Many Black men, and I suspect this of some in this forum, remain insanely jealous of Barack Obama.
His ability to think rationally is far superior to them
His superiority at public speaking diminishes them
His calmness galvanizes others to be inspired by him
Unlike the grandstanding phonies among us, Obama does not seek to isolate Black people. But welcomes all who agree with our progress.
The ones who claim Obama did little for Black people miss the entire point of his campaign and time as POTUS. So, one more time for the clueless: Barack Obama was not elected President of Black America. He was elected President of the United States. And he was great at that job.
He was not able to embark on a grand Marshall Plan for Black Americans. There remained so much hatred, angst and uncertainly immediately after his 2008 election, many Blacks held their breath when it came to his well-being. I guess so many of forgot (or didn't even know about) the Tea Party, "We want our country back!" and the thousands of threats that poured in daily after the Obamas moved into the White House.
And I imagine you also neglect to recall the kindness and welcoming sentiment of the Bush Twins toward Malia and Sasha.
Know how Obama triumphed? He built a multi-ethnic political coalition. It was not all Black. Obama recognized he could not with Black votes alone. The same with Sen. Raphael Warnock in Georgia. He appealed to all constituencies and Asians went for Warnock in a big way, according to exit polls.
This is why I ignore those on this forum who call themselves "writers" but cannot author a coherent paragraph. They are often mistaken on their claims about history or how Slavery ended. Some act as if we Blacks alone triumphed over Southern Racists. Bull.
The Union Army, thousands of Abolitionists and scores of sympathizers, including Britain's Royal Navy, Mexicans, Native Americans and some Canadians all aided our struggle. Often for years and if caught, were punished severely. As a reporter, I was tasked with interviewing the late C. Everett Koop, at the time, the U.S. Surgeon General under Ronald Reagan. Koop's grandfather was part of the Underground Railroad. He spent time rowing escaped Slaves who made their way North into Staten Island across the Narrows into Brooklyn.
I betcha ya'll didn't know that chit.
Just one example of how some sympathetic Whites helped us.
This does not mean Blacks did not achieve anything. We have a bevy of inventors, explorers and luminaries in art, science and literature.
But when it comes to politics, the only way forward for Black America is through political coalition, alliances and cooperation. The Obama Coalition comprised African-Americans, Latinos, women, independents, millennials and those with a college education.
Obama recognized coalitions work and win. Why can't you?