Real journalists, the way we used to hear it explained,
are called to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
They provide citizens with the useful and empowering information
needed to comprehend the world and stand up for their own interests.
BC's own Margaret Kimberley is a real journalist.
Her June 23 Freedom Rider column, "RX
For Black Hearts" highlighted the corrupt practices used
by the drug company Nitromed to get its questionable product Bidil
to market, including the claim that it is somehow better for African
American patients. The column sparked the following email from
an empowered reader:
Dear BC,
My cardiologist recently prescribed the medication
Bidil for me. I am not African American. I take it three times
a day and seem to experience an adverse reaction. The next
time I see my physician I will be interested in discussing the
information referenced by Ms. Kimberley in her Freedom Rider
column "RX for Black Hearts" with him. Is there anything
new you can tell me that I should relay to my doctor?
Dear Sir,
BC continues to be honored by
the solid and continuing contribution that Margaret Kimberley
makes to this publication. Next to the cover story, Freedom
Rider generally draws more readers than any other BC
feature.
Prescribing physicians and trusting patients are at the business
end of the tainted process that is the drug business. It can't
hurt to let your doctor know that you are an informed consumer
with reasonable questions, not just about the efficacy of the
particular drug prescribed, but about the integrity of the process
that put those drugs on your doctor's prescription list and
maybe even with the idea that health care should be a commodity
instead of a human right. If the questions Ms. Kimberley posed
and the information she provided are valuable to you, why not
share them with your physician?
While real journalists are few and far between, you
can find lazy, disinforming pundits on every cable channel and blog.
Last week's Cover Story called out James Taranto, editor of the
Wall Street Journal's online opinion page, OpinionJournal.com.
Taranto agreed with the conclusions of a survey by Dr. Michael Dawson,
featured in a January
5, 2006 BC Cover Story ("Katrina: A Study
– Black Consensus, White Dispute"), that whites and blacks
had widely divergent views of the role race played in the disaster.
However, Taranto's online WSJ opinion
piece contended that, as long as blacks persisted in disagreeing
with white opinion, they would remain – and deserve to remain –
politically marginalized. BC's response,
" BC vs. The Wall Street Journal" generated
more reader emails than we could ever publish, but here is a representative
sample.
I greatly appreciate your commentary on the WSJ's
willful ignorance concerning the issue of race. When one looks
at Mr. Dawson's findings and the regressive media's attack on
the black consensus, one has to conclude that 62%-80% of whites
live in a bubble, created for the purpose of maintaining the
status quo. The WSJ like many other publications wants
to give its readers what they want – a colorblind society where
individuals have no one else to blame but themselves.
Dear LL,
Willful ignorance, besides being an oxymoron,
is hard
work. Just ask your president.
The corporate media's job is to create and sustain
a civic narrative, an ongoing story about life in 21st Century
America, that reinforces and justifies things the Way They Are.
The Black Consensus is a standing repudiation of the validity
of the tale they tell, and therefore a big problem. For the
most part, corporate media acknowledge its existence only indirectly,
going to ridiculous lengths to deny the obvious reasons for
its existence.
For instance, at the beginning of the invasion of Iraq, when
pollsters noted that African American sentiment, across lines
of gender, class and generation was uniformly antiwar, sober
establishment pundits advanced the ridiculous rationale that
lopsided black antiwar sentiments were due to the fact that
the war was identified with Bush, and black people hated anything
that had to do with Bush. Amazing. We are presumed to have
no historical memory, and exist in no historical context that
might make us more doubtful than white Americans of the messianic
premises and racist practices of Uncle Sam overseas. Such is
the stuff of denial. Evidently, that is the distorted view
from inside the bubble.
Taranto's ahistorical, self-involved and self referential
screed, attributing racial ill will in large measure to white resentment
at being "discriminated against" by affirmative action,
provoked more than one reader observation on the nature of white
privilege in today's America.
Excellent analysis of the WSJ fool, Taranto.
In Ira Katznelson's new
book, When Affirmative Action was White: an Untold History
of Racial Inequality in Twentieth Century America, he goes
a long way toward clarifying some of the recent origins and
workings of white privilege and black disadvantage. The author
details the racist legislative imperatives that hampered Black
wealth attainment while shoring up white wealth, through deliberate
policies at the national, state and local levels. Congratulations
again on this piece.
GD
Dear GD,
I have not yet read the book you cite. But from
looking at reviews of it, I can see that the argument reviewers
say the author makes is a valid one that has been made before.
Institutionalized racism in this country has enabled many ostensibly
race-neutral laws and programs in the public and private sectors
to function in ways that replicated and reinforced white supremacy,
that conferred whites unearned advantages and penalized not
just individual African Americans, but whole communities, black
people as a class.
Thanks for reading Black Commentator, and for
bothering to write us. Maybe I'll pick up the book.
bd
Several readers were prompted by the
BC vs. WSJ story to put their $50 on the line,
and help to guarantee our future existence. We deeply appreciate
subscriptions, and take this opportunity to beg for a few more.
Freedom ain't free.
Some other readers wrote just to assure us that
they are indeed out there. One whom we will not name writes:
Nice item on the WSJ. There are a few of us here
at DJ [Dow Jones & Company, owners of the Wall Street Journal]
who understand these issues and how important they are. Keep up
the good work.
The only fully truthful thing in the OpinionJournal.com
article that prompted BC's response was his observation
that BC is "harshly leftist" in outlook.
We took it as a sort of compliment, as did some others.
Dear BC,
Great article. What exactly is a "harsh
leftist" one wonders? A leftist who is actually a
leftist as opposed to a marshmallow? I hope for the day
when the white consensus embraces the black consensus and we
have a decent humane world.
The white consensus embrace the black consensus?
It'll never happen.
The very existence of the state of mind and social
privilege we North Americans have learned to call "whiteness"
is the root of the problem. When the descendants of Europeans
learn to stop thinking like American white people, i.e., entitled
to dominate and decide for the rest of the world, and embrace
their own and everyone else's humanity instead, we will finally
have arrived. In the long run I am certainly hopeful.
But you know what else they say about the long run. In
the long run, we'll all be dead.
bd
In BC's January
5, 2006 cover story, "Katrina: A Study, Black Consensus,
White Dispute" we used the response to three questions lifted
from an extensive survey of comparative white and black attitudes
and political positions.
Huge majorities of Blacks agreed that the federal government's
response would have been faster if the victims of Katrina in
New Orleans had been white (84 percent), and that the Katrina
experience shows there is a lesson to be learned about continued
racial inequality (90 percent).
A couple of readers took exception to the way BC
presented one of Dr. Dawson's questions.
Dear BC,
I suspect that the feds would have moved much
quicker if the abandoned population were not POOR. Would they
have abandoned a Black neighborhood with Condi, Powel, Gates,
Cosby and other non-poor Blacks for five days? Would they even
have wanted to instantly gentrify (steal) their land? Would
they be evicting and bulldozing their land right now?
About 20% of the abandoned victims were in fact
white. And although the media did the usual divide-and-conquer
trick of portraying some white victims as "good" and
the Black victims as "bad," the feds et al still
abandoned the poor white folks and are evicting and bulldozing
their homes too.
I urge readers to join or donate to Common Ground
in New Orleans who are fighting to save the poor Black neighborhoods
for the people and to stop the corporate vultures who have invaded
them. Even a few days volunteering will help. Contact them at
[email protected].
PG
Dear BC,
Maybe you mean, "had the victims all been
white"? But the wording seems to imply that few, if any,
were. Please, the victims of Katrina in New Orleans and all
along the Gulf Coast were of all races and ethnic groups who
reside here: Black, white, Asian, Latino, Arab. People of all
social and economic levels were displaced, drowned, electrocuted,
crushed by falling trees or died by their own hands in despair.
One thousand and twenty seven of us have perished, by the latest
count. Old people, young people. Elderly white people who
would not or could not leave their homes. I read today about
a middle aged Caucasian woman drowned while trying to lift her
dog into a canoe.
All of us were hurt by the storm and the government's
response has been dreadfully slow to help anybody. Why is it
said that FEMA stands for, "Federal Employees Missing Again"?
FEMA trailers have only just begun to show up to house people
who have been living in tents and wrecked fishing camps and
homes without roofs a full four months after the storm, and
these people are white as well as Black. Landlords will bulldoze
houses rather than rebuild; and thousands of their tenants are
white. Katrina was an equal opportunity destroyer and clearly
this administration is, too.
DF
We at BC think both these readers
have a valid point about the facts on the ground. We like facts
at BC, wherever we can find them, and welcome
email from our readers. We read it all, and answer most of it,
though space allows us only to print a few.
Please send your correspondence to BC Associate
Editor Bruce A. Dixon at [email protected].
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