Please believe it: 2015 was chock-full of racism.
America was unhinged this past year, to be sure, with racists coming
out of the woodwork. This was the year that we scraped the bottom of
the barrel, with some sectors of white America holding a good ol’ race
riot, rebooted for the twenty-first century.
Let’s be clear: when you are black, or Latino, or another person of
color, any given year never fails to shock your spirit. With the things
coming out of the mouths of some people, the offensive words and
actions, you really have to wonder about this country.
But 2015 was different, unsurpassed at least in recent memory.
If a single person could represent the embodiment of this
ignorance in 2015, it would have to be Donald Trump. Now, Trump did not
make America more racist. Rather, he only reflected that which already
existed.
As a presidential candidate, “The Donald” was able to tap into the
anger of under-informed white voters who have legitimate anger but, as
usual, always blame the wrong people for their problems. The Republican
Party has been hustling poor, uneducated white folks for decades,
giving them trickle-down economics and, with a wink and a nod, telling
them to point the finger at black and brown people for losing their
jobs, or for their taxes going up, or what have you.
But Trump has thrown away the common
tactics of dog whistle politics and has tapped into white nationalism
and creeping fascism in America. When some people say they want their
country back, they miss the days when whites had everything, and
African-Americans were invisible, or at least seen but not heard.
Trump began his campaign by calling Mexican immigrants
“criminals, drug dealers, rapists, etc.” and vowing to build a wall on
the U.S. border with Mexico. And more recently, he proposed a ban on the entry of all Muslims
into the country, as well as a special identification badge for all
Muslims, not unlike the yellow star of David the Nazis forced Jews to
wear in Europe under Hitler.
But Trump is not alone among the GOP political field. Although not
white, Ben Carson and Ted Cruz — who are scraping the same barrel that
is the Republican base — have appealed to racist white conservatives.
Carson suggested that a Muslim should not become president,
then only if that person renounces Islam. And Ted Cruz, who was born in
Canada to a Cuban father and an American mother, wants to repeal the 14th Amendment, which grants birthright citizenship to children born in the U.S. from undocumented parents. He also likened the Black Lives Matter movement to cop killers.
In 2015, angry whites responded to the #BlackLivesMatter with the
declaration that “All Lives Matter,” an attempt to devalue black life
and downplay the protest movement against police violence,
institutional racism and the impact of the criminal justice system on
communities of color. In the process, they captured the tone of
segregationists of the 1950s and 1960s who opposed civil rights.
As #BlackLivesMatter went to college, so too did the racists. The racist chants of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity at the University of Oklahoma, the defacing of the portraits of black faculty at Harvard Law School, and the suspension of cadets at The Citadel for wearing KKK hoods are a reminder that millennials have as big of a racism problem as their parents.
Moreover, the incident involving a swastika made of feces at the University of Missouri — and attempts by Republican lawmakers to retaliate against the striking black Mizzou football players — are proof that black students are not safe on college campuses.
Meanwhile, in 2015 we witnessed raw racism from the bench of the
highest court in the land. During oral arguments for the University of
Texas affirmative action case, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia suggested that black students belong at “slower track” universities.
Speaking of Black scientists, he said “They come from lesser schools
where they do not feel that they’re being pushed ahead in classes that
are too fast for them,” Scalia said. “I’m just not impressed by the
fact that the University of Texas may have fewer. Maybe it ought to
have fewer. And maybe some — you know, when you take more, the number
of blacks, really competent blacks, admitted to lesser schools, turns
out to be less.” A proponent of the debunked “mismatch theory,”
Scalia reflects the white racist sentiment that affirmative action
should be abolished because black people are in over their heads,
ill-equipped and simply don’t belong.
But some racists responded to black people not just with words but with guns and murder. On June 17th a white supremacist named Dylann Roof,
21, opened fire on a Bible study at the historically black Emanuel AME
Church in Charleston, South Carolina, killing nine people in what
became known as the Charleston Massacre. The bloodbath was a factor
accelerating the debate over the Confederate flag, leading to its
removal from the state capitol in Columbia. And in Minneapolis, three
suspects were arrested for shooting five Black Lives Matter protesters.
Even Hollywood, generally not known as a bastion of diversity and
inclusion, has faced ignorant, racist critics. Some were outraged that John Boyega, a black actor, would be cast in the leading role of Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
These days, the new tactic of racists is to brand people of color as
“racist” for shining a light on discrimination and extolling the
virtues of diversity. Rosalind Brewer,
the black CEO of Sam’s Club, found herself the target of a boycott by
white racists after she discussed the importance of workplace
diversity. She was branded a “racist” who hates white men after telling
CNN her reaction after once meeting with suppliers and finding herself
sitting at a table entirely of white men.
Indeed, racists got their groove back in 2015. And if you call them
out on their racism, they will call you politically correct. Or racist.
Expect this race riot to get worse before it gets better. And remember
that 2016 is an election year.
This commentary was originally published by The Grio
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