I found very little new information in "Nobody: Casualties of America's War on the Vulnerable...", but I'm still very happy to have read it. Written and published before Trump's victory, the message in "Nobody" is even more ringing as we cope with the aftermath. We are a fractured society, but what we're sensing collectively isn't wrong. "What our current age is hiding is...troubling. No matter how many politicians try optimistically to mask the fact, manufacturing, as we have long known it, is over." For the disadvantaged, this means that the chance of being economically comfortable in one's lifetime is low, with an equally bleak forecast for future generations. Trump, one of the 1%, tapped into this deep and well-founded insecurity and played the LBJ card of: "If you can convince the lowest white man he's better than the best colored man, he won't notice you're picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he'll empty his pockets for you." America's long history of racial divisiveness made this strategy a winner for him, and no doubt he'll be richer for it. The tragedy is that instead of unifying those of us who are losing out from our current global economic model, it has pitted us against each other on racial and political lines.
America has never been kind to people who are different, and it has taken us centuries to begin to shift. The problem is that we are still only beginning, something we lost sight of when Obama was elected. As Hill put it: "Maybe now, with a Black man in the White House, the American Empire was finally prepared to enter its much-desired post-racial era, in which race would no longer be a central organizing feature of our social world. As wrongheaded as the idea was then, it seems downright absurd today...[given the] racial, cultural, and economic divides that continue to starkly define American life well into the twenty-first century." (25-26). We as people contain implicit biases that color our every interaction, unconscious judgements based on clothes, speech affects, skin color, etc. These prejudices have been part of America since the beginning and are built into the foundation. By pretending otherwise, we do a tremendous disservice to communities of color and make it evermore impossible for us to make real change to a system that is only benefitting a few.
The biggest insight that I took from "Nobody" was that these systems which we live in, with their entrenched biases against people of color and the poor, are part of a dialogue that our country and its lawmakers have been having since its inception. Nowhere is it writ that things have to be this way, but in order to change them we need to be honest with ourselves that we don't live in a land of equality. Racism and classism are as alive and well, as they always have been, and only by acknowledging them can we begin re-defining the systems that are so broken that a large part of our country elected a man with a personality disorder to save them. Who is our government and our economy serving, who are law enforcement protecting, and are we willing to go along with it even if means that while we rest in comfort, others are suffering? "Make America Great Again" is a stupid slogan because America has never been great, not for all of its citizens. But we do have, as Americans, an optimism that we can continually make ourselves better, to be great. We just need to re-define what that means. I'm glad there are people like Marc Lamont Hill out there to galvanize us and make us question the way things are, because it is very easy to do nothing when you're not directly facing adversity.