Recently, I was
tweeted that I was really the racist for suggesting in my tweets that racism is
a problem in American politics.
Considering the source of the tweets, I forwent a reply. To paraphrase Robert Kiyosaki, ‘Arguing with
an idiot, makes two idiots’. However, these
tweets rekindled my desire to understand how a society so couched in racism,
fails to realize it.
Following the great
black migration to the north in the 1950s, it used to be said by some blacks, having
encountered the cloaked racism in the north, that at least in the south white
people were “up front” with their racism.
Some thought, that lacking the KKK, voter intimidations, Jim Crow laws,
beatings and lynching of black men, this was a benign racism compared to the
racism they had experienced in the south.
They could achieved some measure of security for themselves and their
families in moving north, but they soon became aware that the racism would
impact their longer term struggle for economic dignity, and if they strayed out
of their designated parts of the city, their very lives.
As compared to the
overt racism of the South in the 50’s, the relative safety of the North’s more
covert racism was a welcomed change. What
the new arrivals soon discovered that racism in the north was so covert, most
northern whites didn’t think it even existed, making it even more difficult to
fight. In the South you knew who your
enemy was, and they reminded you daily that you were definitely theirs’. In the North, while that determination was no
less easy for blacks, their white counterparts were clueless as to how they
could possibly be considered racist, even if blacks had to stay out of their
neighborhoods for fear of their very lives.
Over 50 years later,
I think back to November 2008. While I
never uttered the phase “post-racial America”, I’m afraid I might have been
naïve to think that America had turned a corner on race. What I learned since is it wasn’t a corner we
turned; it was a “U-turn” instead. They are still clueless. You can’t fix something that you don’t even think
is broke.
The election of the first black President of the United States should have announced to the world that America was moving beyond race. It should have been a source of great pride, that a descendant of slaves could, a century and a half later, be President. What America has said instead to the world and America, how dare a black man presume to even think he should, or even could hold the highest office in America.
The election of the first black President of the United States should have announced to the world that America was moving beyond race. It should have been a source of great pride, that a descendant of slaves could, a century and a half later, be President. What America has said instead to the world and America, how dare a black man presume to even think he should, or even could hold the highest office in America.