Shame on those political elites demanding we abandon even striving for a fair country.
By
As Scottish literary giant Robert Burns wrote, “The best-laid schemes of mice and men / Go oft awry.”
His 1785 poem,
titled “To A Mouse,” could be directed today at the right-wing sloganeers
who’ve been scheming so furiously to turn their hokey “woke” snobbery into a
winning political stratagem.
“Your local
librarian is woke!” they screech. “So is Disney, Inc.! Some of your churches,
too, plus all Democrats, and — OMG — even Bud Light!” Wokeism is the Red Scare,
Welfare Queen, and Willy Horton rolled into one, forming the main “issue” of
Republicans now running for president, Congress, and dogcatcher.
But rather than
getting defensive, insisting you are not woke,
consider firing back by saying, “Of course I’m woke!”
For the great majority of Americans, being “woke” is a very positive characteristic — it means simply that you’re awake, attentive to what’s going on. Indeed, in Black communities, “stay woke” has long meant staying alert to racial and social injustices.
Even some
Republicans must consider it bizarrely self-defeating for their party’s top
candidates to be urging voters to go to sleep.
GOP leaders explain
that anti-woke means, among other things, crusading against DEI (Diversity,
Equity, and Inclusiveness). But that means they’re opposing America itself, for
we are a nation united under the essential principle of e pluribus unum.
As affirmed by the
egalitarian principles of the Declaration of Independence, the 14th Amendment,
the Statue of Liberty, and our kindergarten teachings of sharing and fairness,
ours is a country rooted in constant diversification, expanding equality, and
the democratic idea that every voice ought to be included. Our country needs
more of all three!
America is way short of achieving these historic ideals, but shame on those revisionist political elites now demanding we abandon even striving for them. Confront the charlatans!
OtherWords
columnist is a radio commentator, writer,
and public speaker. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org.