Love the author's finish - pinto Jun 2015 #3
Thank you for bringing that quote over, pinto! ".slightly more generous, slightly more cognizant of Cha Jun 2015 #5
Something changed. flamingdem Jun 2015 #6
It did, flamingdem.. Cha Jun 2015 #9
BIG BIG BIG KICK AND REC......!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! nt MADem Jun 2015 #4
Thank you, MADem!!!! Beautiful snip from the link.. Cha Jun 2015 #7
I enjoyed his rendition, too!!! nt MADem Jun 2015 #10
k & r flamingdem Jun 2015 #8
I know the pic is poignantly heartbreaking, flamingdem~ Cha Jun 2015 #11
My hubby cried. He said the speech and then the singing of Amazing Grace Iliyah Jun 2015 #12
So did I, Iliyah~ So emotional.. mahalo. Cha Jun 2015 #13
What MLK, Jr. saw and it took Obama to do it: freshwest Jun 2015 #14
Beautiful paragraphs you brought over and highlighted, freshwest! Cha Jun 2015 #16
Beautiful photo KT2000 Jun 2015 #15
Such meaning in that photo.. Mahalo, KT Here's to more "fresh air"~ Cha Jun 2015 #17
That picture... brer cat Jun 2015 #18
"..that sweet baby reaching up for the arms of our comforter-in-chief is going to be seared in the Cha Jun 2015 #20
Thanks very much for this. MBS Jun 2015 #19
You're Welcome Very much, MBS! Pres Obama today visiting MLK Memorial with, Dilma Rousseff, Cha Jun 2015 #22
KnR my dear friends Hekate Jun 2015 #21
Mahalo mon ami! Cha Jun 2015 #23
KICK! Cha Jun 2015 #24
KICK! Cha Jul 2015 #25
KICK! Cha Jul 2015 #26

pinto

(106,886 posts)
3. Love the author's finish -
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 01:46 AM
Jun 2015
Nations do not usually change course on a dime and one must be careful not to overstate what’s happened. But in the 10 days after a uniquely American tragedy, this diverse, rancorous, often conflicted nation became slightly freer, slightly more generous, slightly more cognizant of its past and slightly more progressive than it was before. To paraphrase vice-president Joe Biden, that’s a big deal.

Cha

(305,136 posts)
5. Thank you for bringing that quote over, pinto! ".slightly more generous, slightly more cognizant of
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 01:51 AM
Jun 2015
its past and slightly more progressive than it was before.."

Cha

(305,136 posts)
9. It did, flamingdem..
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 01:56 AM
Jun 2015
"In singing the words of the wondrous hymnal Amazing Grace, a song written by a former slave trader turned abolitionist, Obama reminded Americans of how we’ve fallen short as a nation, but also that the path to redemption and, in turn, grace is within our grasp."

Thank Goodness~

Cha

(305,136 posts)
7. Thank you, MADem!!!! Beautiful snip from the link..
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 01:54 AM
Jun 2015
"In singing the words of the wondrous hymnal Amazing Grace, a song written by a former slave trader turned abolitionist, Obama reminded Americans of how we’ve fallen short as a nation, but also that the path to redemption and, in turn, grace is within our grasp."

Cha

(305,136 posts)
11. I know the pic is poignantly heartbreaking, flamingdem~
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 01:58 AM
Jun 2015

Mahalo

Yes, I love it that Michael gets it so well!

freshwest

(53,661 posts)
14. What MLK, Jr. saw and it took Obama to do it:
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 02:32 AM
Jun 2015
What has always made America a great nation is that for all our many flaws, we are established on a creed, one that is perhaps the simplest and yet most powerful political idea ever articulated, namely that all men are created equal. Living up to that ideal has been America’s arduous journey for 240 years and at the end of these 10 days we got that much closer to it. On Friday, the US Supreme Court ruled that gay Americans have the same right to marriage as other citizens.

Indeed, in his majority opinion, Justice Anthony Kennedy articulated in one sentence the best of America – the self-corrective nature of our democracy. “The nature of injustice,” he wrote, “is that we may not always see it in our own times. The generations that wrote and ratified the Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment did not presume to know the extent of freedom in all of its dimensions, and so they entrusted to future generations a charter protecting the right of all persons to enjoy liberty as we learn its meaning.”

Over the past several years, America has come to understand the meaning of freedom as it relates to gay people and, with a healthy majority now supporting the idea that life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness means the right to marry whomever you love, the Supreme Court ratified this sea change. Consider that when Barack Obama finally endorsed same-sex marriage in 2012, only six US states allowed it. Today, it is the law of the land. Obama was late to the game, but to a large extent that it happened on his watch is fitting, because during his presidency America has moved closer to the more perfect union that he movingly spoke of on the campaign trail in 2008.

In the glow of Friday’s decision on same-sex marriage, it was almost forgotten that a day earlier the Supreme Court beat back what is likely the last judicial effort to topple the president’s signature healthcare plan, Obamacare. While Obama must share credit with Democrats in Congress, it is one of his signature achievements. It is a law that doesn’t just provide a means of buying health insurance, but one that lessens the economic anxiety on poor and middle-class Americans and begins the repair of this nation’s increasingly tattered and frayed social safety net. That these court decisions happened within 24 hours were fitting – progress on economic justice and social justice under a president whose very presence in the White House is a symbol of racial reconciliation.

But then he went to South Carolina on Friday afternoon to speak at the funeral of Clementa Pinckney, the pastor of the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church and one of the nine people slain in Charleston. There, he delivered one of the most extraordinary speeches by an American president. It unblinkingly touched on themes of deep institutional and implicit racism in US society. But it was also a hopeful sermon on the concept of grace and sin that, in a distinctly American way, sought to find reason for optimism in the face of indescribable horror. Here was a black president, speaking to an overwhelmingly black audience in the raucous and welcoming venue of a black church with words that were withering in their honesty and rawness, but also grounded in the basic ideals of not just Christian theology, but America’s secular ideology.


Cha

(305,136 posts)
16. Beautiful paragraphs you brought over and highlighted, freshwest!
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 02:59 AM
Jun 2015

"What has always made America a great nation is that for all our many flaws, we are established on a creed, one that is perhaps the simplest and yet most powerful political idea ever articulated, namely that all men are created equal. Living up to that ideal has been America’s arduous journey for 240 years and at the end of these 10 days we got that much closer to it. On Friday, the US Supreme Court ruled that gay Americans have the same right to marriage as other citizens."

I love this .. Michael Cohen gets it.. while some on this very board.. don't.

"It is a law that doesn’t just provide a means of buying health insurance, but one that lessens the economic anxiety on poor and middle-class Americans and begins the repair of this nation’s increasingly tattered and frayed social safety net. That these court decisions happened within 24 hours were fitting – progress on economic justice and social justice under a president whose very presence in the White House is a symbol of racial reconciliation."

"But it was also a hopeful sermon on the concept of grace and sin that, in a distinctly American way, sought to find reason for optimism in the face of indescribable horror. Here was a black president, speaking to an overwhelmingly black audience in the raucous and welcoming venue of a black church with words that were withering in their honesty and rawness, but also grounded in the basic ideals of not just Christian theology, but America’s secular ideology."

Just stunningly, poignantly, heartbreaking and heartwarmingly beautiful, fresh.. thank you.





KT2000

(20,821 posts)
15. Beautiful photo
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 02:32 AM
Jun 2015

there was a time in the late 60s when change seemed possible - there was "fresh air." It feels like that now.

brer cat

(26,164 posts)
18. That picture...
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 07:03 AM
Jun 2015

that sweet baby reaching up for the arms of our comforter-in-chief is going to be seared in the conscience of many Americans. She lost her daddy, and we can't bring him back no matter how we honor and cherish the life he lived. What we can do is pledge to make the rest of her life safer, to ensure she has the freedom to become whatever she chooses based on her mind and soul, not the color of her skin, her gender, or her sexual orientation. We are off to a good start, but complacency lurks around the next corner. Let's not go there.

Thanks, Cha. K&R

Cha

(305,136 posts)
20. "..that sweet baby reaching up for the arms of our comforter-in-chief is going to be seared in the
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 08:45 AM
Jun 2015
conscience of many Americans."

I like the way you put that and really just all your words are so thoughtful and kind.. mahalo brer cat..

Cha

(305,136 posts)
22. You're Welcome Very much, MBS! Pres Obama today visiting MLK Memorial with, Dilma Rousseff,
Mon Jun 29, 2015, 10:22 PM
Jun 2015

President of Brazil..




President Barack Obama and President of Brazil Dilma Rousseff visit the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial

http://theobamadiary.com/2015/06/29/the-president-and-first-ladys-day-20/

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