Sunday, April 30, 2006

What Kind of Card is Race? The Absurdity (and Consistency) of White Denial

Tim Wise in counter punch

Recently, I was asked by someone in the audience of one of my speeches, whether or not I believed that racism--though certainly a problem--might also be something conjured up by people of color in situations where the charge was inappropriate. In other words, did I believe that occasionally folks play the so-called race card, as a ploy to gain sympathy or detract from their own shortcomings? In the process of his query, the questioner made his own opinion all too clear (an unambiguous yes), and in that, he was not alone, as indicated by the reaction of others in the crowd, as well as survey data confirming that the belief in black malingering about racism is nothing if not ubiquitous.[...]

Since the O.J. trial, it seems as though almost any allegation of racism has been met with the same dismissive reply from the bulk of whites in the U.S. According to national surveys, more than three out of four whites refuse to believe that discrimination is any real problem in America (2). That most whites remain unconvinced of racism's salience--with as few as six percent believing it to be a "very serious problem," according to one poll in the mid 90s (3)--suggests that racism-as-card makes up an awfully weak hand. While folks of color consistently articulate their belief that racism is a real and persistent presence in their own lives, these claims have had very little effect on white attitudes. As such, how could anyone believe that people of color would somehow pull the claim out of their hat, as if it were guaranteed to make white America sit up and take notice? If anything, it is likely to be ignored, or even attacked, and in a particularly vicious manner.

That bringing up racism (even with copious documentation) is far from an effective "card" to play in order to garner sympathy, is evidenced by the way in which few people even become aware of the studies confirming its existence. How many Americans do you figure have even heard, for example, that black youth arrested for drug possession for the first time are incarcerated at a rate that is forty-eight times greater than the rate for white youth, even when all other factors surrounding the crime are identical (4)? read more

1 Comments:

At 2:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

No doubt racism continues as before. In order to change that though requires really massive movements. I'm 'white'. I don't think significant proportions of whites are so hostile as you make out (much more than 6%, possibly we would see 25% of whites in my view supporting an end to racism). What is a problem all the way around is lack of political voice to represent a society that genuinely addresses racism.

Tim and Saddiq lists a little about racism, but I think the process is much more in need of revelation about it than has gone before.

Functionally, to organize against an 'institution' that is economic in nature, one has to do something about how the economics leaches off the in-equality.

Racism in the U.S. is just one form of the process that goes on in nation states elsewhere. What exactly is this deformation in a social system then? I think it right to say that after the French revolution and the establishment of Nation/states, that racism is part of that process. That older systems though unequal can't reproduce the structures we experience now. Since slavery started long before the U.S. 'revolution' the roots of racism arose probably out of the feudal related bondage system though now based upon cheap labor.

It is also correct in my view to say that a major social change say in the U.S. with the intent to really address racism would take a quite a bit of experiment and work to make progress. This would of course require some sort of unity amongst the working class of a new type. Primarily because socialistic economic aims are the only way to address the economic supports for racism that would bolster the status quo, and stymie change.
thanks,
Doyle Saylor

 

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