Letters from an American - August 21, 2024
Episode Date: August 22, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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August 21st, 2024. In 1974, music writer John Landau saw a relatively unknown musician in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, and wrote for an alternative paper,
Last Thursday, at the Harvard Square Theater, I saw rock and roll past flash before my eyes.
And I saw something else. I saw rock and roll future, and its name is Bruce Springsteen.
And on a night when I needed to feel young, he made me feel like I was hearing music for the
very first time. The review helped to catapult Springsteen to stardom.
After three days at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Illinois, I feel like
I have seen the political future, and its name is the Democratic Party. But rather than feeling
like I'm hearing politics for the first time, I am hearing the echo of political themes embraced in the best moments
of America's past. The theme of the third day of the Democratic National Convention,
held in the United Center in Chicago, Illinois, was a fight for our freedoms. But the speeches
were less about fighting than they were about recovering the roots of American democracy.
The Democrats have not lost their conviction that the re-election of Donald Trump and the enactment of Project 2025 are an
existential threat, both to democracy and to Americans themselves. Speakers throughout the
convention have condemned Trump and highlighted Project 2025, a blueprint written by the Heritage Foundation
and other right-wing organizations for a second Trump term. Although Trump has tried to distance
himself from Project 2025, Democratic vice presidential nominee Minnesota Governor Tim
Walz, who was a high school football coach, notes that no one bothers to write a playbook if they're not going to use it.
Tonight, comedian and actor Kenan Thompson illustrated the dangers of Project 2025
with humor, bringing home the horror of it as only humor can do. With a giant copy of the plan
as a prop, he gave a woman married for eight years to her wife the bad news that Project 2025
would end protections for LGBTQ plus Americans, informed a woman who pays $35 a month for her
insulin that the plan would overturn the law that makes drugs more affordable, notified an OBGYN
that the plan would ban abortion nationwide and throw abortion providers into jail, and put a
woman who called herself a proud civil servant on notice that Project 2025 would guarantee she
would be fired unless she is a MAGA loyalist. But the dark dangers of the assault of Trump and the
MAGA Republicans on the country have finally pushed the party to move away from its customary caution
and focus on policy to embrace the possibilities of a new future. The convention is electric,
packed with young people who push jokey memes and poke fun at themselves, much as walls and
presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris are doing to deflect criticism, and who are sharing homemade
politically-themed friendship bracelets that echo the homemade paraphernalia of singer Taylor Swift's
Eros tour. And after decades in which Republicans claim the mantle of patriotism,
now that the fate of democracy itself is on the line, Democrats are joyfully claiming the symbols and the principles of American democracy for their own.
During the Vietnam War in the 1960s and early 1970s,
many Democrats shied away from symbols of patriotism because they seemed to support imperialism.
Then, in the 1980s, Reagan and his supporters wrapped themselves in
the flag and claimed it for their own. That impulse to define Americans as those who vote
for Republicans has led us to a place where a small minority claims the right to rule over the
rest of us. The Democratic National Convention has powerfully illustrated that the rest of us. The Democratic National Convention has powerfully illustrated that the
rest of us are finally reclaiming the country and its symbols. The convention has been full
of references to the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the American Revolution,
the National Anthem, and the Pledge of Allegiance. Tonight, attendees chanting USA waved signs emblazoned with the
letters. Speakers, many of whom are military veterans, have testified that they are proud
to be Americans. The theme of patriotism was even in one of tonight's after parties.
Haitian-born rapper Wycliffe Jean played the Star-Spangled Banner with an interpretation
that recalled Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock. America is the best place to be, he said. I'm the best
of the American dream. Welcome to America. You know what makes America great? We're a bunch of
immigrants. As Jean indicated, that embrace of our history does not come with the
exceptionalism of MAGA Republicans, who maintain that the U.S. has a perfect past that it must
reclaim to become great again. Indeed, speakers have emphasized that honoring our history means
remembering the nation's failures as well as its triumphs. The Democrats' patriotism means recognizing that despite the fact
that the U.S. has never fully realized the principles laid out in the Declaration of
Independence, it has never abandoned them either, a statement paraphrased from President Joe Biden,
who has said it repeatedly. Speakers have highlighted that the imperfect version of those principles has enabled their
personal success stories speaker after speaker from harrison walls of course to tonight's speakers
maryland governor wes moore transportation secretary pete budaj and journalist and
television personality oprah winfrey have recounted their own process of rising from humble beginnings
to their current prominence. Winfrey is an independent who generally stays out of politics,
but tonight she spoke passionately during prime time about electing Vice President Kamala Harris
and Governor Walz. When a reporter asked her why she was willing to make a political statement, she said,
because I really care about this country, and there couldn't have been a life like mine,
a career like mine, a success like mine, without a country like America. Only in America could
there be a me. The many stories in which ordinary Americans rise from adversity through hard work, decency, and service to others implicitly conflates those individual struggles with the struggles of the United States itself.
Running through the stories told at the convention is the theme of working hard through a time of darkness to come out into the light.
working hard through a time of darkness to come out into the light.
Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning,
speakers have quoted the biblical psalm,
and they have referred to the vision of the American flag still flying after a night of bombardment during the War of 1812,
captured by Francis Scott Key in the National Anthem,
promising that after our time of national
darkness, there will be light. The DNC has called not just for reasserting patriotism,
but for reclaiming America with joy. It has showcased a deep bench of politicians,
some of whom are great orators, repeatedly calling for joy in the work of saving democracy.
And it has shown poets like Amanda Gorman and a wide range of musicians,
from Stevie Wonder to Lil Jon to DJ Cassidy to John Legend.
The convention is designed to appeal to different generations.
Tonight, actress Mindy Kaling helpfully explained to older attendees who she is,
and younger attendees have handed out friendship bracelets saying things like
Madame Prez to older people in an echo of the exchange of bracelets among Taylor Swift's fans.
After an era in which politicians have seemed to lie to the American people,
the convention has emphasized authenticity.
It has featured testimonials about the candidates, with speakers ranging from the candidates' children to extended
family and, tonight, to members of the football team Walls coached. There have been stories of
Harris's cooking and how second gentleman Doug Emhoff awkwardly called her for a date,
and fond memories of Walls pulling a student
out of a snowbank, hunting, and caring for his children. The convention has emphasized that the
American government is made up of individuals, and that the character of the people we put into
leadership will determine what that government does. Further, the Democrats have made their points
with the stories of individual Americans
who have overcome dark hours in order to move forward.
In that storytelling,
individuals represent the nation itself.
The message of joy as we protect democracy,
backed as that message is
with four years of extraordinary accomplishments that have
bolstered the middle class and spread opportunity among poorer Americans, has taken off. The
convention has heard from three Democratic presidents and a range of other speakers,
including a number of Republicans who have turned against Trump and are backing Harris and Walz.
backing Harris and Walls. In July, Harris raised four times the money Trump did, $204 million to $48 million, much of it from small donors. The palpable energy and enthusiasm in Chicago,
based as it is in a celebration of American values, especially in the idea of American freedom,
values, especially in the idea of American freedom, reminds me of the enthusiasm of 1860 or 1932.
It is about ending the darkness, not indulging in it, and it requires the hard work of everyone who believes that we deserve the freedom to determine our own lives. Tonight, after his
acceptance speech, Walls walked off stage to a favorite song of his, Neil Young's Rockin' in the Free World.
Neil Young personally allowed the campaign to use the song.
When the Trump campaign used it, Young sued to make them stop.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Denham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.