Pervasive
and persistent racial profiling of African American men is only part
of their reality. When Rashon Nelson and Donte Robinson entered a
Philly Starbucks for a business meeting, it took all of two minutes
for the police to come and arrest them for trespassing. (It took
Cleveland police two seconds to murder 12-year old Tamir Rice.)
Tshyrad Oates and a friend were kicked out of L.A. Fitness for not
paying; Oates is a member. Black men are encountering hostility and
aggression on the street, in a coffee house, in a gym or just about
anywhere their Black faces appear.
The
Starbucks incident took me back to the recent study on The
Equality of Opportunity Project which re-iterated a troublesome
fact: Black men are between a rock and hard place, a Catch-22, a
vicious cycle, a no-win situation. And that’s from the cradle
to the grave.
The
video of the two young men’s incident at the trendy franchise
coffee shop quickly went viral. They were put in double lock
handcuffs (same cuffs used on murder suspects), were not read their
rights and were not told why they were being arrested. Nelson and
Robinson said they feared for their life and well they should. Rarely
does anything good come out of young, Black men being taken into
police custody.
Researchers
from Harvard and Stanford Universities, along with the Census Bureau,
tracked 20 million children born between 1978-1983. The take-aways in
The
Equality of Opportunity Report are depressing. The anxiety of
Black parents and guardians raising Black boys surely skyrocketed.
Blood pressures probably went up a few mmHgs too.
“How
am I supposed to raise my son!” asked one exasperated mother I
talked to about the report. Hers is a family of two parents with
abundant resources. Despite good parenting and a stable lifestyle, it
doesn’t appear that it’ll make a damn bit of difference
in the life outcomes for her Black son.
The
report basically exploded the myths of why Black males don’t/can’t
succeed. The worst places for poor white children are almost all
better than the best places for poor black children. Black boys
growing up in wealthy families were more likely than their white
peers to live in poverty as adults. Income gaps are worse for Black
boys than any other demographic except for Native Americans. Black
families are painfully familiar all with these scenarios.
What
the above means is that family characteristics – parental
marriage rates, education, wealth-- were not big influencers for
reducing the wealth gap. All the talk about eliminating single-mother
households,
working hard and getting a good education are not enough to overcome
the soaring apex of racism. A New York Times created a dramatic,
interactive
graph
showing how fast black boys from wealthy families fall into the lower
rungs of the economic ladder.
The
Opportunity Report (or the No Opportunity Report) was a powerful
reality check for this nation. Especially for the African American
community. Especially for middle-class African American families who
already thought they had a leg up on the poor Black families. The
young, wanna-be entrepreneurs in Starbucks were treated no different
than the Pookies in the hood—handcuffed and humiliated. The
common thread between the two is the color of their skin.
We
should not be impressed by the shallow action of Starbucks CEO Kevin
Johnson. The viral video inside one of his store and viewed by over
11 million people prompted Johnson to shut down his 8,000 stores to
do a few hours of anti-bias training.
Racism
and white supremacy have blocked the doors to the so-called American
Dream. It’s past time to face the ugly truth of how high and
wide racism is. We gotta go deep and dirty to get to the roots of the
systems that choke the opportunities branches in the Black Tree of
Life.
The
change in attitudes and practices—fear, contempt-- towards
Black males needs to happen at home and in our Black community. Black
folks have internalized from racist mainstream institutions that
Black men are dangerous, criminally-inclined and generally unworthy
of resources and respect.
Protests
of the racist incidents by the boys in blue or the boys in the
corporate board rooms are not enough. We need coordinated, strategic
actions that cut through the policies, laws, attitudes and practices
that thwart the full potential of Black males. Schools would be a
good place to focus our energies. We need to build the supports our
Black boys need early in their development and to dismantle the walls
that keep them from soaring to unbelievable heights.
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