brotherpeacemaker

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The Good Old Days

The Good Old Days

“One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we’ve been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We’re no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It is simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been so credulous.” – Carl Sagan

The last time America had no laws protecting black people white people were trying to do their best to try and make the black community’s life as miserable as possible. White people were lynching black people who were trying to do little more than live their lives without drama. Back before there were civil rights laws giving black people some protection white people were free to exclude black people from employment and educational opportunities. Courts were no help. White men like James Ford Seale were free to kill black people without any fear of retribution from the short arm of the law. And the fact that there were a few black people who were able to prevail despite the unfavorable conditions they faced doesn’t mean that there wasn’t a problem. A lot of people worked hard and a lot of people have died in order to obtain the laws that give the black community some protection. So it really would be a shame to simply dismiss their sacrifices in the struggle between the black and white communities.

For some people, the modern interpretation of the struggle between the dominant culture and the black culture has been minimized as little more than black people trying to play the race card anytime something doesn’t go our way. It is true that many black people are far too quick to holler racism whenever they find themselves in an unfavorable situation. This is an unfortunate circumstance because these examples of black people crying “wolf” are the fuels used by the people with a white mindset to push hard to nullify any and all claims of discrimination by the black community. These people constantly walk around in a fog or with blinders to the reality that the black community suffers from real subjugation. Because of their choice to exercise a rather limited understanding of these issues these people have the opinion that a rollback of the various laws implemented to keep racial discrimination in some kind of check and put some kind of fairness in a widely distorted playing field would be a good thing. The proper way to combat racism is to keep from looking at race. Racism would just go away if we would stop pointing it out.

Interestingly, people forget what life in the United States was like for the black community prior to us actually looking at and confronting racism. This country was as far as can be from any racial harmony. Take for example the institution of slavery back when we didn’t have civil rights laws. If I’ve interpreted history correctly, black people were being bought and sold like so much cattle. It is true that at this time in our inhumane past practically nobody was making claims of racism in the nation’s various courts. For many people in the dominant class, race, mindset, or whatever classification one deems applicable, it was an ideal time for race relations. White people were being served and black people were doing the serving. A white man who didn’t even own property had the authority to control black people just by the fact that he was white. This was a fond time for many white mindset people.

Laws were enacted to bring this type of discrimination to a halt. People didn’t have the integrity or sense of community to stop themselves. Nobody was saying something as asinine as the best way to stop slavery was to stop looking at the institution of slavery. Laws brought the enslavement of black people to a slow halt. The country had to go to war before people would give up their ways of discrimination.

However, the dominant culture adapted to the new conditions and enacted various forms of Jim Crow. Black people couldn’t vote because their grandfather didn’t vote back when he was a slave. Or black people couldn’t pass the literacy test administered only to black people so they couldn’t vote. Interestingly, illiteracy also plagued the poor white community but somehow they were immune from the literacy testing. Black people didn’t have any recourse when we were constantly being passed over at the all white company or school. Black people had their property destroyed by white vandals. Our black ancestors were not free to live where they wanted. The black community had to make due with our own schools that were separate from white schools and pitifully unequal. And this was another fine time for a lot of white people.

Laws were enacted to bring this type of racism to a halt as well. Nobody was saying the best way to fight housing, employment, or educational discrimination was to stop looking at Jim Crow laws. Change was implemented to bring these practices to an end. But again the dominant mindset adapted to the new operating environment. A psychological reprogramming of the public has taken place. There was a time that white people would have been embarrassed to have one of their own caught hanging nooses from a tree or publicly venting a discriminatory rant. There was a time when a white person busted for using the word nigger or buckwheat in reference to a black person was publicly castigated. A white man with a radio show calling black women nappy headed whores would have been asked to leave before he could finish his sentence.

But now people come out defending these people’s right to be as racist as they want to be. What is even worse is when black people come out of their place of hiding to defend white people who are advocating the subjugation of the black community or promoting racial stereotypes. A racist white man has the right to tell his son he can’t work for him until he stops dating his nigger bitch girlfriend.  The busted racist gets his black preacher friend to tell the world despite what everyone heard that this is a good man who doesn’t have a racist bone in his body. Forget the evidence that plainly indicates a racist vein. A white man using his radio show to call a predominantly black organization of women basketball players a derogatory slur is given a pass because the black gangsta rapper who gets his money from the white music industry is paid to make misogynistic music about black women. A popular white actor show up for a news conference in black face and his black actress girlfriend defends it as just a harmless prank. And let’s not forget the harmlessness associated with little white kids hanging nooses in school yards.

The economic disparity between the white community and the black community is growing on a daily basis and is picking up speed. Black people suffer from higher incarceration rates. The black community has a much higher percentage of our population unemployed or without adequate medical coverage. Black people suffer the worse in any statistic people wish to use to measure their relationship to the dominant whole. And this is the case when we have laws in place that are supposed to help close this gap between the two races, or at least try to keep it from expanding.

So now the public is supposed to believe that dismantling the little safeguards we have in place now is supposed to make things better for all. This is nothing more than the fruit of the psychological programming taking shape and manifesting itself. Now, people are free to practice their subjugation of the black community and they can do it while convincing people that looking at the racial makeup of a company or an institution of learning is akin to keeping racism alive. And the amazing thing is that people buy this argument. And what’s even more amazing than that is the fact that black people buy this argument as well. Many of our ancestors died trying to get us the little protection that we have now enacted. But I guess these black people feel that the black people who died in the struggle for the black community were mistaken. But that’s okay! These blacks, along with a number of other people who share their pro dominant culture mindset, will have an opportunity to rollback the clock so we all can get back to the good old days where we didn’t pay any attention to issues of racism.

Thursday, December 20, 2007 - Posted by | African Americans, Black Community, Black Culture, Black People, Life, Philosophy, Racism, Reverse Discrimination, Slavery, Thoughts, Unemployment

4 Comments »

  1. You really put it plain and simple. We are allowing the hands of time to roll back so that we can all relive our ancestors lives. Now will this make these crazy white mindset blacks realize anything, I doubt it. They will continue until we can consider ourselves slaves serving master again.

    I love this and wish that more of the “right” people would read it, no, actually LEARN from it. See they will read it and see it as more of the problem while their supposed forward thinking is the answer.

    Thanks for a great mind opening post.

    Comment by theblacksentinel | Thursday, December 20, 2007 | Reply

  2. And some of them self-serving pro-dominant culture mindset bastards will have THEMSELVES to blame when the clock is roll slam back!

    Comment by anonymous | Sunday, April 13, 2008 | Reply

  3. So which measures do you suggest to implement in order to combat racism? Thing is, the wall of institutional racism (at least in America) has been torn asunder with the Emancipation proclamation and Civil Rights Movements. Although mentalities have also changed, Racism has become an invisible Hydra, something you can’t fight effectively, and the harder you try, the stronger it becomes.

    I sincerely believe that there is no other way to emancipate yourself from racism than to find ways of bettering yourself. Focusing on resistance to the mainstream and blackness as something incompatible with any given Western nationality are only things which prolong our predicament. There are white and black racists all over the place, but instead of dragging myself into their mudfights I have learned to ignore them and work hard to improve myself like any other citizen.

    Perhaps this comes as a result of my growing up in Europe rather than America, but I think us black westerners need to stop stressing our violent past and our distinctness. Perhaps, according to you this mode of though makes me an Uncle Tom, but I believe that the best way to elevate blacks from the bottom of economic charts is to stop associating ourselves with the ‘other’, to escape a fringe/ghetto mentality and to stop resisting education. We can’t control what white people think, but if we change the way we see ourselves once more, things will change.

    Comment by Musa | Saturday, August 27, 2011 | Reply

    • Thanks for the feedback Musa,

      But while it might be wonderful to think that all you have to do is better yourself and the world becomes your oyster, that has got to be the farthest thing from reality. No matter how well you prepare yourself, you have to apply for opportunities from people who very well might be racist.

      One of the most well prepared black people on the planet is Barack Obama and he has to deal with other people’s racism day in and day out. And it is because of some people’s racism towards black people and consequently Mr. Obama, people would rather let their racism dictate how they would respond to an economic crisis than actually do anything to help the country out of this dilemma. In fact, Senator Tom Coburn went on record to say that the only reason Mr. Obama is President is because he had the advantage of a dependency on affirmative action and that the country needs to do more to end these programs that reward black people, especially black men, who are not actually earning their way. Despite how hard a black person might work, other people are going to say the only reason a black person got anything was because of some fictitious advantage that comes from being black despite the reality that black people have been hindered.

      It doesn’t matter how we see ourselves. I can see myself as the most qualified candidate for what I do. But when I come across a racist, there is nothing I can do to change that perception that may come through some false sense of inferiority because of the color of my skin. And yes I can keep trying to find an opportunity from someone who wouldn’t let their prejudice override what is fair or real. But it should be noted that black people have to make due with a smaller piece of the opportunity pie. And when we say that the best way to combat this unfair restriction is to make sure we simply better ourselves, is it any surprise when we see unemployment rates in the black community higher than the unemployment rates for other communities? Is it any surprise when we see black people being left out of the recovery? And yes, the best of the black community might make it because we take the time to prepare ourselves, but people from the white community get the same opportunities without even lifting a finger to prepare. And this is the best way to combat racism? I really don’t think so.

      Peace

      Comment by brotherpeacemaker | Sunday, August 28, 2011 | Reply


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