The
first time I heard the racial trope “Go back to where you came
from,” I was getting off of a school bus in a white section of
town in Brooklyn, New York. Little did I know then I’d hear
those words from K through12, and the n-word was usually coming at
the end of the phrase than the beginning. By my senior year in high
school, very few white students and their parents hurled those words
at us black kids in the school’s special college-bound program.
However, many of our white teachers, school administrators, and staff
employees did, and it was not by what they said to us, but rather by
their treatment of us.
The
treatment of “otherness” I experienced from my years of
being bussed I learned had less to do with the people targeted and
everything to do with the group in power. Their perceptions of
birthright, citizenship, ownership, and racial entitlement were
bolstered by laws and institutions keeping their belief system in
place. It is the belief, at least in my generation and older, that it
takes a long time for attitudes like that to change, if they change
at all, because changing those people, their systems and laws can
take more than one lifetime. But not with the four Democratic
congresswomen, fondly called “The Squad” - Reps.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota,
Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts.
When
The Squad called out the president and his administration for the
inhumane treatment of undocumented immigrants detained at the
southern border, and the deplorable and squalid conditions they are
forced to live under, Trump, in his inimitable style of ad hominem
tweets, rather than address the crisis head-on, stated the following:
“Why
don’t they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime
infested places from which they came…These places need your
help badly, you can’t leave fast enough.”
Trump’s
statement illustrates how perceptions of birthright, citizenship, and
ownership have upped the volume on xenophobia and racism to blast
these days. Many more people feel emboldened to call the cops on
blacks, to tell perceived foreigners to leave this country, and to
concoct birther conspiracies of American born children of immigrants
parentage, like presidential hopeful Kamala Harris, and former
President Barack Obama.
While
many Americans are shocked that more than 90,000 people liked Trump’s
tweet, and many of his fellow Republicans stand behind him,
Congresswoman Presley clapped back at Trump stating,” THIS is
what racism looks like.” And, she’s right.
Trump
espouses a racist nostalgia of his childhood during the 1950’s
- 1960’s Jim Crow era, which to him was when America was great.
Most see how racist the country was back then. However, do we see it
now?
I
realize, however, I am not alone in my telling of being outside of my
perceived racially confined area. A Red Sox fan recently posted in
the New York Times comments section the following:
"As
a young person of color in Boston, I would hear “go back to
Roxbury where you belong.” This while I, an American-born
citizen, ventured out of the public housing projects to the downtown
area or to Fenway Park.”
The
volume and the degree to which everyday white American citizens have
called 911 on blacks for sitting at Starbucks, barbecuing in a public
park, playing golf to slowly, or napping in the school lounge, to
name a few, not only speaks of Trump’s vile acts as aberrant to
secure his perceptions of birthright, citizenship, racial
entitlement, and ownership of this country, but it speaks of and to
other ordinary white Americans, too.
While
the American public has heard ad nauseum Trump utter his now-familiar
refrain “I am the least racist person you have ever met”
when it comes to defending his behavior, similar refrains are spoken
by ordinary white people.
When
the American Colonization Society failed to send all freed blacks
“Back to Africa,” the dominance and societal backing of
the white gaze allowed for the “othering” and policing of
non-whites. While it began with the slave codes, which did not permit
blacks to assemble without the presence of the white person, it
didn’t end there. The white gaze morphed into various
permutations over history: KKK, segregation, white citizen council,
and white privilege, to name a few. And, each of these permutations
makes clear that a white person’s discomfort, unease or
suspicion of the “other” trumps a non-white person’s
civil rights.
President
Trump’s proclivity for racist remarks comes as no surprise. His
comment stating a preference for immigrants coming from a
Scandinavian country like Norway than from Africa and Haiti which he
depicts as “shithole” countries with nothing to offer the
U.S is based solely on his xenophobic racism.
The
Squad has a lot to offer this country. And, facts reveal that three
of the congresswomen are American born, and Ilhan Omar, born in
Somalia, because a naturalized citizen in 2000.
|