I wasn't there.
I took the word of a tweet (and reactions to it) that it was a bunch white Bernie Bros singing WSO in Oakland.
But apparently Bernie has a history with the song.
But even with that, it still seems weird to me. Others who were there think so too:
It's not a big deal. Just a bit of color from the campaign trail...
Happy? ;-p
:-)
Cheers,
Scott.
I took the word of a tweet (and reactions to it) that it was a bunch white Bernie Bros singing WSO in Oakland.
But apparently Bernie has a history with the song.
But even with that, it still seems weird to me. Others who were there think so too:
As they waited for the candidate to arrive and the main event to begin, a three-piece band stood onstage and played a spare rendition of “We Shall Overcome.”
The gospel hymn that became an iconic anthem of the Civil Rights Movement is weighty with history and struggle. To invoke “We Shall Overcome” on behalf of a presidential candidate would be dicey in any venue. To do it in the quickly gentrifying black mecca of Oakland, in front of a crowd that was much whiter than those that typically gather for rallies in the city, is dicier still. To do it in a place officially named Frank H. Ogawa Plaza, after a Japanese-American civil rights leader, and informally known to many locals as Oscar Grant Plaza, after a black man killed by police while handcuffed on a Oakland subway platform — let’s just say it would have made me uncomfortable for a black man to use this song in this context. And though the band was fronted by a black woman, Bernie Sanders, as you may have heard, is a white guy from Vermont.
It's not a big deal. Just a bit of color from the campaign trail...
Happy? ;-p
:-)
Cheers,
Scott.