Saturday, November 26, 2016

The Magic of Racism

A good magician knows the art of deception. A great magician can make an audience see and believe something most intelligent people know isn't and never could be real. For instance, we all know that a person can't be sawed in half and put back together, but as an audience we want to believe it's possible. In reality what's really going on is just a sleight of hand and intentional misdirection. Racism, which is race prejudice plus power, is much like magic. Racism needs the power to intentionally misdirect what's truly going on. Without that power to intentionally misdirect what's truly going on, racism becomes impotent. The intentional misdirection of racism is designed to keep its victims and from seeing and understanding the real damage. An example of this would be Black-on-Black crime. When Black people start talking about making things better, racism does a sleight of hand and brings up Black-on-Black crime. I know Black-on-Black crime exists. According to Blackdemographics.com the 2013 US Census Bureau estimated that there are 45,003,665 African Americans in the United States which means that only 14.1% of the total American population, which numbers at 316.1 Million, is Black. However, this country is 67-70% White. Which means that 211.7 Million to 221.7 Million are White. All one has to do is read the newspaper or watch the news and you'll understand that there is robbing, stealing and even killings in White neighborhoods also. Now here's the first step to the sleight of hands and misdirection magic of racism. It's not called a White-on-White crime problem. I live in a state that has only about a 20% minority population and only 1% of that minority population is Black. And just like in other states people here are victims of crimes. People here get killed. Banks here get robbed. There are home invasions. Unfortunately, there are rapes here also. Because of the population demographics here, most of the time those crimes are White-on-White crimes. However, I've never seen or heard these crimes reported as White-on-White crime. There are poor, low income and even uneducated Whites that also live here, but I've never heard them being told to stop the White-on-White crime, before they can prosper. The second step to the sleight of hands and misdirection of racism, is actually getting Black people to believe that somehow racism across this country, that is perpetrated on us, would somehow stop, or is somehow justified, because of the Black-on-Black crime. Ridding society of racism against any group of people should not be based on what goes on in their neighborhoods. Shouldn't racism stop because we're humans, and it is wrong? There's no doubt about it. There's crime in our Black communities and it needs to stop. But this country needs to stop acting as if, there would be some kind of positive, automatic chain reaction, ridding this country of racism, if only there wasn't a Black-on-Black crime problem. Remember what happened in Tulsa, Oklahoma on June 1, 1921? Black Wall Street, the name fittingly given to one of the most affluent all-Black communities in America, was bombed from the air and burned to the ground by mobs of envious Whites. In a period spanning fewer than 12 hours, a once thriving Black business district in northern Tulsa lay smoldering – a model community destroyed and a major African-American economic movement resoundingly defused. The night’s carnage left some 3,000 African Americans dead and over 600 successful businesses lost. Among these were 21 churches, 21 restaurants, 30 grocery stores and two movie theaters, plus a hospital, a bank, a post office, libraries, schools, law offices, 1500 homes, a half dozen private airplanes and even a bus system. As could have been expected, the impetus behind it all was the infamous Ku Klux Klan, working in consort with ranking city officials and many other sympathizers (SFBayview.com). The power of racism kept this American atrocity and many others just like it, out of the history books. While we're focusing on Black-on-Black crime, our children aren't receiving the same level of education as their White counterparts. Black-on-Black crime kills the body and robs us and it needs to stop. However, the magical power of institutional racism kills the future, one generation at a time. There are millions of Black people who believe, 'Black Lives Matter' because we want to be counted in 'All Lives Matter' and we haven't been. However, the intentional misdirection power of racism, would have you believe that because a few militants Black people might mean something negative, that all hard working Black people, must mean something negative when they want Black lives to matter. Just like that person who gets sawed in half, by the magician, non-thinking people, even though logic dictates that they shouldn't, believe that Black people really think and believe that only our lives matter. America needs to focus on the hidden hand and power of the magician. That's the hand secretly killing us all.

1 comment:

  1. keith. maybe one of the first steps we can take as individuals is to fess up to our own inert racisms (bad terminology perhaps). they may lurk in most of us without being consciously aware but then arise whenever something or someone illicit a reaction that comes from deep within. i don't know. but i guess what i'm driving at here are my own shameful displays that had happened throughout my own life. i look at them and understand, at least in part, that they manifest from a number of sources--e.g.,my father, some of the people i grew up with--but in the final-final i'm not absolved of my own responsibility or beliefs because they also served to perpetuate the racist party line.

    i've only told one person this but i think this is as good a time and place as ever to do so. when we were spry, and kicking butt out on the football field during our junior year at vallejo, i had a class in typing. sitting in front of me was mosetta tyson who, at the time, had a wonderful sharp and abrasive wit, which was easy for me to identify with. mosetta and i had a lot of fun together: quipping back and forth; cutting on each other; the regular dumb stuff that alot of kids do. it appears that on one day, and for whatever reasons remaining unclear to me, i leaned over my desk and wispered in mosetta's ear the unspeakable. mosetta immediately stood from her desk and reported to mr. solomon and the class what i had said and my response was to deny it. i compounded this situation by not fessing up and my behavior had affected the class for the rest of the school year. what i had done sent a wave throughout the classroom and mosetta would never talk to me again.

    there are other examples of my own transgressions of which one included a former team mate of ours. at least on that occasion i ran to him and apologized but the damage had been done. i've lamented these two incidences throughout my life, and as i get older they sting even more. there was a part of me then that believed everything would blow over, but it didn't and i now understand why. the racist tendencies that may lie deep within me cut deeply in people, and are a manifestation of a disease that has spread throughout history. i am so sorry.

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