Way back in 2008, I logged onto the internet one day and was greeted with the news that McCain had selected Sarah Palin as his running mate. My first thought was, "Wow, cool, a major party candidate just picked a woman as his vice president for the first time in history! I am so glad that women's rights have come so far in this country, considering we weren't allowed to vote 90 years ago." There's nothing sexist about that, and there's nothing racist about being happy that we finally elected a black president.
Because the fact is, in 58 presidential races over 228 (1776-2004) years, we had never, ever, not even once, had anyone other than a white christian man as a major party presidential or vice presidential candidate. That is absolute, undeniable proof of institutionalized prejudice in our country, as if there wasn't enough proof already. And it is a wonderful thing that we finally overcame that prejudice enough that in the 2008 election we had a woman on one ticket and a biracial man on the other. It's not about thinking that women or biracial people are better than white men, it's about being happy that we have finally achieved something resembling equality.
Please understand that I did not decide how to cast my vote based on either Governor Palin's gender or Senator Obama's race; I decided based on the candidates and their positions. If you want to call it racism or sexism, then go ahead, but you're wrong.
Because the fact is, in 58 presidential races over 228 (1776-2004) years, we had never, ever, not even once, had anyone other than a white christian man as a major party presidential or vice presidential candidate. That is absolute, undeniable proof of institutionalized prejudice in our country, as if there wasn't enough proof already. And it is a wonderful thing that we finally overcame that prejudice enough that in the 2008 election we had a woman on one ticket and a biracial man on the other. It's not about thinking that women or biracial people are better than white men, it's about being happy that we have finally achieved something resembling equality.
Please understand that I did not decide how to cast my vote based on either Governor Palin's gender or Senator Obama's race; I decided based on the candidates and their positions. If you want to call it racism or sexism, then go ahead, but you're wrong.
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