Even his defeated opponent, Senator John McCain, took note of the historical significance of Obama’s victory as a praiseworthy thing. Yes We Can! That phrase, the Obama campaign’s insistent motto, also tapped into the desires of many of Obama’s white supporters who wished to produce evidence that there had indeed been racial progress in the country, including some who may have had a few doubts about the one-term senator with the “non-American” sounding name. For black people, who had seen the rules of the game rigged against them in the most immoral ways – slavery and Jim Crow, and their aftermath – having a black man compete for and win the greatest prize in politics was beyond exhilarating. How proud this made Americans of all races. He would be the commander-in-chief of the country’s armed services. President Barack Obama’s portrait would hang in government offices across the country, and in embassies around the world. An event that many did not think would happen in their lifetimes, happened: a man of African descent and – this may have been more culturally important – his black wife and children resided in the White House as the nation’s “first family”. I t is no surprise that the election of the first black president of the United States would occasion much thinking, writing and talking about the subject of race in America.
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