It was all too
predictable that Attorney General Eric Holder would be attacked
for his recent remarks about race in America. To suggest
that the nation is still haunted by the specter of racism is unacceptable
it seems, especially since, with the election of President Obama,
we have ostensibly entered the “post-racial” era.
But in truth, the nation’s chief
law enforcement officer deserves criticism more for what he didn’t
say than for what he did.
Specifically, Holder blamed
personal cowardice for our racial divide, rather than institutionalized
inequities, thereby minimizing his own Department’s role in solving
the problem; and he blamed everyone (and thus no one in particular)
for being cowards, thereby letting white Americans - who have always
been the ones least willing to engage the subject - off our uniquely
large hook.
This combination of power-obliviousness
(ignoring discrimination and unequal access to resources, while
focusing merely on attitudes) and color-blindness (suggesting that
everyone is equally at fault and equivalently unwilling to discuss
racism) is a popular lens through which to view these matters. Indeed,
the Oscar-winning film “Crash” was based almost entirely on these
two tropes. But such a lens distorts our vision, and obscures true
understanding of the phenomenon being observed.
The racial divide about which
Holder spoke, particularly in terms of the neighborhoods where people
live, is not the result of some abstract cowardice to engage one
another. Rather, it is about the racist fears of whites, who decades
ago began leaving neighborhoods when blacks began to move in. They
didn’t move because of declining property values, as they often
claimed (indeed economic logic dictates that the rapid white exodus,
not the black demand for housing, would cause such an outcome),
but because of racism.
And in their fears, these whites
were assisted by government policy, which subsidized their flight
via FHA and VA loans that were all but off limits to people of color.
This is how (and why) the suburbs came to be. From the 1940s to
the early 60s, over $120 billion in home loans were made to whites,
preferentially, thanks to these government efforts, while blacks
and other persons of color were excluded from the same. Indeed,
about half of all homes purchased by white families during this
time were financed thanks to these low-interest loans, while folks
of color remained locked in cities, their dwellings and businesses
often knocked down to make way for the very interstates that would
shuttle their white counterparts to the suburbs where only they
could live.
We
remain residentially divided today because of the legacy of those
apartheid-like policies, as well as ongoing race-based housing discrimination:
between 2 million and 3.7 million incidents per year according to
private estimates. It is the AG’s job to do something about that
by enforcing the Fair Housing Act, not pleading for more dialogue.
As Elvis once said, albeit about a very different subject, we need
“a little less conversation, a little more action, please.”
Holder also pulled a punch by
issuing his charge of personal cowardice indiscriminately, as if
to say that everyone was equally averse to tackling the subject
of racism. But people of color have always voiced their concerns
about the matter. It is whites who have tended to shut down, to
change the subject, or to minimize the problem by telling those
who mention it to “get over it already,” or by accusing them of
“playing the race card.”
As exhibit one for this charge,
consider the way in which most of white America has reacted to the
recent New York Post cartoon, in which police officers gun
down a wild ape, meant to represent the author of the stimulus bill;
and this, directly opposite a picture of President Obama signing
that very piece of legislation. That
such an image trades on longstanding racist stereotypes is apparent
to most folks of color, and yet, most of white America
has yawned through the controversy, or worse, accused blacks enraged
by the image, of hypersensitivity.
Likewise, most whites reacted
with unaffected diffidence at the New Year’s Day videotape from
the Oakland subway, in which a white police officer coolly executed a black
man by the name of Oscar Grant, despite Grant putting up no resistance,
possessing no weapon, and posing no threat to the officer. On message
boards in the Bay Area - supposedly filled with progressive types,
to hear locals tell it - whites regularly expressed more outrage
at protesters demanding justice for the Grant family, than at officer
Mehserle for committing cold-blooded murder.
Sadly, whites are
rarely open to what black and brown folks have to say regarding
their ongoing experiences with racist mistreatment. And we are especially
reluctant to discuss what that mistreatment means for us as whites:
namely that we end up with more and better opportunities as the
flipside of discrimination. After all, there is no down without
an up, no matter how much we’d like to believe otherwise.
It
is white denial, as much as anything, which has allowed racial inequity
to persist for so long, and it’s nothing new. In the early 1960s,
even before the passage of modern civil rights laws, two out of
three whites said blacks were treated equally, and nearly 90 percent
said black kids had equal educational opportunity. As a matter of
fact, white denial has a longer pedigree than that, reaching back
at least as far as the 1860s, when southern slave-owners were literally
stunned to see their human property abandon them after the Emancipation
Proclamation. After all, to the semi-delusional white mind of the
time, they had always treated their slaves “like family.”
Until we address our nation’s
long history of white supremacy, come to terms with the legacy of
that history, and confront the reality of ongoing discrimination
(even in the “Age of Obama”), whatever dialogue we engage around
the subject will only further confuse us, and stifle our efforts
to one day emerge from the thick and oppressive fog of racism. For
however much audacity may be tethered to the concept of hope, let
us be mindful that truth is more audacious still. May we find the
courage, some day soon, to tell it.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator, Tim Wise is an anti-racist educator and essayist,
and the author of four books, including White Like Me: Reflections
on Race from a Privileged Son and his latest, Between Barack and
a Hard Place: Racism and White Denial in the Age of Obama. Click
here
to contact Mr. Wise.
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