I'm a white woman who voted for Clinton, surrounded by white women who voted for Trump. The way conversations were going before election day, I was convinced these women would vote against their party to prevent a misogynist from getting in. You could say I was shocked and disappointed.
I have a responsibility to talk to these women, not only in my own self-interest, but for the minorities who will suffer from their dumb decision.
In other words, I see that sign in the OP as being directed at those like me, and I'm okay with that.
That being said, comments like the Tweet appear to be attacking the "47%" directly, as if they themselves are responsible for everyone in their demographic, which isn't very helpful.
I'm with you on that. The picture says so much, and the tweet says so little, and it makes a
big difference. People see them together and I've seen a lot of posts saying they are both bad, and I disagree. The OP's timbre definitely slanted his framing in a certain way that looks like it hurt the discussion though. But we don't all have to follow that line or stick to that script.
I see the picture reminding us to not be too self-congratulatory over our show of defiance in the light of the work we have yet to do or even demonstrate that we are capable of doing. Especially when it comes to turning majorities and turn out. People really wanted to highlight the small minority of a minority that didn't come out to vote, instead of the large number of people who
did vote and did so in a way that condemns a whole heck of a lot of us. We have to realize how close to us our opponents are, and what we have to do to win with them or win without them. Many of us can't go back to our towns and live under the shield of privilege in this crazy and frightening new world. Lots of us are now directly under threat from things that others only fear as hypotheticals they now have to get together to fight against.
The sliding scale that is America is in that picture. The poor white woman who is disenfranchised and on the chopping block in Trump's America probably would not have been able to realistically take off from work Saturday to make the trip to Washington DC to protest. Mostly because she needs the hours, whether she voted for Hillary, Trump, or didn't vote at all. The class dynamic is in that picture, the intersectional feminism dynamic is in that picture where some people are in more danger than others, race and economics considered as factors. But the moment it looks like the minority hypocrites are picking on white women, its time (for white men) to circle the wagons and fight over the naming of white fragility? We have young Zoc up here trying to make this the
final countdown. And the one white woman I've seen to post in this thread already gets it.... Come on.
StoOgE (and others):
Instead of telling us how hard it is to deal with your racist parents in one voice and with the other tell us that we all have an equal responsibility to use honey tones to win them over in the name of just cooperation and righteous victory, some are almost out of honey and are left with the sour truth. The bottom line is that white allies don't just have Trump to fight against. They have to fight against themselves, under the shield of privilege, against their (white) peers(irony mark that I need to specify white), with less politeness and more directness than ever before. And they do this while many of us stand out in the cold, or sit in the fire, and try to fight against it getting warmer.