I chose Antonia Okafor for my VIP
for this week because her story is so extraordinary. She grew up in a
traditional family of Democrats. She voted for Barack Obama in 2008 and again
in 2012 and then voted for Donald Trump in 2016. What caused such a change? She
recently shared her thoughts and her story during interviews with Katrina Trinko at The Daily Signal and Dave Rubin at The Rubin Report.
Okafor is one of the rare African
Americans who left the liberal plantation. She considered herself to be a
Democrat during her younger years. When she went to college, she took some
courses on public policy and realized that she did not actually believe in the
policies of the Democratic Party. She did “a lot more research” and discovered
that the Democrat policies did not support the values that she had learned from
her Democrat mother.
Doing a lot more research and realizing
that, you know what, my values that I grew up with that actually,
coincidentally, and ironically [the values] my mother taught me – working very
hard, education is an equalizer for everyone, that traditional family and the
nuclear family is important to success, and having a faith in Jesus Christ is
important to success as well – and just those traditional values really made me
realize that I was in a party that did not reconcile with my values and I
needed to change, particularly with the pro-life issue, but then later on, the
pro-gun issue.
Okafor’s story is particularly
interesting. Not only is she a black woman who speaks out on conservative
matters, but she went to college and became a conservative when many students
come out of college more liberal. She explains that it was the hatred of the
liberals that caused her to take a harder look at libertarianism and conservatism.
I think I was open because kind of like
what’s going on right now, [although] I think it’s to a worse degree because
everybody’s so anti-Trump. It’s because the media’s so focused on making
Republicans look like racists, and sexists, and misogynists, and horrible people.
Then me, I guess, I just have this
affinity to be around people, or to seek out information for myself. I remember
I was like, OK, if they’re really this bad I want to see for myself. Going out
and talking to people who were Republicans and finding out that they weren’t
bad people, in fact, they were amazing people and they actually share the same
values. I mean, who would’ve thunk it that if you did your actual research,
that you would find a lot of what people were saying is false.
That’s what happened to me, and so a lot
of questions ensued after that of what else I was just believing without
actually doing my research and homework on.
I came to find out that there were a lot
of things that I didn’t believe that mainstream media for a long time was
telling me that I should. It was them saying that you must be a certain way as
a black woman, you must think this certain way or you’re not a black woman that
made me actually, “You know what, I want to do my research and find out why
they’re saying this.”
Come to find out, that’s exactly the
opposite.
I think that’s what really spurred me
onto being more open to finding out what my actual beliefs were and if I
believe what they believe.
There is much more to the
interviews, and I encourage you to watch/read them. However, the part that I
have shared from Okafor’s interview with Trinko shows the importance of
educating ourselves on the issues and having open conversations with people who
think differently than we do.
If more people would take these two
steps, two wonderful things could happen in our world. The first is that we
could understand each other better and be less divided. The second is that we
could elect better leaders who would care more about the good of the nation
than they do about their personal situations. The citizens of our nation would
enjoy more peace with each other as well as greater prosperity.
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