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mrs_bonaventure 's review for:
We Were Eight Years in Power: An American Tragedy
by Ta-Nehisi Coates
This book really taught me about racism for the first time. Not about racism as some ordinary discrimination, perhaps familiar from understanding sexism, misogyny and other chauvinistic attitudes close to home; but racism as the systematic threat to one race and theft of their rightful property and opportunities, over generations, legally, and as yet still without a proper remedy. This might sound extreme and perhaps (I have no right to judge for I am white) not as bad here in the U.K. because we have less recent and less severe history of slavery to deal with (though we are not absolved); but it brought home to me for the first time how materially different it is to live in the US if you’re black compared to white.
And for that reason, this is the book that finally enabled me to understand why white people voted for Trump, even if they were poor and even if they were female; because he is, as Coates says, America’s “first white president,” the first one elected as a binary opposite and a correction to his predecessor. Trump is overwhelmingly represented in every white voter group, the rich ones as well as the poor ones. Whereas the working class - if they were black - did not vote for him; and yet they have suffered from globalism and its discontents more than the white working class that have sought to justify their choice economically. And women - if they were black - did not vote for him. But white women - they voted for him in their droves, because even though women are an oppressed group, white women are inextricably attached to the systems of privilege and racism that secure their incomes and positions at the expense of black women and men. And they know it and they profit from that knowledge and privilege.
After reading Hillary’s book and feeling baffled - now I understand.
What a tragedy.
And for that reason, this is the book that finally enabled me to understand why white people voted for Trump, even if they were poor and even if they were female; because he is, as Coates says, America’s “first white president,” the first one elected as a binary opposite and a correction to his predecessor. Trump is overwhelmingly represented in every white voter group, the rich ones as well as the poor ones. Whereas the working class - if they were black - did not vote for him; and yet they have suffered from globalism and its discontents more than the white working class that have sought to justify their choice economically. And women - if they were black - did not vote for him. But white women - they voted for him in their droves, because even though women are an oppressed group, white women are inextricably attached to the systems of privilege and racism that secure their incomes and positions at the expense of black women and men. And they know it and they profit from that knowledge and privilege.
After reading Hillary’s book and feeling baffled - now I understand.
What a tragedy.