America’s black upper class and Black Lives Matter
The United States is also home to the biggest group of highly successful black folk in the world
LAWRENCE OTIS GRAHAM recalls where he first met Kamala Harris, last summer, in Martha’s Vineyard. It was at the holiday home of Spike Lee, a film director, who held a $1,500-a-head fundraiser for the woman who is now number two on the Democratic ticket. “She is the new Barack Obama for us,” says the thrilled Mr Graham, an author and property lawyer from New York. By “us” Mr Graham means African-Americans, and in particular the glitziest end of African-American high society.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Our kind of people”
United States August 22nd 2020
- More mail-in voting doubles the chances of recounts in close states
- America’s black upper class and Black Lives Matter
- War heroes no longer dominate American politics as they once did
- American national-security maximalism can be self-defeating
- Drilling in Alaska’s national wildlife refuge makes no sense
- Democrats set factionalism aside for the big push against Donald Trump
- Paid fellowships in the United States
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