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Can one man represent the entire race? My skin is dark – do I represent all black people? My good friend is white – does he represent all white people? If we are truly representatives of our race, do we have some kind of superpower?
Apparently, Tim Waltz does. The former Democratic vice presidential candidate and Minnesota governor took part in listening tours around the country when they stopped to Harvard's Kennedy School for a talk. He told the audience that Vice President Kamala Harris chose him as a running mate. He added that he is a “permission structure” where white people vote for Democrats.
There you have it. All white self-appointed man. Someone who talks to a white man and has a “code” that orders him to do so.
Waltz says Harris chooses him for the VP and “talks to white people.”
It's hard to believe that such stupidity exists in 2025. No one is lower than someone who thinks of themselves racially. And Waltz is such a man.
If you believe I am strict, explain what value you are worth thinking about yourself racially. Waltz was a failure as he clearly didn't deliver enough white people. So, once again, would I ask what value it is?
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The man is so delusional that you think he has a mysterious grasp of whiteness?
I don't think he's thinking this much. His whiteness towards him is a kind of virtue, and this is exactly my point here. To him, whiteness means racism. The virtue of the Waltz is that his white skin believes racism is personified and that he is guilty of all the privileges that come with it. He believes that all white people share this same guilt.
Democratic presidential candidate, US Vice President Kamala Harris and Democratic vice presidential candidate, Minnesota Governor Tim Waltz, celebrate the final day of the Democratic National Convention held at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois on August 22, 2024. (Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Commentator and author Shelby Steele is causing this white guilt. But that's not a real guilt. Rather, it is a desire to view oneself as innocent of racism.
When Waltz “confesses” to his white-skinned racism, he believes he is achieving the innocence of the American racist past. And he believes that as someone who knows the racism of his skin, he must return to his ignorant tribe and deliver them innocently from their inherent racism.
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But individual men cannot represent race, so we have nothing but yet another national racial absurdity. How many of these absurdities must endure? Will we continue to believe that the use of race can lead us positively everywhere?
What happens if the absurdity of the waltz does not awaken us?
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