Progressive… ish

This week marked the opening of The Obama Presidential Center.  Rather than merely a facility to store and view the best and brightest moments of the eight-year Barack Obama presidency, it is very much something else.

We’ll start with eye catching!

Part museum, part community campus, part city park complete with a basketball court and barbecue grilling stations, along with vegetable gardens, walkways, a physical to-scale recreation of the Oval Office, as well as a destination, state-of-the-art, neighborhood gathering place housing numerous educational programs, classes and activities for people of all ages.

No, this is not a plug for the president or First Lady Michelle Obama, or the Center.

… though you can always get a picture with them

Even though the place seems quite impressive and cool to me.

And the former First Couple are, in my opinion, well, let’s just say sorely missed.

A wild understatement

Rather it is me urging everyone to take a look at two things:

The first is the ambition of what they are trying to create – something innately and historically American because it is a bit new and ingenious.

As was stated numerous times at its inaugural ceremonies on Friday, the building and grounds is not primarily a gauzy, nostalgic look-back at the Obama years. 

Annie Leibovitz's Portraits of President Obama and His Family | Vanity Fair
OK but can we look back at how adorable this family is/was???!

Instead it is an attempt to revitalize the First Lady’s hometown neighborhood on the south side of Chicago (Note: And his adopted one) by providing it with one of the largest, functional and certainly most expensive community centers in the country. 

A place that fosters education, teaches history (note: the successes as well as the failures of the O years), and encourages reflection. 

While at the same time giving the average local or far-away international tourist a fun place to hang out.

An out-of-the-box stab at something different.

That, in itself, serves as a more than apt metaphor and representation of what the Obamas and his presidency meant for the country at the time he was elected.

Click the picture to see more

But as impressive as all of this is, it was the theme and tenor of the former president’s remarks on opening day that really got to me, and got me thinking.

No, I will not be summarizing the speech or breaking it down.  You can watch it yourself here:   

Or better yet read the transcript of what he said here.

Rather it was his reminder to the crowd, and the worldwide audience no-doubt watching, that brings me to my second point.

Which is that despite the insanity currently happening, both in the country and within the now vomitous gold gilded Oval Office (Note: My words, he was far more polite), the 250 year history of the United States has always been a constant back and forth swing between freedom vs. repression, equality vs. racism  and the upper ruling class vs. the “poor.” (Note: I put “poor” in  quotes since 99% plus of us would be considered peons if we use present-day wealth disparities as the measure that determined who really ruled who).

Not to mention a perpetual fight for rights and non-discrimination by the many, and frankly countless, diverse minority groups comprising the essential tapestry fabric that is truly “America.”

What does it mean to be a country whose very founding was based on the tapestry principle (Note: Carole King excepted)?

Carole King: Tapestry Album Review | Pitchfork
OK but do listen to this album after you finish reading.

That despite all of our many faults we are still the only place in the world where you STILL AUTOMATICALLY AND LEGALLY become one of us, i.e. AMERICAN, because you live here.

As a child of immigrant grandparents, who grew up in a neighborhood of immigrants in the most immigrant populous and racially mixed U.S. city in the country during the most progressive decade in U.S. history (Note: NYC in the 1960s. And it didn’t seem so special at the time) I took all the mix and match cultural stuff sort of for granted.

But as an adult the reality of who we also are on the other side of big city inclusion has come crashingly into focus in too many unexpected and frankly, for me, unimaginable ways.

Reality GIFs | Tenor
It ain’t rainbows, my friend.

So when Pres. Obama got to the part of his speech were he spoke of the radical nature of our Founding Fathers for creating the FIRST country not ruled by kings and lords and the strong dominating the weak – aka “the many ruled by the few” it gave me pause. 

Especially when he pointed out that despite their writing a Declaration of Independence of “inalienable rights” every person in the country possessed, these were men who also left “slavery intact” while restricting voting to “white men who owned property.”

Constitution Day: Hamilton edition – The College of Arts & Sciences at  Texas A&M University
Checking my notes on Hamilton…

Therein laid one of many contradictions that is and always has been these United States.  A group of men with “the genius to provide us with a framework that allows each generation to make our union more (Note: Or less) perfect.”

As he recounted the pushing and pulling in each direction over more than two centuries (Note: See the above speech link) I was particularly taken with a quote from a Boston minister (Note: Usually attributed to Dr. Martin Luther King) during the Civil War era. 

This was a time when slaves would escape to the freedom of northern states only to be legally captured, shackled in chains and dragged, or sailed by ship, back down south.  And once again become mere property of their masters with nothing approaching inalienable rights of life, liberty and happiness.

I do not present to understand the moral universe,’ said Reverend Theodore Parker, one of the leading slave abolitionists from Boston at the time.  “..The arc is a long one… I cannot calculate the curve…by sight…. But from what I see, I am sure it bends towards justice.”

MANSFIELD: The Arc of the Moral Universe | CoolCleveland
Ok but how long?

Point being, that despite a lot of evidence to the contrary, namely the case of a young Boston man who had just been seized and hauled away by hundreds of armed officers back into slavery, Rev. Parker had lived and experienced enough in the country to know that in the long run this would never hold and that… eventually… justice would prevail.

I wanted to chalk this up to just another inspirational, glass half-filled Obama speech until that night, while cleaning out some of the physical files in my home office I came upon a news clipping from the N.Y. Post from 1964 my mother had saved.  It was about my third grade elementary school class and I hadn’t looked at in years. 

You might not be able to make out the wording in this copy, but here’s the first paragraph:

When the sun hits the windows in class 3-303 at P.S. 86 it is filtered through the blue cardboard tulips and orange paper daisies pasted to the panes.  In that mixture of gold, blue and orange sits Efrain, the lone Puerto Rican in the class.  Four other transfer students, all Negroes, are scattered through the room.  And there are 29 white students…

Truth be told, I had no idea we were one of the first forced busing, integrated schools in the state. 

Nor did I have any idea Efrain was Puerto Rican.  I just knew his skin had a slightly bronzed tint and the straight brownish blonde hair of the time that I had always wanted (Note: Yes, even then).

But I do remember him, as the last paragraph of the article states, at the blackboard. 

And the adjacent window covered in blue construction paper and orange daisies  

Where he quickly added up a series of numbers much faster than any of the rest of us could.

As for the four “Negro” kids, it never occurred to me that this was unusual.  I didn’t really think about it.  And strange as it might seem to you now, few, if any, of the rest of us did.

That WAS America in that moment in time. 

For me.

And my friends.

And I suspect it will be again.

Or at least, can be.

Bruce Springsteen – “Land of Hope and Dreams”

No Kings

Nearly 7 million people showed up to the No Kings rallies on Saturday to protest Trump administration policies and to stand up for freedom of speech and against fascism in America.

I was one of them.

Just me and Lady Lib, busy on a Saturday

Oh, no applause, please.  I had to do something – if, for nothing else, my psychological well-being.  

Though in actuality, it was much more than that. When donating money, calling and writing your representatives, and challenging strangers at the supermarket or at a random dinner party – all of which I do frequently (Note: And the latter two as recently as last week) – are not enough, it helps to get off your lazy, whiny, doom-scrolling ass, take to the streets and be counted.

In truth, it’s the least you can do for your nearly 250 year-old country, an experiment in democracy that was never expected to succeed.

The original “No Kings” marchers

As cynical as I am, it amazed me to hear the current Speaker of the House of Representatives publicly call this demonstration of freedom a “Hate America Rally.”

Demonstration and Dissent are the literal means by which our Democracy was founded. #TheThreeDs

Or as one of many hundreds of truly clever signs at the rally I attended in L.A. at Roxbury Park noted: “ NO KINGS – Our Founding Fathers Demanded It.”

A couple thousand of my closest friends

The majority of the 2600 #NoKings rallies were in the United States but some extended worldwide – through almost all of Europe, as well as to Japan, Costa Rica and, of course, our neighbors, Canada and Mexico. (Note: Whatever they’re thinking, just quadruple it for me).

I attended with my sister, one of my favorite people in the world.  

Pair of Chairs

One of my other favorites, my husband, was down for the count after dental surgery but urged me to go as I planned instead of staying home with him because he thought it would brighten me up.  

Also, I don’t know how much fun it would be post-surgery to have someone next to you simultaneously doom scrolling and cursing at the television while watching news coverage on MSNBC, so it could’ve been a bit of self-preservation.

Nevertheless, he was correct as usual.

The signs did not disappoint #woof

I have long believed our political situation in the T—p Era is not the Dems vs. the Repubs or progressive vs. conservative.  Rather, it so obviously seems to be democracy vs. fascism; multi-culturalism vs. white supremacy; Christian nationalism vs. everyone else

And on Saturday it was reconfirmed to me thousands of times over that I have by far not been the only person to feel this way.

… and dissent is patriotic

Several thousand or more surrounded me and my sister, carrying signs and placards, chatting us up or chanting through bullhorns or to passersby variations of much the same thing.

Not only that, the pithy original slogan I had thought up to put on my own sign (Note: Had I thought to buy the posterboard and marker ahead of time) – “THIS QUEEN SAYS NO KINGS” – was literally being held high in the air by another queen right behind us.

Wish I had thought of this one!

Old people, young people, middle-aged people and people of the kind of indeterminate age you can only encounter in Los Angeles.  They were all there.  Wealthy, middle-class and I venture to say the not much money class.  Millionaires and those on fixed incomes.

How do I know?

Well, see, contrary to popular belief, here in L.A. we do speak to each other.  A really well-off woman shared with us a story of marrying a very wealthy guy decades ago when she was “younger and 20 pounds lighter” who was in real estate.  Said guy took her to an industry event, introduced her to T—p and, as she put it, “he felt me up all over.  He was disgusting even then!”

barf

Of course, she didn’t just volunteer out of nowhere.  She only came out with it when I shared that my sister and I were from his hometown in Queens.

Then there was the 80 plus year old smiley senior woman who several times drove her car around the block so she could honk in support of us protesters.  Later on in the day she walked by on foot brandishing a ticket a policeman gave her for “cruising” in her car, and lamented about how she would pay it on a fixed income from a social security check of $748 per month she wasn’t even sure she was getting. 

Angelenos are a special kind of people

I wish that I’d had more than $23 bucks in my wallet or thought to say something encouraging before she moved on and found comfort somewhere else.  Which she certainly did, given the crowd, the people and the “vibe.” (Note: #Bitchin’).

Speaking of comfort, you haven’t lived until you’ve stood at a curb holding a sign and received that many hundreds of wide smiles and waves from people in passing cars, that many extended and staccato car horns of support (Note: Sooo many different tones!, and found yourself met with more thumbs up and nods of approval than you have ever received in…well, your entire life.)

Even the dogs got in on it

My favorite came from a handsome cop in an official Los Angeles police cruiser who tipped his hat slightly and nodded in approval of what we were all doing.  I took it to mean, even though I’m in uniform, I still believe in democracy.  

As did those in Mercedes, BMWs, Teslas, Toyotas, Hondas, Chryslers, Ford Trucks, Jeeps, VWs and various non-descript mini-vans and falling apart Kias.

In fact, the only negative reaction came from two different women in two different Porsches an hour apart.  One gave a thumbs down and the other gave us the finger.

… so let them

Make of that what you will but don’t give it too much thought.

Americans are awake, alert, angry and pissed-off.  

Especially in L.A.

Not to mention Creative.  

Man, once again the signs.

My favorite was the woman holding a large poster with a small photo of Anne Frank surrounded by the big bolded words:

WHY PROTEST?  Because It’s Easier Than Hiding A Family In My Attic…..

amen sister

L’Chaim, America.

And here are some snapshots.

Pavement – “No More Kings”