Copyright © 2019, Steven E. Houchin. All rights reserved.
In "We have Overcome ...", the author, Dr. Jason D. Hill, has written a truly inspiring and poetic story of his journey as an immigrant from Jamaica to America, and his struggle with the "progressives" among us who despise him for refusing to be categorized as a helpless minority victim of a racist nation. In many ways, his experience is a celebration of America's inclusive Conservative values where race is of little importance compared to human character and brotherhood.
Growing up in Jamaica, Hill longed to come to America to take advantage of the boundless opportunities offered by our country. He refers to it as The Dream. As a young man, he settled in a predominantly white section of suburban Atlanta. He worked hard at relatively low-level jobs that required little skill so as to save money to attend college. He hoped to study philosophy and poetry. In his Atlanta neighborhood, he found that the people (mostly Conservative) accepted him for who he was and were supportive of his ambitions.
Later in life, in Progressive academia, he met with dogged resistance. Hill believed in moral virtues, hard work, and had a love for freedom and free enterprise, seeing that as the route to success. His Progressive colleagues could not understand why he did not regard America as a land of racism and oppression, where he was doomed to fail without the affirmative action set asides of the state. They simply refused to recognize him as a free man in control of his own destiny, one who did not need to be "emancipated" by their militancy. His attitudes as a free thinker even led to attempts to have him fired from his academic positions, even though he had become a successful author and international speaker.
What he realized was the Progressive Left needed him to be a suffering, oppressed person of color so they (especially white Progressives) could use him (and others) to work out their own racial guilt so as to achieve some sort of personal moral redemption. Others (people of color) saw him as a threat to their own racial militancy. How could it be that he, Hill, could hold to Conservative values, and be free and successful? But what Dr. Hill understood, and which befuddled the Progressives, was that Conservatives simply accepted him for who he was (a free man) and did not try to stand in his way.
In the book, Dr. Hill details similar stories of other immigrants who led their lives in pursuit of The Dream, to live free and be left alone to seek their own happiness.
My only criticism of Dr. Hill's book is his use of many $100 academic words and phrases that make some of the chapters unnecessarily verbose. But, I suppose that's inevitable from someone who has spent years in academia. That aside, this is a remarkable book that details not only the author's love of America and its opportunities for all, but also the divisive racial impediments erected by Progressives in pursuit of their own agenda of identity politics.