I forget sometimes that Donald Trump is president.
Iāve tried to convince myself that this is intentional; a willful misremembering of reality necessary to process his span in office. Thereād be a nobility there, I think, as this would suggest Iām so empathetic, so down, so woke, that I canāt even sleep without tricking myself into amnesia.
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But nah. That would give him (and me) too much credit. I forget sometimes for the same reason I forgot this month that the second Tuesday is street cleaning day in my neighborhood. The same reason I went to bed last night without flossing. There are just too many things to think and feel and do during the day to remember them all. Sometimes, I even forget heās president while Iām remembering, processing, and reacting to a thing he just did. Which reminds me, in a way, of how a Nexium pill each morning is a part of my daily routine, but I rarely think of the acid reflux itās prescribed to prevent.
An efficient way of lifting me out of this fog is TV. I donāt watch cable news much, but the impeachment proceedings have glued me to the screen this week, reminding me of his presence in a visceral way his tweets canāt capture. His voice. His face. His words. And then, I am reminded that this guyāthe casino guy, the Central Park Five full-page-ad guy, the Birther guy, the āgrab them by theā you-know-what guyāwas elected president. President. This is the man 60 million Americans voted for. Donald Trump? Him?Ā
When this happens, Iām reminded, again, of exactly who elected him, exactly why he was elected, exactly who still supports him, and exactly who I hold responsible for this happening. And Iām reminded, again, that Iāll never forgive white people for doing this.
Iām aware that this feeling transmutes white Americans into a collective, distilling a demographic of hundreds of millions down to its least desirable parts. While ānot all white peopleā has become the canonical clichĆ©d reply to this sort of charge, it is also not false. Not all white people voted for Trump. Not all white people support Trump. And sometimes it feels wildly unfair to lump all in with the undesirables. But being fair to white people feels, well, irrational today. It feels dumb to offer a benefit of the doubt while knowing that 54 percent of whites either voted for a racist specifically because heās racist or didnāt believe racism mattered enough to lose a vote. It feels stupid when realizing that this majority isnāt just the frothing seas of MAGA, but also the white people who seem to be otherwiseā¦decent. A morning shift barista at your favorite neighborhood coffee shop. A co-worker you share silly memes and quiche recipes with. A small forward on your rec league basketball team.
Of course, the sort of negotiation necessary to exist while black in America demands both an awareness of the ubiquity of racism and an evolving calculus where we decide how we wish to proceed with that information. We know that the plumber we recently hired or the human resources manager we had coffee with yesterday morning might also be a racist, so if theyāre discovered to be one itās not quite the end of the world. Just āWell, that sucks. But did you fix my bathroom sink leak yet?ā While also explosive and violent and deadly and essential to our countryās foundation, racism is mostly just rote as fuck. Itās Americaās paint primer.
But what distinguishes support of Trump is scale. They knew that heās a cheater, a charlatan, a chickenhawk, and a scammerāand also that theyād likely be grifted by him, tooābut they just didnāt care. His commitment to preserving whitenessā status superseded all else, including their own livelihoods. Iāand Iāll admit to my own naĆÆvetĆ© hereāunderestimated that appeal. I knew they were willing to sacrifice us to retain Americaās racial hierarchy. I didnāt realize they were willing to sacrifice themselves and the rest of the world, too. Cut off a nose to spite a race.
What urges me sometimes to consider being more forgiving is critical race theory, which argues that race is a social construct and that racism is the father of race, not the child. If racism is Americaās most essential elementāthe fulcrum everything from our livelihoods to our legal system hinges uponāthen maybe itās unreasonable to expect individual whites to possess enough willpower to resist the sway of a 400-year-old behemoth. This theory even helps explain the behavior of presumably well-meaning white people, such as the New York Timesā David Leonhardt, who in āNo, It Wasnāt Just Racismā suggested that racial and economic fears had equal resonance with Trump voters; anxieties working together like flour and eggs to bake a cake. While itās true, as he argued, that these forces are symbiotic, their impacts are disproportionate. I mean, both Kawhi Leonard and Jeremy Lin won a championship with the Toronto Raptors last year, but only one was Finals MVP.
Iāve long been fascinated with how people like him can stare at the sunāso bright, so blinding, so thereāand just see smog. Whatās wrong with your eyes, man? How can you not see whatās so obvious? But this sort of learned astigmatism is what existing while American in America demands of you. It doesnāt allow you to accept that the innermost core of our national zeitgeist is racism. Thatās too indicting, too damning, too gargantuan, too easy. Is it Leonhardtās fault that he has blind spots? And that this vision gap flattens black working-class anxiety while giving the white working-class complex origin stories and relatable pathoses like theyāre Marvel Avengers? And that this flattening alone is proof of racismās disproportionate impact on Americaās behavior? Maybe. I donāt know.
I just know that, when I turn on the TV and see Trumpās face, Iām immediately reminded of why he is president. Iām immediately cognizant of the psychic and physical impacts of his presidency, and the joy he seems to derive from cruelty. Iām immediately mindful of how his presence is perpetually exacerbating, providing racists and misogynists an unambiguous spiritual co-signature.
And I find myself in less of a forgiving mood. Sometimes I wonder if I ever even wanted to attempt forgiveness; if trying to forgive white people for this is a lie I told myself to make me feel better about myself. And, well, I guess we each have stories we tell ourselves to live.
Straight From
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