Like other reviewers, I found the three essays in the slim volume, Blackballed, to be rambling and without any structure or organization. Darryl Pinckney published this book initially in 2014, and then added a third essay in the 2020 publication (which references the COVID epidemic). The title essay, Blackballed, is based on a lecture he gave in 2012, and reads like a bit of a rambling talk. But he does cover a lot of ground in terms of the history of voting rights for black US citizens and the continuing battle against the conservative US Supreme Court, which he feels has become activist instead of truly adhering to the constitutional principles that they allegedly swear to.
Pinckney also weaves in some of his personal life, especially the views and experiences of his parents as they watched the country change, and saw a black man, Barack Obama, become the U.S. president. Pinckney discusses Obama in several places, not criticizing him as much as explaining how Obama attempted to push forward policies that would benefit blacks without pushing for race-specific programs. For blacks in the U.S., he says, just having a black man in the White House was important enough.
The second essay reads a lot like an overview of the literature about black identity and black culture in this country. One interesting point he repeats is that whites in this country love black culture (music, food, entertainment, sports) but don't like black people. That struck me as quite poignant and sad.
The final essay on Juneteenth was a jumble and I skipped through a lot of it. Sometimes I am not sure what he was trying to say, though one key point was that that lynching continues in various ways (police shootings of George Floyd, the murder of Trayvon Martin) and that black people have now realized that while they may feel one way about themselves, the white world sees them as "other," so that a perfectly respectable black teenage boy walking innocently through a gated community to where he is staying with his father after running an errand is seen as a criminal up to no good by a white person in that community. Sad. Tragic. We have not come very far, and possibly have gone backwards in the area of race relations.