The
history of America is one of democracy for white male landowners and
enslavement for Black people, with the latter struggling for the
rights enshrined in the Constitution through protest and bloodshed.
As marginalized and disenfranchised groups have fought to broaden the
scope of who enjoys the benefits and rights of citizenship, they have
been met with blowback and regressive policies, including violence
from white America. The rise of Donald Trump and “Make America
Great Again” reflects the level of white resistance to progress
on the part of Black, Latino and other people. A new study delves
into the thought process and political motivations of whites who
resist.
In
a working
paper
entitled “White Outgroup Intolerance and Support for
Democracy,” researchers Steven V. Miller of Clemson University
and Nicholas T. Davis of Texas A&M University suggest the
greatest threat to democracy comes from the political proclivities of
intolerant white people. Examining data from the World
Values Survey
from 1995 to 2011, the research found that racial, cultural or ethnic
intolerance diminishes white Americans’ commitment to
democracy. Further, the authors conclude, such sentiments of social
intolerance on the part of white people make them more receptive to
“undemocratic alternatives” such as military rule and the
elimination of separation of powers in government.
The
authors define social intolerance as an unwillingness to associate or
fraternize with those whose culture, race or religion differs from
one’s group. “White respondents in the United States …
who expressed that they would not like to have various outgroups of
interest as neighbors (i.e., those from a different race, Muslims,
immigrants/foreign workers, Jews, and those speaking a different
language) were more likely to support rule of government by a strong
leader without legislative or electoral oversight, rule of government
by the army, and were more likely to oppose democracy, in general,”
Miller
said.
Miller takes note of the participants in the violent Unite the Right
rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and President Trump’s
reaction to the white supremacist event — in which he blamed
both neo-Nazis and anti-racist protesters and said there were “fine
people on both sides” — as evidence of a “tenuous
commitment to democratic principles.”
Miller
and Davis believe the Unite the Right rally, which resulted in a
murder, and other such demonstrations point to more than mere
prejudice. Rather, aggrieved white Americans, in their view, reject
equality and democracy because democracy protects the rights of
marginalized, up-and-coming racial and ethnic groups that white
nationalists loathe.
Despite
its reputation as the land of the free and beacon of democracy and
human rights, the United States is a place where democracy has proven
elusive, and its people are not necessarily fans of liberty and
justice for all. “Although prosperous, American citizens have
not historically exhibited the sort of lofty, normative commitments
to things like equality and tolerance that we might expect from one
of the longest-running continuous electoral democracies in the
world,” the authors write, noting the tendency of most
Americans to apply a double standard in which rights are granted to
more popular groups, and rights denied to unpopular groups. Based on
current sociopolitical events, they suggest, popular support for
democracy is waning in the age of Trump. “In part, a divisive,
partisan president may be priming co-partisans to renege on certain
civil freedoms or institutional support, but this behavior also
corresponds with a growth in nativist and racist sentiments within
the mass public more broadly,” they added.
Racial
politics is nothing new, as this has been a part of the nation from
its origins. Social intolerance and a hatred of diversity, inclusion,
integration, and immigration is longstanding. Democracy carries with
it an interplay between majority and minority rights, and an
allocation of power, as the researchers note. When members of the
white majority feel they are under an economic threat, they will
retreat from democracy because that system is allowing undesirable
groups to accumulate power, presumably at white people’s
expense.
White
resentment politics
has manifested itself over the past five decades with the Republican
Party’s Southern Strategy, in which the GOP has won elections
by tapping into white racist hatred of Black people and civil rights.
This anti-Black sentiment translated into antipathy toward government
— resentment over government programs that curb states’
rights and benefit Black people, and a hatred of the first Black
president and his signature program, the Affordable Care Act, or
Obamacare.
Further
complicating the political landscape is the inevitable end
to America’s white majority,
with the election of Trump a symptom of an existential crisis of
white American grasp on white supremacy and privilege, and a
last-ditch effort out of white racial paranoia to stem the tide of
changing demographics. The white supremacist concept of white
genocide — that white people are an endangered species and the
victims of racial discrimination in education and employment and all
facets of life — is reflected in the current policies of the
U.S. government. Measures designed to protect against white genocide
include a restrictive immigration policy that bars nonwhite people
from entering the country, a rollback of civil rights and affirmative
action, voter suppression for Black, Latino and other communities,
racial gerrymandering, mass incarceration and police violence for
nonwhite people.
The
practices and policies of the Trump administration provide ample
evidence of a rejection of democratic principles and a rebuke of
constitutional norms. For example, not unlike a Third World dictator,
Trump has hired his family members as his closest advisers and aides,
all of them manipulating the levers of government for personal
financial gain in violation of the Emoluments
Clause.
Trump has embraced the use of torture — a violation of the
Eighth Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment —
and has selected as his new CIA director a woman who oversaw a
torture program. Further, Trump has abandoned enforcement of civil
rights laws, called for the firing of athletes who exercise free
speech and kneel in protest of police violence, and pressured the NFL
to adopt a policy requiring that football players stand for the
national anthem.
If
there is a crisis of democracy which is tied to white racism, then
there is little indication this crisis will subside anytime in the
near future. After all, the fundamentals of white supremacy —
that white people should have all the power at the expense of Black
people, and anything less is anti-white discrimination and a cause
for white tears to flow — remain intact.
This commentary was originally published by AtlantaBlackStar.com
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