Thursday, February 2, 2017

The Arc of History


Hello!  At my daughter Susan’s suggestion, I’m starting a blog!  I’m not much of a techno-person, so bear with me while I learn it.  I will seek to use this forum on at least a weekly basis to share thoughts and open room for discussion on issues focusing on race, theology, the church, and justice.  I’ll be glad to hear from you on these musings and on any ideas that you have. 

             I’ll start with the obvious point of all of these:  the beginning of the disastrous Trump administration.  During this administration, I don’t know how far back we will go in the history of human rights, but we almost certainly will lose some ground, and perhaps a lot of ground.  Will we return to the 1950’s, with the deep struggle for human rights beginning to take hold, but still a deep struggle?  Will we go back to the 1910’s when Woodrow Wilson, the first Southerner to be president since the Civil War, re-segregated the federal government, and before women had the right to vote?  Will we go back to the 1890’s when a combination of legislation, violence, and Supreme Court decisions re-instituted “slavery by another name,” as Doug Blackmon put it so well in his book by the same name?  Will we go back to the 1870’s when white Southerners and allies elsewhere fought hard to strip black people of their rights, finally culminating in the “Mississippi Doctrine” of law and death?   I hope that we don’t go back further than that – if we do, Lord, help us all!

            Wherever we go, we should note that this is part of a long struggle in American history between the forces who designed the Constitution with slavery as a strong element of it, deeming those of African descent to be 60% human, in one stream, with the other stream driven by those inspired by the idea of equality, those women and poor people and people of color who heard that the idea of equality applied to them also.   We should also note that many of us have both forces in us as individuals and as institutions, much like Thomas Jefferson, who penned the famous line in the Declaration of Independence:  “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all {people} are created equal.”  Jefferson was not quite sure that people of African descent were more than 60% human beings, and that is how he could emphasize equality while holding the 60% human beings as slaves.  And, of course, as the DNA tests have told us, he had several children with one of his 60% human being slaves, Sally Hemmings. 

            We find ourselves now swimming in those same waters, as the eddys and currents seek to take us one way or another, with the current arc of history bending not towards justice but rather injustice.  There is much work to do in the short term, but there is one long term idea that I’d like to float out there and get response to it. How about seeking a constitutional amendment to establish that people of African descent are full human beings, rather that the 60% currently enshrined in the document?  We could combine this with the idea what women are also full human beings, since the “men” in Jefferson’s famous phrase seems to have meant “males.”  We tried to do this with women 40 years ago with the Equal Rights Amendment but fell 3 states short.  I’ll have more on this discussion next time, but I’ll be glad to hear from folk on this idea and any others that you have! 

            This era looks to be full of chills and spills but very few thrills.  I’ll be glad to hear from folks on how you see this time in our history, and since it is Black History Month, soon I will suggest some witnesses from different eras who can give us some clues about actions and attitudes needed in our present time.  Let me hear your thoughts!

9 comments:

  1. Thank you so much Nibs for taking the time to write down your thoughts. I like your radical idea of a constitutional amendment.

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  2. It's great to hear your voice through your writing, Nibs! We miss you, but suspect you are getting the rest and relaxation you need and deserve (or at least as much as you can during this trying and scary time!).

    My suggestion- perhaps we should ask Frederick Douglas to weigh in, you know with the more and more attention he has been getting for all his good work lately! Ha!

    Also, Nina says hi!

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    1. Thanks, Anna, we are glad that ya'll are part of Oakhurst! Yes, in a weird way, I'm wishing that Trump was right on this one, that Frederick Douglass is resurrected! We very much need his spirit and his fight in these times!

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  3. Interesting,thanks for sharing Nibs!

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  4. We're coming off administration that wanted to take us back to pre-Magna Carta days by insisting that President was not bound by due process and could jail or summarily execute whom he wanted by mere fiat.

    His genocidal campaign against the Yemeni could rival anything Andrew Jackson did.

    He constantly applied state violence to help capital suppress the marginal and disadvantaged.

    All of this was present--even characteristic--of the previous administration.

    What is it about Trump that makes people finally confront these ugly realities about our country?

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  5. Thanks, Paddy! I think that Trump's election gave us raw exposure to the forces that have always been present in our history as a white-dominated nation, and yes, the things that you describe seem to happen, no matter who is president.

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  6. Nibs, I'm so glad to be able to read your thoughts. I live and serve out here in Trumpland, so it's really refreshing to keep in touch with folks who are more thoughtful and progressive. Thanks so much for starting a blog!

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    1. Thanks, Debbie! I'll be glad to hear your comments and thoughts! Stay in touch!

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