The
case of Shirley Sherrod, who was fired from her job at the
Department of Agriculture for being charged by Andrew Breitbart,
a white nationalist, with making a racist speech at a March
NAACP conference is on its way to being respectfully resolved.��
Breitbart had placed an edited eight minute video of Ms.
Sherrod�s speech at an NAACP conference in March on his
website to make a case for racism within the NAACP.�
Ms.
Sherrod said that she had taken her job to help Black people,
but when a white farmer came to her for help, understanding
that many Black farmers had received no help, she would
have to determine, in light of his arrogance in dealing
with her, just how much help she would give him.� And although
she decided that she would do just enough, circumstances
caused her to rethink her initial decision and go above
and beyond the call of duty, coming to believe that what
really mattered was that he was poor and not just white
and as such had much in common with blacks.�
But
what still sticks in my craw is that all the parties to
the sorry treatment of Ms. Sherrod�based their actions in
agreement�with the concept of racism as defined by Andrew
Breitbart,� that the eight minute video segment showed racism
both in terms of Ms. Sherrod�s statements and the audience�s
response.� It�s simply not there.�
Most
people now understand that the speech was actually 35 minutes
and that this small segment was taken out of context of
a complete story.� But it should be noted that even the
first eight minutes were not racist.� It was not racist
that Ms. Sherrod wanted to work only for Black people.�
Charge Cesar Chavez with being racist for only working for
Hispanics.� It was not racist that she remembered the past
mal-treatment of blacks and decided how much help she would
give him.� It would only have been racist if she decided
she would give him less than equal service.� It was not
racist for some in the audience to respond audibly in agreement
with Sherrod who voiced the irony that the shoe was on the
other foot and she now had the power to determine how to
help a white farmer knowing that Black farmers had faced
trouble at the hands of whites.��
In
other words, the cultural context within the exchange between
Ms. Sherrod and the NAACP audience was a legitimate one
for the expression of her past experiences and its validation
by the audience.� It only appears racist when taken out
of that cultural forum, as was the case of the video of
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, and thrown into an arena where it
was evaluated at the hands of conservatives who had neither
respect nor much knowledge of Black culture.
This
means that the White House, the media and other institutions
are vulnerable to having racial situations being defined
by those with a distinctly political agenda if they do not
change their approach.� So, they should take racism seriously
rather than running from the issue for the reasons that
many have written about, because the President lives in
a country where race is one of the most dynamic issues and
his own race will continually invite some relationship to
those issues.� In this sense, it was, and is, na�ve for
him and his advisers to believe that they can either ignore
these issues or handle them on an ad hoc basis.� They are
as serious to his success as passing health care legislation
and they deserve �war room� attention.
Either
the White House, the NAACP, MSNBC and various other media
outlets, and the Agriculture Department all agreed with
Breitbart�s definition of the video segment, or they were
afraid to have to defend the video against a Fox News campaign
by its show hosts to shape the speech as racist.� Perhaps
it was both, but if they had been accurate about the concept,
the Right wing campaign would have come to a halt right
there.� These institutions need expert and trusted advisers
on racial issues that they use in the decision-making process
not just for damage control.�� The NAACP should have known
better, and done better, and its expertise on the issue
would have been able to inform others.
First
Rev. Wright, then Van Jones, Acorn, the New Black Panthers,
now Breitbart all lead to the conclusion that this White
House is inept in the handling of racial issues.� Since
the culture war against it will not stop, it should develop
the capacity and the confidence to face it down.�
BlackCommentator.com Editorial
Board member, Dr. Ron Walters, PhD is a Political Analyst,
Author and Professor Emeritus of Government
and Politics at the University
of Maryland, College Park. One of his latest books
is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press) Click here to
contact Dr. Walters. |