From worker-brc-news@lists.tao.ca Thu Feb 24 08:22:02 2000
Date: Wed, 23 Feb 2000 18:40:53 -0500
From: Manning Marable <mm247@columbia.edu>
Subject: [BRC-NEWS] White Supremacy in Dixie
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How far has America actually progressed toward more constructive race relations? Judging by some recent events, not much.
During this year’s legal holiday marking the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., I was invited to speak at a small, predominantly white Southern college. For decades, this school had been racially segregated, like other all-white public educational institutions. The college’s first black faculty member had been hired only in the early 1980s. Nevertheless, the initial reception I received was friendly and positive, from administrators, faculty and representatives of the student government association, who had sponsored my visit. Nothing up to that point had prepared me for what I would soon encounter that evening.
My lecture that night was before an audience of perhaps 500 people, consisting mostly of students and a significant number of African Americans from the surrounding community. I spoke about the enduring legacy of Martin, the necessity to achieve social justice, and the urgent need for constructive dialogue across America’s racial chasm. As I concluded, most of the audience responded favorably to the message, but many sat in silence.
A white male student jumped out of his seat even before the audience
had stopped clapping, and raised his hand to ask the first question.
When I acknowledged him, the white student launched into an attack
against affirmative action, which was characterized as reverse
discrimination.
He insisted that both he and many of his friends
had lost scholarships and jobs to unqualified minorities. I replied
that statistically less than two percent of all university
scholarships were race-based,
that is, designated for blacks
and Hispanics. Affirmative action was necessary because job
discrimination was still rampant, and blacks frequently were unfairly
charged more for goods and services than whites. I cited one major
study illustrating that blacks who negotiated and purchased
automobiles at white car dealerships were charged significantly more
than whites who bought the identical cars.
The white student was unimpressed and unapologetic. His precise words
were unclear, but his essential response was, then the blacks ought
to shop somewhere else!
Suddenly, a significant number of white
students burst into applause, and a few even cheered. Surprised and
saddened, I quickly responded that this discrimination was illegal and
morally outrageous, and that blacks shouldn’t have to shop in
another country in order to be treated fairly in the market place.
Don’t misunderstand my point here. As a middle-aged black man, I spent many summers in Dixie during the 1960s. I experienced Jim Crow segregation firsthand, and white racism is hardly a new phenomenon to me.
But the white students at this formerly segregated college had no
personal knowledge of what Jim Crow was about. They never saw black
people being denied the right to vote, or signs posted on public
restrooms reading white
and colored.
Yet they felt no
hesitation, no restraint, to proclaim their prerogatives as whites,
over and above any claims that black people made for equality. In
effect, this was white supremacy
: blind to the historical
dynamics and social consequences of racial oppression, jealous of any
benefits achieved by blacks from civil rights agitation, and outraged
by the suggestion that racial minorities should be compensated for
their exploitation. The twisted logic of white supremacy is that
reformers who champion racial equality and social justice are the
real racists.
And as I subsequently learned, a number of white
students were e-mailing administrators and others the next morning,
after my talk, demanding to know why this black racist
was
invited to speak at their campus!
What particularly struck me by this incident was the deep anger displayed by some whites in the audience. One can disagree with someone else’s political perspective, yet behave in a civil manner. Something I had said, or perhaps, what I represented, had generated white rage bordering on irrational hatred.
This same kind of white bigotry has been at the heart of the recent
public controversy over the flying of the Confederate battle flag over
the South Carolina statehouse. When the NAACP called for the
flag’s removal, State Senator Arthur Ravenel referred to the
organization as the National Association of Retarded People.
When this racist remark generated widespread outrage, Ravenel
apologized to retarded people
for mistakenly linking them with
the NAACP.
In January this year, 50,000 people gathered at the state capital in
Columbia, South Carolina, to call for the flag’s removal. But
you’d never guess this from the hypocritical and opportunistic
behavior of the Republican Party’s presidential candidates.
Arizona Senator John McCain first described the Confederate battle
flag as a symbol of racism and slavery,
but soon reversed
himself claiming it was also a symbol of heritage.
McCain’s top strategist in the state, Richard M. Quinn, is a
proud leader of the neo-Confederacy movement.
Texas Governor George W. Bush’s response to the controversy revealed his political cowardice and moral bankruptcy. Bush refused to demand that Ravenel apologize. He held a political rally at Bob Jones University, a racist institution that forbids interracial dating on campus, and is openly hostile to Roman Catholics. Back in Texas, Bush has done nothing to prohibit the widespread displays of Confederate flags in state buildings and even public schools.
Why have McCain and Bush refused to condemn a flag that journalist
Brent Staples has described as a symbol of choice among neo-Nazis,
skinheads and other bigots?
For the same reason that the white
students became outraged when I talked frankly about the history of
white privilege and racial discrimination. Many white Americans
refuse to honestly examine their history, because if they did, they
would have to confront the moral equivalent of the Nazis who ran
Germany’s death camps. They would have to acknowledge the vast
murders and rapes by their foreparents, and their own complicity in
profiting from today’s system of racial injustice. It is far
easier to boo
a black historian lecturing about racial
equality, or to denounce the NAACP as retarded.
By taking away
their rebel flag, we may force these whites to finally come to terms
with their own oppressive history, and themselves.
America as a nation has been essentially silent
about its
racist history. As legal scholar Patricia J. Williams eloquently
stated in the Nation recently, It would be better to feel ourselves
unsettled by the full truth of these historical horrors before we
commend ourselves for having buried the past. As we peer into the
unmarked graves of the ghosts that haunt America still, perhaps the
path to peace lies not only in dreaming a better future for black
children but in awakening white Americans to their own history
. . . .