UUMUAC (You Me Act): The Unitarian Universalist Multiracial Unity Action Council
Anne Holcomb begins by invoking Frederick Douglass’s famous Fourth of July speech to expose the gap between America’s ideals and its historical realities. Douglass’s words highlight how liberty and justice were long reserved for some while denied to others, setting the stage for Holcomb’s central theme: the United States has always wrestled with contradictions between its revolutionary rhetoric and its exclusionary practices. She then traces the American tradition of toppling statues—from the 1776 destruction of King George III’s monument to the recent removal of Confederate, colonial, and Trump-related statues. These symbolic acts, she argues, reflect a recurring struggle over power, memory, and national identity. Holcomb contrasts this with Donald Trump’s self‑celebratory displays, including a massive 2025 military parade, which sparked the nationwide “No Kings” protests. With millions participating, these demonstrations surpassed Revolutionary War mobilization and signaled a modern rejection of authoritarianism. Holcomb examines whether the American Revolution was truly revolutionary. Some historians argue it preserved existing hierarchies—slavery persisted, women remained disenfranchised, and Indigenous peoples faced dispossession. Others contend it met the criteria of a revolution through its ideological vision and institutional transformation. Holcomb emphasizes the deep contradictions of the era: founders who preached equality while owning enslaved people, religious rhetoric used to justify both liberty and oppression, and educational institutions like the Bray School that simultaneously taught literacy and reinforced racial hierarchy. Turning to the present, Holcomb argues that a “revolution of sorts” is already underway—marked by rising authoritarianism, harmful legislation, and the normalization of cruelty. She cites contemporary voices warning that compassion is being reframed as extremism and that indifference enables injustice. Yet she insists that resistance begins with small, deliberate acts: caring, learning, speaking truth, repairing harm, and standing in solidarity. These, she says, are the sparks that ignite meaningful change. Holcomb closes with Alexander Hamilton’s warnings about demagogues who manipulate public fears and the dangers of collapsing the separation of powers. She reminds readers that the Constitution ultimately places responsibility in the hands of the people. In her view, the true revolution is the ongoing effort to align American governance with its professed ideals—and the willingness of ordinary citizens to act when those ideals are threatened.
19 episodes
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