In a post published
on The New Yorker, acclaimed Nigerian writer writes on race, identity,
politics, misogyny, the media and our moral duty after the election of Donald
Trump as the President of America. Read below.
"America has
always been aspirational to me, Even when I chafed at its hypocrisies, it
somehow always seemed sure, a nation that knew what it was doing,
refreshingly free of
that anything-can-happen existential uncertainty so familiar to developing
nations. But no longer. The election of Donald Trump has flattened the poetry
in America’s founding philosophy: the country born from an idea of freedom is
to be governed by an unstable, stubbornly uninformed, authoritarian demagogue.
And in response to this there are people living in visceral fear, people
anxiously trying to discern policy from bluster, and people kowtowing as though
to a new king. Things that were recently pushed to the corners of America’s
political space—overt racism, glaring misogyny, anti-intellectualism—are once
again creeping to the center.
Now is the time to
resist the slightest extension in the boundaries of what is right and just. Now
is the time to speak up and to wear as a badge of honor the opprobrium of
bigots. Now is the time to confront the weak core at the heart of America’s
addiction to optimism; it allows too little room for resilience, and too much
for fragility. Hazy visions of “healing” and “not becoming the hate we hate”
sound dangerously like appeasement. The responsibility to forge unity belongs
not to the denigrated but to the denigrators. The premise for empathy has to be
equal humanity; it is an injustice to demand that the maligned identify with
those who question their humanity.
America loves
winners, but victory does not absolve. Victory, especially a slender one
decided by a few thousand votes in a handful of states, does not guarantee
respect. Nobody automatically deserves deference on ascending to the leadership
of any country. American journalists know this only too well when reporting on
foreign leaders—their default mode with Africans, for instance, is nearly
always barely concealed disdain. President Obama endured disrespect from all
quarters. By far the most egregious insult directed toward him, the racist
movement tamely termed “birtherism,” was championed by Trump.
Yet, a day after the
election, I heard a journalist on the radio speak of the vitriol between Obama
and Trump. No, the vitriol was Trump’s. Now is the time to burn false
equivalencies forever. Pretending that both sides of an issue are equal when
they are not is not “balanced” journalism; it is a fairy tale—and, unlike most
fairy tales, a disingenuous one.
Now is the time to
refuse the blurring of memory. Each mention of “gridlock” under Obama must be
wrought in truth: that “gridlock” was a deliberate and systematic refusal of
the Republican Congress to work with him. Now is the time to call things what
they actually are, because language can illuminate truth as much as it can
obfuscate it. Now is the time to forge new words. “Alt-right” is benign.
“White-supremacist right” is more accurate.
Now is the time to
talk about what we are actually talking about. “Climate contrarian” obfuscates.
“Climate-change denier” does not. And because climate change is scientific
fact, not opinion, this matters.
Now is the time to
discard that carefulness that too closely resembles a lack of conviction. The
election is not a “simple racism story,” because no racism story is ever a
“simple” racism story, in which grinning evil people wearing white burn crosses
in yards. A racism story is complicated, but it is still a racism story, and it
is worth parsing. Now is not the time to tiptoe around historical references.
Recalling Nazism is not extreme; it is the astute response of those who know
that history gives both context and warning.
Now is the time to
recalibrate the default assumptions of American political discourse. Identity
politics is not the sole preserve of minority voters. This election is a
reminder that identity politics in America is a white invention: it was the
basis of segregation. The denial of civil rights to black Americans had at its
core the idea that a black American should not be allowed to vote because that
black American was not white. The endless questioning, before the election of
Obama, about America’s “readiness” for a black President was a reaction to
white identity politics. Yet “identity politics” has come to be associated with
minorities, and often with a patronizing undercurrent, as though to refer to
nonwhite people motivated by an irrational herd instinct. White Americans have
practiced identity politics since the inception of America, but it is now laid
bare, impossible to evade.
Now is the time for
the media, on the left and right, to educate and inform. To be nimble and
alert, clear-eyed and skeptical, active rather than reactive. To make clear
choices about what truly matters.
Now is the time to
put the idea of the “liberal bubble” to rest. The reality of American tribalism
is that different groups all live in bubbles. Now is the time to acknowledge the
ways in which Democrats have condescended to the white working class—and to
acknowledge that Trump condescends to it by selling it fantasies. Now is the
time to remember that there are working-class Americans who are not white and
who have suffered the same deprivations and are equally worthy of news
profiles. Now is the time to remember that “women” does not equal white women.
“Women” must mean all women.
Now is the time to
elevate the art of questioning. Is the only valid resentment in America that of
white males? If we are to be sympathetic to the idea that economic anxieties
lead to questionable decisions, does this apply to all groups? Who exactly are
the élite?
Now is the time to
frame the questions differently. If everything remained the same, and Hillary
Clinton were a man, would she still engender an overheated, outsized hostility?
Would a woman who behaved exactly like Trump be elected? Now is the time to
stop suggesting that sexism was absent in the election because white women did
not overwhelmingly vote for Clinton. Misogyny is not the sole preserve of men.
The case for women
is not that they are inherently better or more moral. It is that they are half
of humanity and should have the same opportunities—and be judged according to
the same standards—as the other half. Clinton was expected to be perfect,
according to contradictory standards, in an election that became a referendum
on her likability.
Now is the time to
ask why America is far behind many other countries (see: Rwanda) in its representation
of women in politics. Now is the time to explore mainstream attitudes toward
women’s ambition, to ponder to what extent the ordinary political calculations
that all politicians make translate as moral failures when we see them in
women. Clinton’s careful calibration was read as deviousness. But would a male
politician who is carefully calibrated—Mitt Romney, for example—merely read as
carefully calibrated?
Now is the time to
be precise about the meanings of words. Trump saying “They let you do it” about
assaulting women does not imply consent, because consent is what happens before
an act.
Now is the time to
remember that, in a wave of dark populism sweeping the West, there are
alternative forms. Bernie Sanders’s message did not scapegoat the vulnerable.
Obama rode a populist wave before his first election, one marked by a
remarkable inclusiveness. Now is the time to counter lies with facts,
repeatedly and unflaggingly, while also proclaiming the greater truths: of our
equal humanity, of decency, of compassion. Every precious ideal must be
reiterated, every obvious argument made, because an ugly idea left unchallenged
begins to turn the color of normal. It does not have to be like this."
Source:
Newyorker.com
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