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LK's avatar

Absolutely on point. The outreach must happen at the community level. And it needs to be visual and at town halls and community centers. We need to lift up those campaigning for the “us” in our entire neighborhoods.

Watching an episode with Stanley Tucci over the weekend in Sicily. He was interviewing a woman in a small village that had African roots, and how many people had moved decades before to help build and grow the community. He asked about feeling welcome - she answered yes because they had achieved “a cultural maturity” of how to respect and coexist.

When we will reach that maturity in America I still do not know.

Sharon Herrick's avatar

I am an old (78) white feminist---a woman who marched in Washington and Cairo, Illinois. Our response has to be more than voting. When I look at professional sports, for example, I see Black sports stars everywhere. When I look at film and TV and commercials, I see Black actors. Companies use Black actors to sell their products. (The same is true for women, of course.) They want our money, our patronage, our participation in culture but they don't want to share power. Boycott their asses. If all of the pro sports teams would simply speak up and stand with Black voters, things would change. Withhold your talent, your allegiance, your admiration, withhold your dollars---it's what they understand.

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