The Party of Lincoln Is Dead

The Party of Lincoln Is Dead
The Party of Lincoln Is Dead

“Black Vote, Black Power,” a collaboration between Keith Boykin and Word In Black, 
examines the issues, the candidates, and what’s at stake for Black America in the 2024 presidential election.

“Republicans are the party of Abraham Lincoln, but Black people are stuck on the Democratic plantation.” Please stop saying this. Every time someone makes this argument, an angel in heaven loses a few brain cells. 

It’s 2024, and Virginia school board members have voted to put the names of Confederate leaders on two public schools. At the same time, the state’s Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, has still not signed a Democratic bill passed in February to eliminate tax breaks for the United Daughters of the Confederacy.

Meanwhile, in Mississippi, Republican Governor Tate Reeves declared April to be Confederate Heritage Month. In Florida, Republicans are trying to punish local officials who remove Confederate monuments. And in Texas, Republican Governor Greg Abbott has invoked a Confederate theory of secession to justify violating federal law.

After lecturing Black people to “move on” and stop talking about the legacy of slavery, white Republicans just can’t stop celebrating the racist traitors who lost the Civil War nearly 160 years ago.

That’s one of the many reasons why Republicans are no longer the “party of Lincoln.” That party died long ago.

Republican Abraham Lincoln served as president from 1861 until he was assassinated in 1865. For the next 12 years, Republicans led the fight for Reconstruction, creating the Freedman’s Bureau, passing landmark civil rights legislation, and ratifying the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery, the 14th Amendment guaranteeing citizenship to Black people, and the 15th Amendment granting Black men the right to vote.

Then it all ended. 

Nearly the entire history of Republican legislative and policy accomplishments for Black people rests on the four long years of the Civil War and the 12 short years of Reconstruction that followed it. 

While many noble Black and white Republicans carried on the cause of racial justice for the next century, the Republican Party itself effectively abandoned Black people with the Compromise of 1877 that allowed Republican President Rutherford B. Hayes to take office in exchange for the removal of federal troops that protected African Americans in the South.

In the decades that followed, Republican politicians and judges would enable racist Democrats and Ku Klux Klansmen to terrorize Black communities in the South, drive out Black elected officials, and impose an oppressive new racial caste system called Jim Crow segregation. In fact, for most of the twentieth century, both parties were openly racist.

It took 100 years after the Civil War for the parties to switch roles when a famous Southern Democrat signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and an Arizona Republican condemned it.

So, when Republicans today claim to be the “party of Lincoln,” they want you to focus on what their party did way back in the 1860s and 1870s but ignore what the same party has done since the 1960s and 1970s. 

Some even quote Malcolm X, who rightly condemned both political parties for their racism in a famous speech called “The Ballot or the Bullet.”

But history didn’t end in April 1964, when Malcolm X gave that speech. In the years that followed, Democratic President Lyndon Johnson went on to sign the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the Fair Housing Act of 1968, and he appointed the first Black Supreme Court Justice

But what have Democrats done for Black people lately?

It was a Democrat, Joe Biden, who selected Kamala Harris as the nation’s first Black vice president and Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black woman on the Supreme Court. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

In the past few decades, the Democratic Party delivered the first Black president, the first Black vice president, the first Black woman on the Supreme Court, and the first Black party chairman in American history. Democrat Barack Obama signed a federal hate crimes law in 2009 after a Black man named James Byrd was murdered by three white supremacists in Texas. And the last major civil rights bill, the Emmett Till Antilynching Act, was passed by a Democratic Congress and signed by Democratic President Joe Biden in 2022. That’s how far the party has moved from its racist history.

And that’s why no Democratic candidate for president has won the white vote since 1964. Not Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, or Joe Biden.

At the same time, the Republican Party has moved in the other direction, adopting a notorious “Southern strategy” that evolved from loudly using the N-word to quietly deploying “tax cuts” to appeal to white racial resentment. Today’s Republicans love to brag that the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed by a bipartisan margin, but it was a Republican Supreme Court that gutted the Voting Rights Act in 2013, and since that time, Republicans have been blocking every effort to renew the very law that they love to take credit for.

How else do we know the parties switched roles? Because Republicans love the racist Southern Democrats of yesterday. 

Fifty years after Strom Thurmond bolted from the Democratic Party to run for president as a segregationist, Senate Republican Leader Trent Lott openly embraced him.

And when Obama tried to remove racist Southern Democrat Andrew Jackson from the $20 bill, it was Trump who reversed him. In fact, two of Donald Trump’s first official acts as president were to hang a portrait of Jackson in the Oval Office and to visit Jackson’s Tennessee slave plantation. 

Why would a 21st-century Republican president show so much love for a 19th-century racist Democrat?

It’s the same reason why Trump vetoed a national defense bill so he could preserve a Confederate general’s name on a military base in North Carolina. And why Republicans in 2023 fought to protect a Confederate Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery.
The party of Abraham Lincoln, who once appealed to “the better angels of our nature” and fought the Civil War to preserve the American union, is dead. The party of Donald Trump, who appeals to the worst demons of our disposition, and seeks to destroy the union, is alive and kicking.

Keith Boykin is a New York Times–bestselling author, TV and film producer, and former CNN political commentator. A graduate of Dartmouth College and Harvard Law School, Keith served in the White House, cofounded the National Black Justice Coalition, cohosted the BET talk show My Two Cents, and taught at the Institute for Research in African-American Studies at Columbia University in New York. He’s a Lambda Literary Award-winning author and editor of seven books. He lives in Los Angeles.

The post The Party of Lincoln Is Dead appeared first on Word In Black.

The post The Party of Lincoln Is Dead appeared first on New York Amsterdam News.

* This article was originally published here

Yes, that’s hail pouring down in NYC right now

Yes, that's hail pouring down in NYC right now

In true New York fashion, the weather just unexpectedly turned… very weird? 

Despite local forecasts predicting highs in the 70s and eternal sunshine today through the upcoming holiday weekend, the sky in the New York area just turned a light shade of black while rain and, yes, hail, started pouring down on confused New Yorkers. It’s also very windy out there.

Before you start despairing: forecasters are warning that the very worst part of the storm will take place between right now and 1pm. It’s pretty bad at the moment, so try to stay indoors if you can—perhaps dreaming of better weather days that are actually not that far away. 

Although a severe thunderstorm warning has been issued for Manhattan and parts of Long Island earlier this hour, things should be looking better by the early afternoon. Don’t rule out the chance of a few storms this evening as well. 

This Memorial Day weekend, though, will likely be a (mostly) beautiful one: according to the National Weather Service, today’s rain will give way to a dry Friday with temperatures reaching the low 80s. Saturday will be a bit colder, perhaps in the high 70s, with a low chance of rain—same with Sunday.

On Monday, the actual holiday, expect to frolic in shorts—temperatures will reach about 75 degrees—but perhaps carry an umbrella with you as meteorologists are warning about a slight chance of rain.

While you’re hiding from today’s surprisingly wet weather, you might want to start planning the upcoming weekend. To that intent, check out our list of best Memorial Day weekend events in NYC. Enjoy the time off!

* This article was originally published here

The Ozempic Diet In Harlem? Yes, People Taking It Eat less And Spend Less On Food

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

Ozempic and other GLP-1 drugs, developed to manage diabetes, have become popular ways to lose weight and now we know why. A survey shows people taking the drugs eat less. A survey conducted for the investment bank Morgan Stanley found people taking these drugs reported eating less and spending less money on food, both at…

The post The Ozempic Diet In Harlem? Yes, People Taking It Eat less And Spend Less On Food appeared first on Harlem World Magazine.

* This article was originally published here

Eating Foods High In Potassium May Improve Women’s Heart Health, Study Finds

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

A new study conducted by researchers from the European Society of Cardiology explored how women’s diets may affect their heart health. Their findings showed that eating more foods that are high in potassium may improve women’s long-term heart health and neutralize the effects of salty foods.  “It is well known that high salt consumption is associated with elevated blood pressure…

The post Eating Foods High In Potassium May Improve Women’s Heart Health, Study Finds appeared first on Harlem World Magazine.

* This article was originally published here

First-ever ‘Top Chef’ winner Harold Dieterle opens a Sicilian restaurant in NYC

First-ever 'Top Chef' winner Harold Dieterle opens a Sicilian restaurant in NYC

A decade after he shuttered his three West Village dining roomsPerilla, Kin Shop and The Marrow—and took a temporary leave from the New York food scene, Harold Dieterle is back with a brand-new restaurant concept: a Southern Italian stunner called Il Totano, with a focus on aged seafood and “a stylish Sicilian sensibility.”

RECOMMENDED: The 26 best Italian restaurants in NYC, including red-sauce joints, fine-dining spots and more

Best known as the first-ever winner of Bravo’s long-running cooking competition Top Chef, Dieterle debuted the new eatery in—where else?—the West Village earlier this week, at 154 West 13th Street by 7th Avenue.

Despite its downtown NYC surroundings, you’d be forgiven for thinking you stumbled upon the Italian coast, given the menu featuring dishes like dry-aged bluefin tuna with fried capers and fig leaf oil; a grilled branzino with blistered Sicilian green beans; a crispy pork-chop cotoletta with white anchovies and Calabrian chili dressing; and a “fake” affogato, made with fior di latte ice cream and Manhattan Special espresso soda. There will also be a new version of the chef’s famed spicy duck meatballs, here served with mint cavatelli, water spinach, and quail eggs.

Overseen by interior designer Sasha Bikoff, the digs also give off la dolce vita vibes: taking a page from the Italian fashion brand Marni, the walls are dressed up in bold, blue-and-white hand-painted wallpaper, made even more nautical when paired with a dark walnut bar (to “evoke a sleek Riva boat zipping through the Amalfi Coast,” naturally). Speaking of the bar, there are also several Southern Italian-inspired tipples to enjoy, including the Bitter Giuseppe (Chaparral liqueur, orange, and grapefruit) and the Capri (Probitas rum, Blackpool Spiced Rum, J.M. Creole Shrubb, Orchard Amaro, lemon and mint).

Il Totano will be open for dinner Sundays to Thursdays from 5pm to 10pm and Fridays and Saturdays from 5pm until 11pm. Check out the space and some of the food-and-drink offerings below: 

Il Totano
Alex StaniloffIl Totano
Il Totano
Alex StaniloffIl Totano
Il Totano
Alex StaniloffIl Totano
Il Totano
Alex StaniloffIl Totano
Pork Cotolette at Il Totano
Alex StaniloffPork Cotolette at Il Totano
Pastas at Il Totano
Alex StaniloffPastas at Il Totano
Arctic char at Il Totano
Alex StaniloffArctic char at Il Totano

* This article was originally published here

Green Haven: Inmate Actors Shine In ‘Thoughts Of A Colored Man’

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

Rehabilitation Through the Arts (RTA), a nonprofit that helps people in prison develop critical life skills through the arts, concluded a week of performances of the Broadway play Thoughts of a Colored Man at Green Haven Correctional Facility, a maximum security prison. The critically acclaimed play by Keenan Scott II was performed for three nights—two…

The post Green Haven: Inmate Actors Shine In ‘Thoughts Of A Colored Man’ appeared first on Harlem World Magazine.

* This article was originally published here

Check out these cool pink chairs in Prospect Park

Check out these cool pink chairs in Prospect Park

Want to chill on the edge of the iconic Prospect Park Lake but can’t find a place to sit?

A new installation by the Prospect Park Alliance, NYC Parks and CJ Hendry Studio will help you out: a pair of charismatic and fully functional pink chairs are now part and parcel of the on site scenery. Unsurprisingly given their color, size and overall vibe, they are already going viral online. 

RECOMMENDED: Are we really ready for The Portal’s ‘pure window’ into different cultures?

The sculpture-slash-bench, aptly named “Pink Chairs,” is part of a artist CJ Hendry’s “Inflatable” series, which seeks to reimagine public art through the lens of utilitarian public spaces, according to the Prospect Park Alliance.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Cj Hendry (@cj_hendry)

Fair warning: although the chairs may look like inflatables made of plastic, they are actually rock solid—so don’t throw yourself on them as if they were bean bags! 

Just like the Australian artist’s other large scale, hyperrealistic projects, the pink beauties are experiments in weight and scale, playfully subverting expectations.  

While in the area, make sure to check out public art pieces currently on display at nearby parks, including “Community Heroes” at Fort Greene Park, just a few minutes away. The exhibit brings together residents of Fort Greene, Clinton Hill and Farragut to celebrate the very people that make up each neighborhood through a series of beautiful portraits. 

But back to those adorable pink chairs: find them by the lake through October but try to head there in the next few weeks to thoroughly enjoy them as the weather turns warmer.

* This article was originally published here

How To Choose The Right Shingle Roofing Services For Your Home In Harlem And Beyond

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

By HWM Partner Choosing the right shingle roofing services for your home is a critical decision that can impact both the aesthetics and functionality of your property. With numerous options available in the market, from different materials to varying styles and colors, it can be overwhelming to make the best choice. This is why it’s…

The post How To Choose The Right Shingle Roofing Services For Your Home In Harlem And Beyond appeared first on Harlem World Magazine.

* This article was originally published here

Play with over 600,000 balloons at this new immersive experience coming to NYC

Play with over 600,000 balloons at this new immersive experience coming to NYC

This summer—from July 3 to August 24, to be precise—the Park Avenue Armory will play host to what is sure to become the next big thing on Instagram: Balloon Story, an interactive ballon art exhibition featuring over 600,000 eco-friendly latex orbs.

Tickets for the experience, which will last about 70 minutes, are already on sale right here. Depending on the type of pass you opt for, you’ll be spending between $36 and $66 to get in.

If the success of the Balloon Museum is of any indication, Balloon Story is poised to go viral on social media, so try to secure your ticket before all the influencers hear about this.

Once inside the Armory at 643 Park Avenue by 66th Street on the Upper East Side, you will walk through a series of beautiful inflatable sculptures and installations created by 200 different artists, each one telling a story of their own. Among the explored themes are iconic monuments from around the globe; an Americana display celebrating July 4; a space installation; an Antarctica-like, snowy wonderland and “magical under the sea moments,” according to an official press release.

Since Internet virality seems to be directly related to the presence of a ball pit no matter the occasion, expect just that on premise as well, alongside a “selfie square” featuring 12 installations that guests can take pictures of and in. Remember: immersive is the name of the game. 

“This exhibition is a celebration of art and imagination,” said Erica Domesek, the creative producer of the experience, in an official statement. “Each installation is designed to evoke joy and wonder, providing a magical experience for visitors of all ages.”

Although, as the weather turns warmer, we like to spend our days hanging out by the beach or perusing outdoor art pieces, we’ll make an exception and head indoors for this pretty creative show inside an iconic NYC building.

* This article was originally published here