I Am AngryI had a whole moment on Wednesday. I had a completely different reflection ready, full of rage and grief. I moped, cussed, and doom-scrolled. (Yes, I cuss. Sorry, not sorry.) I wrote a whole piece about how the Voting Rights Act was gutted like a fish and the ghost of Jim Crow was resuscitated. I screamed on the page. I needed to get it out of my system. Then Thursday morning came, and Dr. Greg Carr (Howard University, UrbanView Mornings on Sirius XM Ch.126) reminded me of what our ancestors already knew: nommo, the power of the spoken word. Life and death are in the power of the tongue. (Prov. 18:21) No matter what the opposition does, I still have the power to determine what controls my mind. He reminded me that the electoral system we find ourselves in was crafted while Black people were enslaved and not considered human. It was designed to dehumanize, disappoint, and disillusion and yet, tools for change still exist within it. He reminded me that while the House of Representatives was built to capitalize on Black bodies for representation while diluting Black political power through gerrymandering and voter suppression, the Senate operates differently. Every person in a state, regardless of district, votes for the same two Senate seats. No gerrymandering can touch that. And it is the Senate, not the House, that shapes the judiciary and confirms Supreme Court justices. Yet the media keeps our eyes fixed on the House. That is not an accident. That is a distraction. How many times do we absorb narratives designed to depress us until we're ready to give up? How many times do we let the noise convince us our power is gone? How many times do we believe what they want us to believe and curl up and surrender? Beloved, yes, I am mad. Yes, work has been undone. But we still have power. We can still vote, no matter what district we're in. Our votes count, especially in local government and in Senate races. Let this moment fuel your inner passion for justice. Get mad. Stay mad. And do the work. That's what Jesus did. ––Rev. Moya Harris, Senior Director of Programs, Sojourners |
No comments:
Post a Comment