Donald
Trump and his followers clearly don't see the ugly parts of our nation's past
as problematic.
We watch It’s
a Wonderful Life and A Christmas Story, engage in
time-honored traditions, and even sing songs about sleighs and sleigh bells.
Honestly, when was the last time you rode in a sleigh?
I’ve eaten a roasted chestnut (purchased on the streets of
Chicago, so I don’t know if there was an open fire involved in the roasting
process), but I haven’t gone for a single sleigh ride in my whole life.
Donald Trump’s campaign slogan — “Make America Great Again” —
plays on this idea of some imagined time in the past when things were better,
simpler, than they are now. But The Donald isn’t the only one who evokes this
mythical past.
On the other side of the aisle, Democrats often wax poetic about
the strong middle class of the era that followed World War II, or about the
social safety net President Franklin Delano Roosevelt put in place before that.
And it’s true: America did accomplish great things in the past.
But I fundamentally disagree that our better days are behind us.
This notion of a lost Norman Rockwell America is an illusion.
If you’re African American, looking back to the 1950s means
looking back to the days of lynching, Jim Crow, and legalized discrimination.
How can that inspire nostalgia?
In the South before the Civil Rights movement, it was open
season on African Americans, with white terrorists lynching whomever they chose
with impunity. And to secure the white racist vote for his New Deal programs,
FDR excluded farm workers and
domestic workers from basic wage
and work protections. Back then, those segments of the labor force were largely
black.
There were problems in the North too. Housing discrimination against blacks was federal policy — not just a
simple, organic process of “white flight.” Policies like redlining
systematically denied African Americans wealth, which still harms their
families and communities today.
Nor was life peachy for women in this time.
This was the era that spurred the feminist Betty Friedan to
write about “the problem that
has no name.” She torpedoed the
presumption that all American women ought to rejoice that their roles as cooks,
house cleaners, and baby machines were now made easier with modern
conveniences.
No doubt modern women are grateful they’re no longer expected to
greet their husbands with a warm meal, a cocktail, and a come-hither look when
they come home from a long day of work.
Trump’s “Make America Great Again” sloganeering — combined with
his anti-Muslim, anti-black, and anti-Mexican rhetoric — makes it apparent that
he and his followers don’t see the ugly parts of our nation’s past as
problematic. But it’s wrong to whitewash history.
Surely, America isn’t perfect today. We haven’t solved our
problems with racism (Donald Trump is Exhibit A) and women still earn less than
men. We’ve also got the specters of mass shootings, terrorism, and the climate
crisis to boot.
Yet the answer to our troubles isn’t returning to an imagined,
better past. It’s finding our way to a more perfect future. As Bill Clinton said two decades ago, “There is nothing wrong with
America that cannot be cured by what is right with America.”
OtherWords
columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our
Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It. OtherWords.org.