NeighborhoodNomad.
New member
Peace_79;9477938 said:I have heard a lot regarding the collective wealth of Black people in America touted as a rationale for us to withhold our vote in the Presidential election.
I've always found this rationale to be peculiar.
It is not the responsibility of the government to provide the people with wealth ... that is incumbent upon the people ... either individually or collectively.
That's why I appreciate and respect what @"NeighborhoodNomad. " is doing for the black community.
We need more of that.
But one of the things the government CAN do is provide mechanisms and infrastructure to introduce fairness and equality into the system.
What socioeconomic groups choose to do with those conditions is up to them.
I think we can all agree that African Americans have significant opportunity in the areas of fairness and equality.
The question I have - is why can't we do BOTH?
Why can't we build up our wealth as a community AND at the same time, enhance our capability to do so by voting for the legislation and infrastructure that aligns with our interests at both the local and federal levels.
Many people have framed this election as voting for a person.
It's not.
A person's background and character should only be considered in so much as it will impact their EXECUTION of the office of the President and the image they project to the rest of the country and the world.
We are electing the national DIRECTION on a swath of imperative issues - Including the systemic policies that can bring more equality and fairness to African American people.
Ideally, we can do both, but realistically or maybe a better word would be historically, we always do vote for the candidates who align with our interests and goals. We've been eagerly voting for the candidate that panders to us the most, but overall, our conditions haven't changed. We have a few more faces in places we didn't expect to see in executive positions, but our conditions as a people are still fucked up. And if we protest loud enough, eventually, the system will reluctantly throw a crumb to shut us up, until our next protest or their next election.
Ideally, Most the words of the constitution and pretty much every religious moral conduct is good on paper, but it's never what ends up being applied.