Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Racism ended in the '60s! Everyone knows that!

Barack Obama says:
As William Faulkner once wrote, "The past isn't dead and buried. In fact, it isn't even past." We do not need to recite here the history of racial injustice in this country. But we do need to remind ourselves that so many of the disparities that exist in the African-American community today can be directly traced to inequalities passed on from an earlier generation that suffered under the brutal legacy of slavery and Jim Crow.

Segregated schools were, and are, inferior schools; we still haven't fixed them, fifty years after Brown v. Board of Education, and the inferior education they provided, then and now, helps explain the pervasive achievement gap between today's black and white students.

Legalized discrimination - where blacks were prevented, often through violence, from owning property, or loans were not granted to African-American business owners, or black homeowners could not access FHA mortgages, or blacks were excluded from unions, or the police force, or fire departments – meant that black families could not amass any meaningful wealth to bequeath to future generations. That history helps explain the wealth and income gap between black and white, and the concentrated pockets of poverty that persists in so many of today's urban and rural communities.

A lack of economic opportunity among black men, and the shame and frustration that came from not being able to provide for one's family, contributed to the erosion of black families – a problem that welfare policies for many years may have worsened. And the lack of basic services in so many urban black neighborhoods – parks for kids to play in, police walking the beat, regular garbage pick-up and building code enforcement – all helped create a cycle of violence, blight and neglect that continue to haunt us.

That's part of what I meant when I said:
The effects of actions like child-snatching, or slavery, or Jim Crow, or apartheid, echo throughout multiple generations. They don't only affect the people who were victims at the time, but also their children and their children's children. You can't sweep that all under the rug by saying "Well, that all happened in the past." No! Its effects are still happening today!

I'm glad to see a politician talking about it instead of insisting that abolishing legally-enforced inequality is enough, and there's no reason to pursue actual equality.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

You mean besides Ralph Nader?

Skemono said...

I was partly being facetious--I'm sure that there are plenty of politicians who have brought this up before and besides Obama. Even real politicians, unlike Nader.

Anonymous said...

How is Nader not a "real" politician?

Skemono said...

As far as I know, Nader has never actually been elected to anything, no? He's more a perpetual candidate than a politician.

Anonymous said...

And we all know that political candidates are never politicians. And he was head of the Green party for quite a while there. That is a political seat. That's not even going into the decades of political activism.

Skemono said...

And we all know that political candidates are never politicians.
Not never, but neither always.