IT'S OFFICIAL : John Lewis for Obama!

Oh.

My.

Blog.

THIS IS HUGE!

This is the beginning of the end of Hillary Clinton's campaign.

I just saw on MSNBC that Congressman John Lewis is indeed changing camps. Andrea Mitchell got the scoop and was completely floored when he said this was the hardest decision he has ever made in his life, harder than the decision to walk over the Pettus bridge.

If you don't know what I mean by that, let me give you a refresher :

On Sunday March 7, 1965, about six hundred people began a fifty-four mile march from Selma, Alabama to the state capitol in Montgomery. They were demonstrating for African American voting rights and to commemorate the death of Jimmie Lee Jackson, shot three weeks earlier by an state trooper while trying to protect his mother at a civil rights demonstration. On the outskirts of Selma, after they crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge, the marchers, in plain sight of photographers and journalists, were brutally assaulted by heavily armed state troopers and deputies.

[Source : Library of Congress, This Day In History - First March from Selma]

Congressman's conversation with Andrea Mitchell sounded more like a confession at church. He looked somber and heavy hearted. He said it was difficult because the Clintons "were family". Yet he had a responsibility to go with the force of history, especially him, a man who did give his blood, sweat and tears to give black people, like Barack Obama, a chance at the presidency.

From the Atlanta Journal Constitution :

In an interview in his congressional office, Lewis said the decision to switch his support was a difficult one, a choice between a longtime friend and a little-known black man.

"I did it because I felt I had to support Mrs. Clinton because of our friendship," Lewis said. "But also I thought she was ready to lead. Lewis had placed a called to Clinton's office Wednesday morning but hadn't heard back from her. He also had a Please-Return-The-Call message of his own from Obama. By midday, he still hadn't returned it.

"It's been a long, hard and difficult struggle to come to where I am now," Lewis said.

I can't tell you how huge this is not just for the Clinton, but as a black woman born of the Civil Rights Movement, I can't tell you how moved I was by his declaration.

I'm just ... wow.

I really have to take a moment.


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The truth is that as a woman, a woman of color, and specifically an African American woman, the insults come so fast and furious that there’s always the danger of becoming overwhelmed and de-sensitized.

Sad to say, but I’m used to hearing black and brown women being call “bitch” “ho” “skank” “skeazer” “gold digger” or some variation of all of the above in popular songs and music videos. “Norbit,” Eddie Murphy’s current movie, may be the most recent example of a black man putting on a dress and playing the fat, ignorant, loud, brown-skinned black woman as an object of ridicule and revulsion, you can bet it won’t be the last. And check out “Flavor of Love,” VH1’s hit show in which women demean themselves in an effort to get Flava Flav - brought beneath low since his high as a member of the seriously political rap group Public Enemy - to choose them.

What these three have in common is that they demean black women, earn handsome profits for their corporate sponsors, and for the most part exist devoid of criticism.


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