This country has been fighting a scaled back version of the civil war since 2016. Twenty-first century rebels are still tethered to a lost cause — traditions and an ideology that should have been nailed in a coffin and buried on April 9, 1865.
This scaled-back version of a war that divided this country did not start yesterday, or the day before, or even the year before. No, weapons of mass destruction have taken the form of people who have made it their mission to chip away at long-standing executive, judicial, and legislative norms while simultaneously reveling in the nullification of common sense.
Extremists have supplied oxygen to the welled-up longings of those bred on bigotry and racism. Pent-up anger, fear, jealousy, and ignorance ended the Reconstruction Era in the United States. The dreams of slaves that had been deferred until Reconstruction were once again put on hold in 1877. The flames ignited by racism and bigotry were not relegated to a storyteller’s imaginative recording of historical events. The flames were real, unabated, and used as a strategy to intimidate and terrorize blacks. Preventing Blacks from voting was one of many goals.
The 15th Amendment paved the way for Black Americans to vote, but when Reconstruction ended in 1877, the right to vote for most Blacks in American became a bridge too far for many to cross. Fast forward to 2013 when the Supreme Court ruled against a section of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, effectively removing what had been a long-standing check on states that needed (because of past discriminatory practices directed at Blacks) federal preclearance before enacting any changes to voting laws and practices in their states. More than a dozen states changed aspects of their voting practices after the 2013 Supreme Court ruling. These changes were deliberately intended to curb the Black vote.
I am the mother of a Black male. There were some trying times, rooted in bigotry, when he was growing up in northern Maryland where I live, but I never thought that into his adult years I’d have to harken back to lessons on how to survive racism that I had to learn as a Black teen on the Eastern Shore of Maryland—which at the time was a haven for racial inequities.
It is indeed a stony road we trod while being Black in America and has been since 1619. Why are Black Americans, over 400 years in America, still confronted with attempts to prevent their casting of ballots for elected officials? Hatred, fear, jealousy, and ignorance come to mind.
No matter how many other cultures or ethnicities emigrate to the United States, the Black–White racial dynamic will be forever fraught with dread, deep anxiety, and mistrust because racism and bigotry continue to be taught to children across this country from the time they are old enough to recognize differences in the hues of people’s complexions. To each person reading this, I ask, “What did you teach your children about race?” What was taught to you? Did your lessons enhance a positive understanding or widen the divide?”
I too am a citizen of this country born and bred here, but not a day has ever gone by when I haven’t or don’t realize that through the eyes of many, the only thing visible when they look at me is my blackness. To them I am a member of the underclass and therefore not entitled to the pursuits of life, liberty, and happiness.
To those in tune with the current progressive push for racial equality in America, those who comprise the greater good in this country, I say, we’ve been here before at the threshold of sweeping change. Reconstruction in the late 1800s held such promise for Black Americans, but pure unmitigated hatred, jealousy, and fear triumphed over good. It remains to be seen whether the current push for racial equality will fight the good fight and be strong enough to eradicate evil forces.
There needs to be a reckoning in this country that will allow for a deep understanding and embracing of the
American’s Creed: “I believe in the United States as a government of the people, by the people, for the people; whose just powers are derived from the consent of the governed, a democracy in a republic, a sovereign Nation of many sovereign States; a perfect union, one and inseparable, established upon those principles of freedom, equality, justice, and humanity....” Note that however intended, the creed as written, does not disenfranchise any race.
VOTE by absentee ballot if need be, but vote.
Deborah Scott
has been writing one genre or another since she was a young girl growing up on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Regardless of which genre she is writing, it is her hope that readers will be informed, touched, or inspired by her words.