Blacks are a "hated people" writes Jamil Smith in the New Republic Is there no safe place? Our Racist History Isn't Back to Haunt Us. It Never Left Us. Rebecca Traister wrote in the same issue.
It's
to be expected that those who see a senseless murder and respond with
such passion about it will be in the headlines for a while and those who
try to put it in another perspective will have a hard time avoiding
criticism, but is there any safe place for anyone? We have a history of
senseless violence in America and as coverage of it around the world
screams at us all day and all night we all know about it, we all fear it
no matter how small the odds for any individual. School children,
Muslims, Jews, gay people get attacked, always by disturbed and probably
demented and deluded young men -- it's a long list and it grows.
Random samples of the population have been involved in mass shootings in
recent memory. Movie theaters, restaurants, schools, office buildings
and the streets.of Boston, Deadly explosions, aircraft hijackings and
shootings. One might correctly think Americans are a hated people.
But
he's right, of course, there are people who hate anyone with any
African ancestors, like our current president -- and his election and
re-election has released some hate gas from the muck, but the unspoken
implication is that everyone hates black people: The White People hate
Black people, that is. That's not only untrue as election results prove,
but it's a statement that is needlessly divisive and inflammatory. It
serves to heighten hatred and fear as well as it serves to sell
magazines. It's a racist sentiment.
I do not doubt the
sincerity of either writer and I do share the anger and a disgust with
racism of all sorts, but it's very very hard in the atmosphere we have
been given to breathe even to discuss the possibility that outrage is
just another form of the same thing we're angry at -- that fighting bad
doesn't make everything you do good or true or helpful. This isn't the
old South, the murderer has zero chance of getting away with it.
Is
this latest tragedy really the result of intransigent racism or the
story of another young man slipping into madness and choosing a "cause"
that's a relic of the Old South? I have heard people say you can't
go to the movie theater any more, you can't send your kid to school any
more and even that our laws provide an open season on black children.
Irrational and untrue and hyperbolically out of proportion. Black people
are still more likely to be shot by a black person. Domestic acts of
terrorism have been quite random when it comes to the race of the
victims. Every time something happens we're told this changes
everything, but the truth, the sad truth is that it doesn't.
Again
did Dylann Roof shoot up a church because we have a tradition of
racism or because we have a tradition of letting the insane go
unconfined? Would one cause have been as good as another? Was it
really all about suicide? He did claim he was going to kill himself
after all. We don't know and perhaps some don't want even to talk about
it because they're on a mission of their own and don't want the passion
play watered down or its passionate elements soothed.
Why is a Confederate flag still flying high over the South Chinalina capital? Why have the guardians of the Confederacy refused to take it down, or fly the flag at half-mast, in respect for, in deference to the mourning families of Charleston? Why is this symbol of slavery, segregation, hatred, persecution, and oppression still flying? Why THIS flag on THIS day?
ReplyDeleteWhite Southerners wield the Confederate flag as a symbol of DEFIANCE – denying or defying history. They make no apologies for slavery; feel no shame over segregation; offer no regrets for a legacy of exploitation and persecution; show no remorse for the lynching and murder of innocent people; offer no admissions of guilt; admit to no moral lessons learned. Unlike the post WWII experience in Germany, Southern states escaped the definitive rebuke of history.
In contrast, we see no images of citizens filing past corpses or newsreels of concentration camp atrocities; hear no admissions of collective guilt or shame; and speak no words of condemnation. The war ended 150 years ago. The lived experiences of a people are long gone – their voices lost in time.
I woke up this morning angry as hell. Angry at the NRA for blaming victims as the cause of their own deaths … for failing to carry guns in their own self-defense. Angry at our presidential candidates for hijacking the moment with false narratives, misattributions, and self-serving sound bites to advance their own agendas:
Rick Perry: “It was an accident.”
Santorum: “It was assault on religious liberty”
Jeb Bush: “Maybe it was drugs, but the motive remains unclear.”
Lindsay Graham: “[The Confederate flag] is who we are.”
The moment does not belong to the NRA or clueless and tone-deaf politicians. The moment belongs to the latest victims of a dastardly crime and their grieving families. The murders were no accident. Religious persecution was not the motive; drugs were not the cause; nor the addled brain of a depraved madman. Mass murder should never serve as advertisement for the NRA nor serve as a platform for sleazy politicians. The circus of depraved indifference appalls me.
Indeed, the Confederate flag is exactly who we are … a nation of bigots, racists, murderers, renegades and sham snake oil salesmen.
"Indeed, the Confederate flag is exactly who we are … a nation of bigots, racists, murderers, renegades and sham snake oil salesmen."
ReplyDeleteActually I understand for the last 15 years, that flag flies near the capitol next to a confederate memorial -- but neither of us flies that flag, neither of us is a bigot. Neither of us is represented by that flag nor will I admit that such people who are represent my country. Are we not both Americans? I choose to say you're typical.
I mentioned that I expected the usual suspects would soon try to frame and stage and coopt this situation as they always do. No surprise that Republican whores remain Republican whores or that we are too busy bickering to vote them out. They have no opinions or beliefs, they just take advantage of losers who do. Certain stats are full of such low lives and losers and outcasts. They take that flag and the Swastika as an emblem sometimes. Flags, guns, perverted religions and racism. We're not part of that, are we?
No surprise that some are trying to make more of this than it is. There is a lot of money being spent trying to portray White Americans as racists, elevating every example to a trend and expanding the definition thereof in the effort. That disgusts me too. Are you a racist? Am I? Are we white? Is it an unavoidable consequence of our ancestry? I feared this would be a battle of lobbyists and PR corporations and politicians and I think I'm right. It is.
But really -- 325 million of us? How many such people as Roof does it take in this huge country to be "typical" or to be your representative and mine? I choose my own heroes and my own symbols and defend my right to them no matter what anyone thinks.
Actually Texas just refused to put the Confederate flag on license plates because they're government property.. TEXAS! Lets make them typical today. There is no law against flying the Swastika or putting a cross on churches even though I see it as a symbol of Roman persecution and a symbol of Christian persecution. It's been a symbol of pederasty, slavery, tyranny and murder but I will fight hard to keep the right to put up crosses on churches. Symbols are in the mind of the beholder and as the German song goes: Die Gedanken sind Frei Even ugly Gedanken.