Real Clear Politics
 
 
Identity  Politics in America: A Post-Mortem

 
 
 
By _Michelle  Malkin_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/michelle_malkin/) 
November 09, 2016


 
Here  is what eight years of President Obama's "post-racial" reign have 
wrought. 
The  weekend before Election Day, Hillary Clinton grinned from ear to ear 
at a  Cleveland rally while reciting a verse from Jay-Z's remix of Young 
Jeezy's "My  President is Black." As the rapper and his Black Lives 
Matter-promoting wife,  Beyonce, beamed on stage nearby, pandersuit-clad 
Clinton twanged 
with a stilted  accent: 
 
 



"Remember,  Jay memorably said: 'Rosa Parks sat so Martin Luther could 
walk, and Martin  Luther walked so Barack Obama could run, and Barack Obama ran 
so all the  children could fly.'" 
This  would be comical if not for the noxious cynicism of it all. Clinton 
may not  remember (if she was ever aware in the first place), but the 
original version of  "My President is Black" is a brazen middle finger to 
nonblack 
America. Just a  few lines after the verse Hillary quoted, the song taunts: 
Hello  Miss America, hey pretty lady 

Red,  white, and blue flag, wave for me baby 
Never  thought I'd say this s---, baby I'm good 
You  can keep your p---, I don't want no more Bush 
No  more war, no more Iraq 

No  more white lies, the President is black 
So  the poster granny for liberal white privilege, groveling for black 
votes, kissed  the rings of celebrity Obama BFFs Jay-Z and Beyonce by parroting 
an inflammatory  anthem laced with profanities and radical racialized 
gloating. 
Could  there have been a more perfect beclownment to cap Clinton's 
phony-baloney  "Stronger Together" campaign? 
After  denigrating millions of Trump supporters as "deplorable" and 
"irredeemable"  earlier this year, Clinton then unctuously confessed on 
election 
eve: "I regret  deeply how angry the tone of the campaign became." 
Note  the classic textbook employment of the passive voice to evade 
personal  responsibility. 
The  good news is that after being blasted as haters by Clinton's 
hate-filled  minions, after being slapped down as racial "cowards" by 
Clintonite 
holdover  Eric Holder, after being lambasted as "xenophobes" and "nativists" by 
 
immigration expansionists in both parties, after enduring a string of faked 
hate  crimes blamed on conservatives, after ceaseless accusations of 
"Islamophobia" in  the wake of jihad attacks on American soil, after baseless 
accusations of  "homophobia" for protesting the government's gay wedding cake 
coercion, and  after mourning a growing list of police officers ambushed and 
targeted by  violent thugs seeking racial vengeance, an undeniable movement 
of citizens in  the 2016 election cycle decided to push back. 
When  all is said and done, one of the most important cultural 
accomplishments of  Donald Trump's bid will be the platform he created for 
Americans of 
all colors,  ethnicities, political affiliations, and socioeconomic 
backgrounds to defy  soul-draining identity politics. 
Beltway  chin-pullers expediently focused on Trump's white and conservative 
supporters  who are rightly sick and tired of social justice double 
standards. But they  ignored the increasingly vocal constituency of 
hyphen-free, 
label-rejecting  American People Against Political Correctness who don't fit 
old narratives and  boxes. 
And  the same "Never Trump" pundits and establishment political strategists 
who  gabbed endlessly about the need for "minority outreach" after 2012 
were  flummoxed by the blacks, gays, Latinos, women and Democrats who rallied 
behind  the GOP candidate. 
The  most important speech of the 2016 election cycle wasn't delivered by 
one of the  presidential candidates. It came from iconoclastic Silicon Valley 
 entrepreneur/investor and Trump supporter Peter Thiel who best explained 
the  historically significant backlash against the intolerant tolerance mob 
and phony  diversity-mongers. 
"Louder  voices have sent a message that they do not intend to tolerate the 
views of one  half of the country," he observed at the National Press Club 
last week. He  recounted how the gay magazine The Advocate, which had once 
praised him as a  "gay innovator," declared he was "not a gay man" anymore 
because of his  libertarian, limited-government politics. 
"The  lie behind the buzzword of diversity could not be made more clear," 
Thiel noted.  "If you don't conform, then you don't count as diverse, no 
matter what your  personal background." 
Trump's  eclectic coalition was bound by that common thread: disaffected 
individuals  tired of being told they don't count and discounted because their 
views do not  properly "match" their gender, chromosomes, skin color or 
ethnicity. That is  exactly why the more they and their nominee were demonized, 
the stronger their  support grew. 
"No  matter what happens in this election," Thiel concluded last week, 
"what Trump  represents isn't crazy and it's not going away." 
He's  right. I too often take for granted my own personal awakening about 
the  entrenched tribalism of identity politics at a crazy liberal arts 
college in the  early 1990s. The liberation from collectivist ideology is 
profound 
and lasting.  Witnessing so many outspoken newcomers arrive at this 
enlightenment, however  circuitous the route, has been the most encouraging and 
underappreciated  phenomenon of the 2016 campaign.

-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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