Last night I sat at Denver’s Invesco Field and watched Barack Obama accept the Democratic nomination for President. I found myself thinking about my brother’s wedding day and my first day of second grade.
My oldest brother, Alan, got married in 1970. He married my sister-in-law Claudette in Newport News, Virginia. If they had gone down to get their marriage license three years earlier, they would have been denied. You see, Alan is white. Claudette is black. Because of that fact, my brother and his new wife had to move north, as it was not physically safe to move back to our family home in North Carolina. I would not see him for the next four years.
The next year, 1971, I started second grade. I will always remember that first day of school — because it was the first day I had ever shared a classroom with black students. You see, schools were still legally segregated when I was in first grade. I was one of very few white students who came to school that first day of school in 1971. That day, and every other day I attended public schools in North Carolina, we white students sat on one side of the classroom and our black classmates sat on the other. No one ever crossed that line. As I watched Barack Obama accept the nomination tonight, I thought about how we have this amazing opportunity to turn a momentous corner in our nation’s history with this election, to create a very different set of memories for the next generation. And I started to cry.
Oh, there’s plenty of good political reasons to vote for Barack Obama, most of which boil down to this: if – like me — you think our nation is on the wrong track, then vote for Barack Obama (if you think that the path we’ve been following for the past eight years is the right one then, by all means, vote for John McCain, because you’ll get more of the same from a man who voted with President Bush over 90% of the time). But that’s not why I was crying. I was crying because I know this election is about making history, not just making policy.
As a member of the National Finance Committee for Obama for America, my job is to help raise the money Senator Obama needs to win. We need your support to make this history. On Aug. 1 the Obama campaign and the Democratic National Committee had $93 million in the bank: so did the McCain campaign and the Republican National Committee. From a financial point of view, the election is tied. I’d be deeply grateful for any support you could give. No gift is too small (and only a gift over $30,800 is too big!). Please give at https://donate.barackobama.com/page/contribute/GLBT and make sure you say on the form I referred you so I can thank you for stepping up.
Three years ago this month, I had a nearly fatal heart attack, an event which taught me that time is precious, that — when we are presented with a stark choice and an opportunity to make real change – we can’t afford to waste it. We have such a choice this fall in Barack Obama. Let’s not waste it.




