First Lady Lets Loose On Race..

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First lady Michelle Obama isn’t hold­ing back.

During a com­mence­ment speech at Tuskegee University on Saturday, Obama spoke frankly about the role her racial iden­ti­ty played dur­ing the 2008 pres­i­den­tial cam­paign. “As poten­tial­ly the first African-American first lady, I was also the focus of anoth­er set of ques­tions and spec­u­la­tions, con­ver­sa­tions some­times root­ed in the fears and mis­per­cep­tions of oth­ers,” she told the class of 2015. “Was I too loud or too emas­cu­lat­ing? Or was I too soft? Too much of a mom and not enough of a career woman?”

Obama ref­er­enced her satir­i­cal por­tray­al on a July 2008 cov­er of the New Yorker mag­a­zine as a ter­ror­ist. “Then there was the first time I was on a mag­a­zine cov­er,” Obama told the grad­u­ates at the his­tor­i­cal­ly black Alabama col­lege. “It was a car­toon draw­ing of me with a huge afro and a machine gun. Now, yeah, it was satire, but if I’m real­ly being hon­est, it knocked me back a bit. It made me won­der ‘just how are peo­ple see­ing me?’”

During a com­mence­ment speech at Tuskegee University on Saturday, Obama spoke frankly about the role her racial iden­ti­ty played dur­ing the 2008 pres­i­den­tial cam­paign. “As poten­tial­ly the first African-American first lady, I was also the focus of anoth­er set of ques­tions and spec­u­la­tions, con­ver­sa­tions some­times root­ed in the fears and mis­per­cep­tions of oth­ers,” she told the class of 2015. “Was I too loud or too emas­cu­lat­ing? Or was I too soft? Too much of a mom and not enough of a career woman?”

Directing her remarks to her African-American audi­ence, Obama spoke from her own expe­ri­ence on how racial inequal­i­ty impacts oppor­tu­ni­ty. “The road ahead is not going to be easy,” Obama said. “It nev­er is, espe­cial­ly for folks like you and me.”Obama then aired a laun­dry list of slights she said black Americans deal with on a reg­u­lar basis.

We’ve both felt the sting of those dai­ly slights through­out our entire lives. The folks who crossed the street in fear of their safe­ty, the clerks who kept a close eye on us in all those depart­ment stores. The peo­ple at for­mal events who assumed we were the help,” Obama said. “And those who have ques­tioned our intel­li­gence, our hon­esty, even our love of this coun­try, and I know that these lit­tle indig­ni­ties are obvi­ous­ly noth­ing com­pared to what folks across the coun­try are deal­ing with every sin­gle day. Those nag­ging wor­ries about whether you’re going to get stopped or pulled over for absolute­ly no rea­son. The fear that your job appli­ca­tion will be over­looked because of the way your name sounds.”

Obama also stressed that those expe­ri­ences were “not an excuse” to “lose hope.”
http://​www​.bloomberg​.com/​p​o​l​i​t​i​c​s​/​a​r​t​i​c​l​e​s​/​2​015 – 05-10/michelle-oba­ma-lets-loose-on-race-in-grad­u­a­tion-speech