Last week comedian Michael Richards fired a round
of angry racial epithets at several young black men heckling him
in a comedy club in Los Angeles. Just one week later, Sean Bell,
a 23 year old groom-to-be and his two friends (all black) were gunned
down by five plain-clothed New York City police officers who felt
compelled to fire over 50 shots total at the three unarmed men who
were celebrating Bell’s impending marriage. Although some have characterized
the slaughter as ‘mistaken identity’, the three were unmistakably
young, black and deemed menacing--even without possessing weapons.
Apparently these young men didn't need to be armed to be considered
dangerous.
When replaying the video of Richards' relentless round
of expletives aimed at pranksters in the audience, one cannot help
but draw parallels to one of the police officers who fired his weapon
31 times, emptying two full magazines at three unarmed black men.
He too must have felt very threatened. It appears racism has no
coastal bias and the indignation and public outcry that erupted
on the heels of Richards' ‘slip o the tongue’ was deafening and
certainly warranted. And yet, after all the criticism and numerous
video replays plastered on network television, Richards, in an interview
with talk show host David Letterman, earnestly insists “I’m not
racist”—as if this is the only question of concern. Pundits, entertainers,
activists and journalists spend hours posing the question “is he
racist?” and carefully pointing their forefinger in the direction
of the culprit, and speculation abounds as to whether or not Richard’s
career is over.
Why? Because in America we don’t tolerate overt racism.
No siree, no ‘n’ words here. Never mind that our prisons are disproportionately
filled with black men and women, that schools serving predominately
black and brown communities remain understaffed and underfunded
and that in study after study, it is revealed that people of color
receive inferior health care, employment opportunities and many
are destined to live in poverty their entire lives.
So
just what did we learn from the past weeks debacles? We learned
that after a white, wealthy, quick witted and beloved comedian felt
threatened by several young black hecklers, he reached in his comedic
tool bag and pulled the pin out of a racially charged verbal grenade
and hurled it into the balcony. Richards apologetic protestations
on Letterman are indicative of the mass denial infecting this entire
country—especially white America. We shake our heads in consternation
as if what lies in Richards does not live inside all of us. As if
somehow, the problem is ‘over there’ and thank god it does not live
in me.
If that were true, Sean Bell (and thousands like him)
would most likely be enjoying his honeymoon rather than buried six
feet under. After viewing the Richards’video several times, it appeared
the vitriol was lurking just under the surface—which of course it
was. Because that’s where racism lies for most of us—just under
the surface. Just under the surface in the ways we instinctively
clutch our purses on the street when approached by a black man,
when we are alone on an elevator or when we read the latest headline
about what is commonly known as ‘black- on-black crime’.
If only we were less concerned with being labeled
“a racist” and more concerned about the systemic and institutional
damage inflicted on people of color on a daily basis. Maybe then
we could transform our outrage and indignation of overt bigotry
and violence into something meaningful. Perhaps even something that
would prevent innocent young men from dying at the hands of those
sworn to protect us—ALL of us.
When will we understand that these outbursts--like
the one Richards displayed last week--are symptomatic rather than
a-typical of something much deeper? That the words he vomited at
his audience are very much connected to the fatal 50 shots fired
at Sean Bell and his friends. If only we could start from the premise
that yes, of course Michael Richards is racist—and so are most white
people. It is impossible to be raised in a society where white supremacy
is one of the founding principles and not entertain racist notions.
It’s too deeply engrained for any of us to boast of immunity. Simply
impossible.
If we could somehow grasp the notion that it is only
to the degree that we acknowledge and unearth the racist notions
that lie hidden in all of us—often just beneath the surface-- that
we will become ‘less racist’. If so, perhaps we might one day be
capable of making the correlation between words that wound and bullets
that kill.
Molly Secours is a writer/filmmaker/speaker and
frequent co-host on “Behind The Headlines” and “FreeStyle" on 88.1
WFSK in Nashville, TN. Her websites are mollysecours.com
and myspace.com/mollysecours.
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