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Jacey de la Torre's avatar

I love your work, and I enjoyed reading about Ruination Day for the second year in a row as a subscriber of this newsletter. I want to lift this passage at the end of your piece:

"Abraham Lincoln wasn’t a perfect President, but that doesn’t make him the same as Donald Trump. Some of my political enemies are actual Nazis, and it’s OK to denounce them as such. All I’m suggesting is that there has to be something more to this life than simply identifying the good guys and bad guys in our midst with a greater degree of moral accuracy."

I think here would have been an appropriate place to acknowledge that Lincoln happily led the execution of 38 Dakota people in 1862 during the ongoing campaign of genocide against Native Americans. I believe that understanding each of these historical actors' (Wilkes Booth AND Lincoln's) commitments to the twin projects of white supremacy and settler colonialism is crucial in understanding how we ended up here.

Your newsletter has taught me so much about how whiteness is constantly attempting to find foils within our own white communities in order to grace or exempt ourselves. It is with the knowledge that white people who are uplifted as arbiters of justice (such as, but certainly not uniquely, Lincoln) were also involved in settler colonial and white supremacist projects, that we as white folks can move forward with understanding ourselves and our histories.

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David Mayo's avatar

Goddamn. That was a beauty, thank you.

I just happened to do a deep dive into the lyrics of those two gems last night, on Ruination Eve (and into the wee hours of the holiday itself) and had my soul rended again, twenty-odd years later. I was transported back by the folk songs and African-American traditionals she references, but this adds layers I would never have considered without knowing the details of the Booth story. I’d so love to hear a conversation between you Gillian Welch about these tracks!

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