YES, HE AND WE DID
And isn't America beautiful and better?
I'm a white Irish-Catholic, born in 1943, before Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier and President Truman integrated the Armed Forces. In that era Coya Knutson lost her seat in Congress because a woman belonged in the home.
After Tuesday's election, I checked out my civic lineup card: My state representative is a black man; my state senator is a woman; my council member is also a woman; my congressman is a black man, and a Muslim; one of my U.S. senators is a woman and the other (whoever it might be) is a Jew; my president is a black man.
The world has changed, and for the better.
DAN KANE, MINNEAPOLIS
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We hear over and over how the senator from Illinois will become the nation's first African-American president. The truth is that he is biracial. This may seem petty to some -- and to others it may seem to be the same thing. But to recognize only part of his race is to not embrace his full identity, and to miss the lesson he is able to teach us: We are all many races -- and many faces -- that make up a larger whole. Without one, we as a people are incomplete.
JOHN MEDEIROS, MINNEAPOLIS
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