Can you talk about racism? If not, nothing will change.
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More than a century ago, Black intellectual extraordinaire of his day, WEB DuBois, stated that the problem of the 20th century would be the problem of the color line. In 1944, the renowned Swedish sociologist, Gunnar Myrdal wrote the landmark (for the time) An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy. Both men were right on target. Indeed, such a prophetic message is very relevant today in the 21st century. If the past several years (hell, the past several months for that matter) have taught us anything, it is that we as a nation are in a perpetual state of crisis when it comes to the racial situation plaguing our nation. A recent CBS News Poll of 1,205 adults taken earlier this year indicated that a majority of people polled believe that race relations were at their worst in more than two decades.
The report showed that large majorities of Blacks and Whites as well as Americans across all race and ethnic groups characterized race relations as “bad.” Twenty percent saw race relations as improving; 40 percent viewed the racial climate as being essentially the same as ever. Such a dramatic change in attitude was most prominent among Blacks at 68 percent. The recently conducted poll provided specific detail on the vast divide of opinion between different races on topics ranging from politics, economics, law enforcement, etc. The election of the nation’s first Black president notwithstanding, race is still the unruly, rambunctious elephant running wildly through the room. The feeling among many people across racial lines, particularly people of African descent, is that Black America is under unrelenting physical, mental and emotional siege.
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Indeed, for many Whites, institutional and structural racism is a vice of which they are largely if not totally immune.
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As a Black college professor, I can attest to the fact that, by speaking with other educated Black professionals (and some non-Black), friends, acquaintances and through social media, I can detect the unmistakable level of anger, stress, fear, and most certainly resentment in regard to the current volatile racial situation. Such emotions are indeed well-founded. The temperature is hot and the climate has become unpredictable.
For many of us, our viewpoints on race largely have been formed by our personal experiences. In a nation that has been less than equitable to people of color, in particular, Black Americans, it is justifiable that many Black Americans are more inclined to believe that race is an intractable factor in our society that has an impervious grip on all people regardless of race either as perpetrators or oppressors. Many of us have stories of parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, siblings, ourselves for that matter, who have been the recipients of its often poisonous venom. On the contrary, many Whites, particularly White men, are in positions where the specter of racial prejudice has little, if any, effect on their lives. Indeed, for many Whites, institutional and structural racism is a vice of which they are largely if not totally immune.
A number of Whites are in denial about racism. A greater percentage are even more dismissive about the potential negative economic, psychological and emotional impact that it can have on the lives of non-Whites. Such attitudes have manifested themselves in polls like the recent CBS/New York Times poll, on social media, chat rooms, political oriented websites, talk radio, private clubs and multiple avenues of society. Over the past several years, a number of politically right of center media outlets, talk radio and FOX News in particular, shamefully and purposely misrepresent or, at the very least, manipulate racial incidents.
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…personal attacks began even before he officially took office. Such juvenile and pathetic behavior among the President’s detractors has been a sad spectacle to witness.
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Conservative talk radio chimes in with its relentless bombastic, acerbic thrashing of President Obama. The nation’s first Black president and, to a lesser degree, his wife have been the subject of unprecedented vitriol and disrespect from politicians, a few journalists, anonymous bloggers and other disgruntled malcontents who cannot stomach the fact that a Black man is commander-in-chief and that a Black family occupies 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Such personal attacks began even before he officially took office. Such juvenile and pathetic behavior among the President’s detractors has been a sad spectacle to witness.
The deaths of Laquan MacDonald, Freddie Gray, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Reika Boyd, Tanisha McBride and many others at the hands of law enforcement. The ongoing dramatic saga of police brutality and corruption plaguing cities such as Baltimore, Ferguson, Cleveland and Chicago. The growing wealth and income gaps that transcend across racial lines but disproportionately affect Black and Brown Americans. Lower life expectancy that is more likely to impact poor people (especially poor Black men). Systemic, systematic and structural discrimination all too often directed toward Black and Brown Americans. All of the aforementioned factors indicate that racism is a malignant form of cancer that has spread throughout the land.
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Denying such hard truths will not bring us any closer to any sort of racial reconciliation.
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Chattel slavery, Black codes, Jim Crow servitude, grandfather clauses, oppressive sharecropping systems, lynchings, urban ghettoization, political disenfranchisement, covert and overt discrimination and outright unapologetic violence have deeply affected America’s Black population. The results still linger with us today. Denying such hard truths will not bring us any closer to any sort of racial reconciliation. Rather, acknowledging that racial conflict is a serious problem and making a valiant, diligent, and committed effort to tackling the issue will be the only viable solution to addressing such a crisis.
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Not to interject inappropriately, or to presume too much about other peoples’ situations- But, speaking very generally, I can certainly relate to a potential circumstance or hypothetical occurrence, where, discussing lesser matters of politics or other social significance and finding my opposite to be overly-strident, overbearing, narrow-minded, opinionated, or otherwise “smug” then I would certainly understand if I thus then found myself to be somewhat more reticent and reluctant to then broach even more weighty, contentious, and inflammatory topics with them, and to thus invite sharper degrees of the same. And yes, there’s not much good bound to come from only living… Read more »
Sorry you afraid to meet and talk with progressives. However, the fact that you readily denounce and dismiss such individuals as “smug” without actually talking with them, yet, rather, automatically assume how they will behave demonstrates that you, yourself are somewhat smug and arrogant whether intentional or not.
Elwood Watson, Ph.D.
author of article
Elwood, in some ways you proved Marks point. He speaks from experience, experience similar to my own. Like Mark, I’m not afraid of getting into a discussion but will shy away from the “progressives” simply because it’s a one way discussion. And my avoidance of discussion is not limited to racism but many issues where the discussions turn into no more then futility. I find non-progressives to be far more open to discussions in that they’re more likely able to look beyond what appears to be obvious. The non-progressives are a majority that appear to look at the whole picture… Read more »
Based on your own biased perceptions?
It’s not productive (or truly progressive) to presume that everyone who disagrees with you must be suffering from false-consciousness; that the only explanation & justification for a divergent point of view is that it must somehow be flawed, obtuse, or otherwise illegitimate- only just that, and always just that.
Actually Elwood it happens here in the gmp on a regular basis. Another article ago I made a rather simple comment on a common phrase. A moderator jumped on me for that phrase being spefically a code for racism. It was nothing of the sort. I don’t speak in code. Sometimes I might need to clarify which I’d happily do if asked. But this moderator is very liberal and that’s fine. But rather than ask me what I meant she basically called me a racist because I was coding my language. I told her she was reading to much into… Read more »
I’m not afraid to talk about racism. Why should I be.
But I am afraid of getting into that discussion with the typical progressive who will not talk but sit smuglyvand denounce everything I say as proof of racism and that I’m a poster child for it and that unless I change my ways then there is no hope for me until I bend on knee asking for their forgiveness and recite verbatim what they just told me to say.
And that is pretty much what is going on today Elwood.