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Daveparts Donating Member (854 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 09:33 AM
Original message
A Single Lifetime
A Single Lifetime
By David Glenn Cox



Surviving to over age 50 is no major accomplishment, in and of itself. It's only a chance to see things and experience things, and sadly, most of it for the worse. As a child, playing in the sun was not seen as a danger; the polar ice caps weren’t melting, or at least we didn’t know about it yet. Gasoline was .29 cents a gallon and seat belts were a novelty only required in the front seat.

But I started life on a wholly segregated, post-World War II street, in a wholly segregated block, in a wholly segregated suburb. African Americans didn’t exist in public life; there were no African Americans on television except Nat King Cole, Sammy Davis Jr. and Louis Armstrong. No African American news anchors, or weather people, or sports reporters. There were few African American movie stars. Sidney Poitier is the only one that comes to mind.

In 1961 we moved to Dallas, Texas, and I was exposed for the first time to racial and religious prejudice. We had moved into a new house and the lawn was overgrown. A neighbor lady came over and introduced herself and asked my mother, “Where did you find a white yard man?”

“Oh, it was easy,” she answered. “I married him.”

Some neighborhood children invited my sister and I to go to the community pool with them, but after finding out that we were of the Catholic persuasion, they left without us. I was a small child and I couldn’t understand how it could matter what church we attended. That was my first small taste of American prejudice, and my mother explained it as some people are just afraid of anything different and some can only feel good about themselves when looking down on someone else. For years I kept an ash tray from a dry cleaners in Dallas because inside of it was the motto: For discriminating people!

I remember, about the same time, running into the house to get a drink and hearing a voice on the television. A voice like I had never heard before, a voice that stopped me, a child, in my tracks. It was a voice that, if God spoke to you, that is what he would sound like. I was a kid. I knew nothing of left wing or right wing politics, but that voice stopped me in my tracks. “I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal."

In 1964 we moved to Montgomery, Alabama. My father, not liking the job in Dallas, took a job in Montgomery where I was exposed to an entirely new world. While the neighborhoods were segregated, the shopping was not. The library was having their annual book sale, but what was on sale was mainly text books because, at that time, students in Alabama had to purchase their school books. Just one of a hundred ways that African Americans were denied access to education. Sure, it impacted poor white students as well, but poor blacks outnumbered poor whites ten to one.

Montgomery still had downtown movie theaters then. Along the side of one that still stands today was a steel staircase that, if you didn’t know any better, you might mistake it for a fire escape. Being ignorant little white children, we wanted to sit in the balcony but were told the balcony was closed. It was a mystery to us, as it appeared safe enough. But as we looked we couldn’t find a stairway to the balcony except for that steel-framed staircase outside. It was federal law that had closed off the balcony and it occurred to me later that without an internal staircase they had no access to restrooms or the candy counter.

This struck me as mean spirited and vicious. The candy counter was one thing but the restrooms were another matter. The city, faced with forced integration of public pools, chose instead to fill them in and have none. This, to many in the white population, didn’t seem extreme or incredibly cynical but necessary and something that they were forced to do by militant blacks and rabble-rousers. Why, you scratch any black militant and right underneath you’ll find a communist. Martin Luther King was called a communist in the local paper right up to the day he died.

The white population was frightened and the politicians exploited that fear. But Montgomery was a pretty dull town in 1965. So when the marchers started from Selma my dad loaded us up in the old Chrysler to see them. Riding down Hwy 80 I saw the marchers and the state troopers and lots and lots of police cars. I saw the Edmund Pettis Bridge for the first time and recognized it from television. Returning to Montgomery my father tried to get us into downtown but the police had the roads blocked so he attempted to sneak us in on a back road. We got close enough to hear loudspeakers but not close enough to hear what they were saying. We could see the dome of the capitol with the Stars and Bars blowing in the breeze.

That was as close as we got to downtown and shortly after that we returned to Chicago, but things were changing. A TV station hired a black anchorman, and Diahann Carroll starred in a sitcom with black actors. A young, black comedian named Bill Cosby was a hit on the TV show "I Spy." While progress was being made, feelings among many in the white population hardened. Graffiti was ugly and many saw it as African Americans never being satisfied. I remember thinking, I wonder how they would feel as a child seeing the swimming pools filled in rather than let you swim in them. Or taking a date to the movies, up a long flight of steel stairs, outdoors, and paying your money but not being able to use the restroom.

Slowly blacks were getting elected to state houses, and city councils, and becoming mayors, and even governors, and lo and behold, the sky didn’t fall. I ended up back in Montgomery and much had changed, both for the better and the worse. The political division, rather than being Republican and Democrat, was black versus white. For nine years black members of the city council tried to get a section of Cleveland Avenue renamed Rosa Parks Drive. The section ran through several black neighborhoods but many in the white population saw it as blacks still pushing for more. That same city council, with a white majority, renamed another major street after a retiring republican congressman, with just the bang of a gavel.

An African American congressman got a section of I-85 renamed the Martin Luther King Memorial Expressway. The dedication sign was vandalized repeatedly until it was moved overhead, out of reach. But attending an integrated high school named for the president of the Confederacy was tenuous. The back and white populations were more distrustful then hostile. Conversations were short and rare; it was a segregated school in an integrated building. We were guinea pigs in a way. We were always filling out state or federal paperwork as government tried to glean knowledge about us, both white and black.

One day in home room the teacher began to pass out a state form, on white paper for white students and yellow paper for black students. I had already started to fill out my form when I heard a murmur from the black students. They would not fill out the yellow form; they wanted a white paper form. Why was theirs yellow, they asked. I got it, and understood just how easily these things can become institutionalized without even thinking about it. The black students were refusing to fill out the yellow form and began crumpling them up and throwing them in the trash can. I crumpled up my white form and threw it away, as well. It didn’t make me a hero; I did it as much for my own personal rebellion, but it cost Hillary Clinton my vote.

When Hillary Clinton came to Selma to celebrate the anniversary of the Selma-to-Montgomery march, she kept saying, "y’all." Right, people who live in New York and attended Ivy League schools always say y’all. She was trying to draw a parallel between herself and Dr. King, when in fact she didn’t do any more than I did, crumble a form and throw it in the trash. She might have been supportive but that doesn’t make you a hero, and certainly draws no connection to a man who took a bullet to the throat.

I used to ride the bus to work in Montgomery; the ridership was 98% African American, and me. Most were women going to work. I would sit behind the bus driver, a man about my age, and we struck up a friendship, talking politics each day on my ride. One Saturday an elderly white woman pulled the cord, and as she got to the door she turned and said, “Thank you, Boy.”

I could feel my own ears burning with embarrassment. I stammered, “I know that’s got to piss you off.”

“Not really,” he answered. “Her kind is dying off. She just doesn’t know no better; the graveyard is taking care of her kind.” He was right, I never again heard a black man referred to as boy, and even in the South I don’t hear African Americans referred to by the N word. Not to say that it doesn’t go on among rednecks, Yee Haws, and uneducated Billy Bobs, but as a society it is considered an ignorant thing to say. In my lifetime the transformation has been amazingly swift. If, however, I’d lived under the yoke I’m sure it’s been a painfully long, uphill slog.

We are less than one week from possibly electing the first African American President of the United States, and I intend to vote for Barrack Obama. During the primary here in Georgia, Obama received 40% of the vote. Amazing when you consider that in my lifetime Georgia had a governor that campaigned with an ax handle to, as he said, “Put 'em back in their place!” Where, in my lifetime, most blacks in Georgia were not even allowed to vote. Yet today Georgia is a better place for that struggle, a better place for its white citizens as well as its African American citizens. A place where an African American candidate for President can garner 40% of the vote.

He may not win but the fact that it is even close is an amazing thing to see in one lifetime. But I’m voting for Barack Obama not because he is African American or half African American, I’m voting for him because I think he is the best man for the job and race has nothing to do with it. But this is the dream realized and we would be lying to ourselves to ignore it. “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”
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Zuiderelle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 09:44 AM
Response to Original message
1. I liked that right up until he had to insult and demean Hillary. That was unnecessary.
Edited on Fri Oct-31-08 09:48 AM by PelosiFan
Turning what started as an inspiring story about growing up among segregation and racism, with which I can identify, having grown up in Texas, into a nasty criticism of Hillary in one little paragraph.

If David Glenn Cox would take out that shit paragraph it might be good again.

UNITY, that's what we need, not shit-flinging.

(And if you are the author of this, I respectfully request that you remove that divisive paragraph.)

And yeah, he (or you) misspelled Barack, it's not "Barrack"

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Daveparts Donating Member (854 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 09:50 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. I call them as I see them
A New Yorker comes to Selma and tries to talk like a local and tell us what she did in her Ivy league school was a fraud. Had she just come and celebrated would have been fine but instead she tried to make about her. How her and Dr, King fought for civil rights
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Zuiderelle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 09:54 AM
Response to Reply #2
4. Too bad you can't let the primaries alone.
You ruined your story with that. I call them as I see them too.
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Captain Hilts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 10:32 AM
Response to Reply #1
6. Agreed. The ugly turn this article took makes me wonder about the veracity of the first part.
Edited on Fri Oct-31-08 10:34 AM by MookieWilson
Hillary DID live in Arkansas for quite a while. Mr. Obama went to Ivy League schools and also sometimes adopts the native tongue in speeches.

It's politics.
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Zuiderelle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 11:21 AM
Response to Reply #6
8. Exactly. I've heard Obama say y'all. And Hillary did live in Arkansas...
as well as having a husband with a very southern accent. That paragraph ruins the entire thing. And the OP really ought to remove it, unless it really is his intention to alienate several million democrats who supported her.



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Omnibus Donating Member (676 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 09:39 PM
Response to Reply #1
10. Hillary lived in Arkansas for nearly 20 years.
She moved there in 1973, when Bill moved back, and didn't leave until she became First Lady.

I grew up in Arkansas, and got to see her on TV once in a while. Even met her a couple of times. To my ears, she had (and has) a mild Chicagoland accent (she grew up there), but had some "Southern" there, too. And I'm sure she said "y'all" a lot, because we all did. Anyone who spoke to more than one person at a time would say "y'all". Yankees would move into our school district in August, and their kids would be saying it by the next May. Usually by Christmas.

While she was First Lady, or when she was running for President, I could tell when she was giving a speech in the south, because she would lapse into her adopted Little Rock accent.

I do the same thing; no one can normally tell I'm from Arkansas, but get me talking to someone from the south and I just naturally lapse into the accent of my youth.

The point is: the woman married a southern man, and lived in the south for a third of her life. When she's in the south, she says "y'all" and she's earned the right to do so.

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crikkett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-01-08 06:15 AM
Response to Reply #1
12. The man's allowed to say that he was turned off by an affectation.
Tolerance and respect for each other are what we need, not hysterics.

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Tansy_Gold Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-01-08 08:00 AM
Response to Reply #12
13. He's allowed to be turned off, but it may not be an "affectation."
The anti-Hillary slant ruined what was otherwise a decent first-draft.




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sinkingfeeling Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 09:53 AM
Response to Original message
3. I'm 60 and was moved from Ohio to south Florida at age 8, where I was first exposed to
segregated water fountains, rest rooms, schools, etc. I remember being shocked at the differences between my school and the 'black' ghetto school. I demanded and got to return to Ohio and lived with my grandmother for a year and a half before my parents also returned.

As an adult, I have lived in Ohio, Florida, North Carolina, Arizona, Minnesota, Texas, New York, California, and finally Arkansas. I have found pockets of racism in all states, and surprisingly only heard the verbal in lily-white Rochester, MN. I know that the country has a long ways to go, but look to the next couple of generations to completely lose the injustice. I have a bi-racial grand child and have proudly voted for Obama.
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nancyr Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 10:13 AM
Response to Original message
5. Very good.
I grew up in the midwest in the 50's, and can relate to what you've said. Religious and racial bigotry was the norm. We seem to be evolving slowly, but it's taken entirely too long. I moved away from that area years ago, but trips back have shown me that the attitudes are still very much the same. It's as though they are quite proud of their ignorance.
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dixiegrrrrl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 11:14 AM
Response to Original message
7. Well done. thanks.
I lived in Anniston, Al. early 60's.
Quite a cultural shock for me, coming from the Pac. NW.
Tumultuous times.


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noiretextatique Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 06:44 PM
Response to Original message
9. thanks for sharing your story
very powerful.
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Omnibus Donating Member (676 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-31-08 09:45 PM
Response to Original message
11. A wonderful story.
It's nice to have things put into perspective like this.

Sometimes we look at the way things are, and then think of how they ought to be, and we get discouraged by how far we have yet to go. When we feel that way, we should look back, and see how far we've already come.

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UpInArms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-01-08 08:57 AM
Response to Original message
14. ...
:applause:
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ConcernedCanuk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-02-08 02:46 PM
Response to Original message
15. "She was trying to draw a parallel between herself and Dr. King" - where does that come from?
.
.
.

and as far as that "y'all" thing - heck

- I'm a Canuk and when I lived in San Diego CA I used it all the time, and STILL do - even on this board - and no-one has made an issue out of it.

Furthermore,

I live on the Ontario/Quebec border, and the French speaking people are FLATTERED when I try to speak their lingo

Hillary, as all politicians do, have their faults.

But I think making an issue/assumption like "She was trying to draw a parallel between herself and Dr. King" is a cheap shot

Not quite sure why you decided to throw HRC into the mix anyway -

She's not even a contender, and otherwise it's a pretty good writing Dave.

Just My wee Canuk Opinion.
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