0
votes

Are All of Us Actually Racist?

posted September 3, 2006 - 2:45pm
Are All of Us Actually Racist?

I can't help but notice that several times a day I hear something in the news or see some television show that talks about, or alludes to racism. It's a well-known tactic in politics and on any given day it will lead off multiple 24-hour news stations looking to overhype their stories for a ratings boost. Now I'm not suggesting that racism doesn't exist, but is that really what consumes most of our daily lives?

There are a lot of dark times in our nation's history when it comes to equality, nobody can deny that. The arguments you hear about the constructors of our constitution aren't always accurate when it comes to the three-fifths compromise. It wasn't written in to degrade the African slaves, it was there because the politicians at the time knew that the southern states would never ratify a constitution that abolished slavery outright. If the slaves were only counted as three for every five in the census, the slave states would have less representation, and therefore less power in the federal government. The problem was that the southern leaders never caught on to the whole abolition idea.

Many times I hear the argument that men like Washington, Jefferson, and Madison were bigots and racist because they believed that black slaves were only three-fifths of a person, when that was the furthest from the truth. Even in today's world, where minority buying power is growing faster than whites, I still hear hatred towards "rich, white men," especially if they happen to be republican politicians. If a black man doesn't get a job at a Fortune 500 company, it's almost automatically assumed, particularly by the ACLU, that the company is run by racists.

Hollywood doesn't exactly help with these cries of bigotry and discrimination. I couldn't tell you how many documentaries I've seen this week telling us how racism was inherent in hurricane Katrina. I didn't know natural disasters sought out minority communities for destruction, but I guess that's the case since there were no white people affected by the storm. Also, one of last years' Academy Award winners was the movie "Crash", which was supposedly a compelling look at the everyday lives of prejudiced Americans. Has Hollywood ever done anything constructive when it comes to race relations?

I couldn't tell you the last time I woke up and said, "Alright, what can I do to oppress minorites today?" Probably because that has never happened. If you believe everything you hear in the media or see on television, you'd think that every white business owner in America wakes with that thought every day. I've actually grown pretty weary of it. I do not own slaves. My father did not own slaves. My grandfather did not own slaves. It's been quite a few generations since anyone has even been a slave in this country, so let's stop using that in our "Racism 101" playbooks.

Furthermore, racism isn't confined to white hatred towards all other races. I'm sure it can be found in all cultures and societies, but that doesn't mean that all the people in different cultures and societies are racist. I think it's nothing but pure ignorance to believe that to be true. It's time to stop blaming everybody, and everything else for things that go wrong in your life and grow up and start taking responsibility. If we would stop pointing our fingers at each other as the reason why we can't accomplish our dreams or goals and start seeing each other as a partnership that will help us reach them, I think we'd be a lot better off.



Comments

Excellent Article

Scary to think that this article actually makes sense. I am not trying to be rude to the writer, I find this writer quite entertaining with his views and wonder how the rest of Xomba community will feel...but I agree with these views. I, too, feel a good portion of racism stems from the media. Take the typical surveys conducted by different clinics and then broadcasted on the news. A good example is the one done on the channel seven news a few months ago about smoking. They delibertly told viewers that smoking is harder to quit amongst blacks than whites. Blacks and Whites? This may not be a worthy example, but why must we boradcast blacks and whites? Why not have redirected the survey to the general hardship that humans go through when smoking religiously or something to where we do not compare ethnicities (since we are all humans and that is our race).

Well put, that's exactly

Well put, that's exactly what I meant to say.

racism

Of course. We can't accuse Shakespeare of racism when he wrote," Beware of Greeks bearing gifts..."!!!!!

Ivar Tabrizi

That's hate. I don't know, I

That's hate. I don't know, I just don't like that everything is called racism anymore. I think it's too strong a word. As for what you experienced, there isn't a word strong enough. That's just wrong, and I think we all agree on that. All I was trying to say is that stereotypes exist, and there's always truth behind them, and I don't think that's necessarily racism.

Racial Diffrences are Fun

I apppologize but race is the last thing one should use to evaluate a person. My friends and I have a tongue and cheek sense of humor about each other's races. I have taught my children that people are not, green, red or purple, but people colored. Each person is their own color and that color is beautiful. Let's put it into perspective, I can't help my color, and I did not choose my friends based upon their color and I don't care what color you may be and chances are there is something considerably more stupid about you that is WAY more fun to tease you about than your color.... :)

Definitely. Who would

Definitely. Who would disagree with that, I wonder.

Antonia Dwells

racism

Whatever racism is by definition, it does break your heart as it did mine when told that the benches in the park were only for 'Whites' in the South Africa of Apartheid days. Ivar Tabrizi

Ivar Tabrizi

Stereotyping is a component

Stereotyping is a component of racism. Cornell West has a good book on the subject: "Race Matters." Let's be real and call it what it is. You may say that Asians are this and Mexicans are that and whites are whatever--and that's racist in the sense that it's a blanket statement about race, a generalization, a stereotype. People do it all the time. Maybe it's a joke, and you laugh. Maybe it's a pejorative, meant for another purpose. But regardless of the purpose, it still falls under the heading of racism. So, we can stop dancing around the issue and just call it what it is. There's no harm in that.

Antonia Dwells

I think it depends on how

I think it depends on how you define racism to figure out whether all of us are racist or not. Do all of us believe the generalizations about certain cultures that have an inherent truth to them? Well, mostly, yes. The definition of racism is "a belief or doctrine that inherent differences among the various human races determine cultural or individual achievement, usually involving the idea that one's own race is superior and has the right to rule others". EVen this definition accounts for differences among races. They exist!!! I'm not racist if I say the Middle Eastern people who drive in Central NJ absolutely suck at driving, I'm stating a truth and how it ticks me off. I'm not racist if I say that the Asian people and the Patels of my high school mostly did better and got better grades than the rest of us. I'm not racist, I'm telling the truth. If I were to say that other races look different from mine and therefore are inferior and should be flattened by my race's authority...well, that, by definition, is racism. But I don't believe that. Do I think some people are better apt to running this country than others? Perhaps, but I don't really know enough to say. And I certainly don't think it has anything to do with the color of their skin, the shape of their face, or the beliefs they grew up with, unless they're detrimental to this country. Racism isn't acknowledging differences, good or bad. Racism is saying that one race is better than another. I don't believe we're all racists, we're just afraid and we like to make fun of people. ;)

Racism

To add a bit of levity to your very serious article, let me tell you a story about my great grandmother which still makes our whole extended family roar with laughter. Being one of the high warrior castes of India, it was unthinkable in those days even to touch 90% of our countrymen much less a foreigner. So when my grand uncle went to England to study and got married to a English girl, it did cause, I am told, a great deal of consternation. Then he decided to visit his ancestral land with his bride which caused even more heated debates at home. Finally my great grand mother solved the problem - she had a great big kettle of boiling water set up in the entrance courtyard of our house ( now in ruins) and had her son wash himself to get rid of all the foreign influences as soon as he crossed the front gate with his wife. As to the English wife , of course she had to take a detour and enter the house from the kitchen at the back - which is what was expected of people below great grand ma's caste and rank!!! So you are right. There is a lot of racism in all our histories whether we are white, brown or black. Instead of dwelling on that and creating more rancour, we can go forward into a new world appreciating each other's good points and as you said, striving to do our best. Ivar Tabrizi

Ivar Tabrizi

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Post new comment

  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You can use BBCode tags in the text. URLs will automatically be converted to links.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <p> <br> <b> <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <img> <span> <object> <param> <embed> <table> <tr> <td> <div>
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.

More information about formatting options

Join Xomba Today

Do you like to write? Would you like to make a little extra money on the side? These people do. Join the Xomba community today.
Become a Member