I wrote this post after a few frustrating - and revealing - conversations with some older white persons of my acquaintance - but this is a microcosm of the experience of discussing race
with many white people in the Trump Era. This has been particularly apparent
when discussing anything related to either Black Lives Matter, or immigration
policy.
Basically, the conversation tends to go like this:
I point out the glaringly obvious, that a particular policy
of the Trump Administration or the Republican Party is openly racially motivated - and harming people.
Something that is obvious to pretty much any person of color I know - and a
large majority of those I know my age and younger.
A white person - usually older, but nearly always a Trump
voter - gets all offended, claiming I am overgeneralizing, making accusations,
or insulting them.
I point out that it takes an epic level of denialism to miss
the obvious racism, and mention that this is common to white people - and to
white people of a certain age and religious belief.
Said white person takes this as a personal attack.
I have some observations about this. For what they are worth:
***
1. Denial runs so
freaking deep.
I still cannot believe how impossible it is to convince
Trump voters that his policies are racist. He practically BRAGS about it. The
people he surrounds himself with (see: Stephen Miller and Steve Bannon, to name
just two) use White Supremacist arguments and terminology - plus they push the exact same policies as white supremacist
groups. His former chief advisor is touring Europe
stirring up hate against brown-skinned immigrants. His ICE director attends
anti-immigrant hate group conferences. At some point (and it has passed
um...several years ago) this becomes willful
ignorance. This is people refusing to see what is right in front of their eyes.
I have also pointed out - with reputable sources - over and
over again the many - and increasing numbers of people genuinely harmed by
Trump’s racist policies. And nothing changes. Denial isn’t just a river in Egypt.
2. White fragility
is definitely a thing.
I will admit, I myself have this tendency, and I hadn’t
really come to terms with it until relatively recently. My journey away from
this way of thinking has been a process, significantly triggered by a series of
events over the last 20 years. (Starting with my escape from the Bill Gothard
cult after graduating from law school and moving out on my own. But
particularly triggered by my wrestling with what it really means to love my
neighbor as myself - including neighbors outside of my race and income level.)
But over the last few years, I have really started to notice
white fragility. Any time I point out obvious racism, many white people in my
life (particularly conservatives, Evangelicals, and Baby Boomers) get really
freaking defensive. They take it really
personally. In part, I believe this is because they voted for Trump. To vote
for the KKK candidate and yet cling to one’s belief that Trump didn’t run on
and isn’t governing on the KKK platform requires a lot of cognitive dissonance.
And, as I have come to understand, many Trump voters who
would never consider themselves
racist turn out to have really racist views - and political goals.
(Particularly when it comes to immigration - that one is a real hot button.) So
when I mention that Trump is pursuing racist policies, I implicate them.
In particular, my words and actions do the following, which
trigger White Fragility (borrowed from the link above):
- Suggesting that a white person’s
viewpoint comes from a racialized frame of reference (challenge to objectivity)
- Choosing not to protect the racial
feelings of white people in regards to race (challenge to white racial
expectations and need/entitlement to racial comfort)
- As a fellow white not providing
agreement with one’s interpretations (challenge to white solidarity)
- Giving feedback that one’s behavior
had a racist impact (challenge to white liberalism)
- Suggesting that group membership is
significant (challenge to individualism)
- Acknowledging that access is unequal
between racial groups (challenge to meritocracy)
These predictably result in hostility, defensiveness, and
accusations against me that I am not being nice, that I am being misogynist (if
the person I challenge is female - particularly an older female), that I have
insulted them, and so on.
More than anything, I break the White Solidarity Code™ by
actually using the “R Word” - Racism - to describe what is happening.
In addition, there is a demand that I not group them with
others of their race. Individualism allows whites to distance themselves from
the actions of their racial group and demand to be granted the benefit of the doubt,
as individuals, in all cases. Which is exactly what is going on here. They want
the benefit of the doubt - to be seen as good, moral people - even as they
defend inhumane policies directed at people of color. They feel threatened when
I point out that this election was a white temper tantrum that has gravely
endangered the wellbeing of people of color - and make my words out to be more
serious than the very real threats -backed by government power - to life,
bodily integrity, and other human rights that have escalated against
non-whites.
A few years ago, before the last election, I probably would
have disputed the existence of White Fragility. Now, its existence is
thoroughly proven.
3. Our biggest
problem in political discussions is a pathological lack of empathy by those on
the Right for people who are not white, straight, middle-to-upper class, male,
and born in the United
States.
Boy, people bristle when I say this. But it is absolutely
f-ing true.
When you see unarmed African Americans (including children)
gunned down by the police, and you say “Black Lives Matter is a media creation,
and racialized police brutality is a myth,” you have a pathological lack of
empathy.
When the response to a law (that nearly passed - thank you
John McCain…) that would have stripped health care from the disabled, the
elderly, and 45% of children under age 5 and you say “they are all just lazy,” you
have a pathological lack of empathy.
When you see children separated from their parents (often
permanently) and put in prisons and cages, and your reaction is “serves them
right for coming here when our laws say we don’t want them,” you have a pathological
lack of empathy.
When your response to refugees and asylum seekers is “why do
we have any obligation to take them in?” you have a pathological lack of
empathy.
When your response to an administration going through and
revoking passports (and citizenship) for people because a midwife might have
lied on the birth certificate is basically, “what’s wrong with that?” you have
a pathological lack of empathy.
I’ve said it, and I will keep saying it, even though it
offends a LOT of people in my life:
If your approach to
immigration - or other racial issues - does not start with “how can I love my
neighbor” and a recognition that immigrants ARE our neighbors, then you do not
have a recognizably Christian ethic.
That virtually everyone in my life who has said one or more
of the above things is 1) allegedly Christian, and 2) white, is strong evidence
that we have a serious problem with empathy and basic human decency.
It seems for some reason that they are incapable of actually
putting themselves in the shoes of others, and realizing the catastrophic
damage which their political agendas would cause. That is why I say
“pathological.” Their inability or unwillingness to use empathy causes violence
and damage to other people. That is a pathology.
4. As a result of the
above, many white people I know are FAR more offended that I called them on
their racism than they are about children in cages, separated families, US
citizens being persecuted and forced to prove they belong here, or unarmed
African Americans being murdered by the police.
I am serious. I actually had someone claim my pushback on
their racism was the harmful thing, not the genuine and serious harm being done
to people because of the color of their skin.
And that is why White Fragility prevents us from having an
honest discussion about racial issues - and specifically the malevolent and
harmful policies that are damaging millions of people.
5. Trump voters have
zero willingness to take responsibility for the harm they have caused.
When I was a kid, I was taught that you don’t harm people.
But if you do, you apologise and try to repair the damage.
Along with many others, I spoke out before the election
warning people that Trump promised to harm whole groups of people: immigrants,
refugees, brown-skinned people, African Americans, LGBTQ people, low income
people on Medicaid, disabled people, children.
And guess what? He is doing exactly what he promised to do.
So, if you voted for him, you are morally responsible for the harm. Stop trying
to weasel out of your responsibility.
I have seen ZERO remorse from Trump voters. I can point out
the damage being done to people all day until I am blue in the face, but it
does no good. It is hard not to conclude that there is such a pathological lack
of empathy (see above) toward people outside the narrow tribe that nothing can
penetrate it. No amount of horror and carnage will convince them that they made
a mistake. Maybe someday when it is people like them, they will care. But “those people” apparently don’t actually
matter.
6. Many white people
have zero interest in actually asking WHY they support harmful policies.
They have no interest in asking why we even have a “denaturalization task force.” As in, “why do we
want to take citizenship away from people anyway?”
They have no interest in asking why we put children in cages.
They have no interest in asking why the Trump Administration wants to virtually end immigration
from the developing world.
They have no interest in asking what the common thread is
that ties all of the harmful policies together.
Why not?
Might it be that they wish to support those policies without
admitting to themselves that the motivation is racism?
It’s much easier to simply take offense when I point out the
blindingly obvious: yes, these policies are motivated by racism. Yes, they harm
people - including a lot of children. And yes, supporting them is strong
evidence that you too are racist.
Get over it. If you want to be thought of as a decent,
compassionate, non-racist person...it’s time to start acting like one.
***
Just an illustration
here:
Recently in the news is the fact that the Trump
Administration has been revoking the passports of people who are United States
Citizens. Why? Well, over a 40 year period, some midwives falsified birth
certificates to show that babies were born on US soil, when they were born in Mexico, just
across the border. Said midwives were prosecuted. Now, the Trump Administration
wants to strip citizenship from the persons (many of whom are middle aged), and
deport them to Mexico.
So, let’s think this through:
An infant is born. Presumably said infant has no choice in
where, and no memory of the event.
Infant grows up in the United States believing he or she
is a native-born United States Citizen.
Former infant goes to school, gets a job, has a family,
makes a life here. Eventually, that person gets a US Passport. (BTW, if you
have a US Passport, that means you have no drug convictions, no restrictions on
travel as a result of a criminal conviction, no back child support, no IRS
liens, and no defaulted federal student loans. These are not, shall we say,
terrible people - they are ordinary people with ordinary lives.)
Suddenly, they get a notice - or even a knock on the door by
ICE - that their passports are being terminated, and they are being considered
for denaturalization (losing citizenship) and deportation.
Being deported would mean their lives would be destroyed.
They would be evicted from the only country they knew. They would lose their
jobs. They probably would lose their families. Everything they had would now be
gone.
Remember: these people have committed NO crime. They have
done NOTHING morally wrong. They are innocent.
What is your response
to this situation?
Think carefully before you answer.
Will your answer look like this:
“According to the article 79 midwives
in that corridor were convicted of selling fake birth certificates for babies
born In Mexico. That's probably many babies. Those babies are adults now and so
in 2008 the law was made more restrictive and the checks more comprehensive. I
guess my question is, what else should they do? Should they make it an all over
the country search or concentrate on the area where there has been a problem?”
That’s an actual quote from an older white person I know.
Let that sink in for a few moments.
The response to a policy aimed at destroying the lives of
innocent people is….wait for it….wait for it….
Should we do this everywhere, or just in the places where
most of the bad acts occurred?
Yes, I lost it at that
point. Sorry not sorry.
Because that is not the response of a person thinking with
basic human decency. That is a person acting out of a pathological lack of
empathy. And I said so.
Now, compare this with the response from another person I
know. (BTW, also white, but...and I think this matters: with a non-white child.)
“The people who issued the birth
certificates falsely should be prosecuted and the people who have them be left
alone as the citizens that they are.”
Succinct, to the point, and morally admirable. Punish those
who did wrong, but leave the innocent people alone.
People, this isn’t that hard. It’s basically ethics 101. My
youngest child can understand this - and could have as a toddler.
Don’t hurt people.
Don’t hurt innocent people. Don’t punish people when they haven’t done anything
wrong.
Why is this so hard?
Again, decent human beings do not conclude “destroy the
lives of innocent people.” You can only come to that conclusion if something
has stripped compassion and empathy from your soul.
What might that something be? My personal theories are 1)
Fox News has been spewing xenophobia for decades, and this has led to a
dehumanization of immigrants - particularly the brown-skinned ones. 2)
Partisanship - the GOP is viewed by whites (mostly Evangelicals and Boomers) as
always right, even when they go full White Supremacist. 3) White Evangelicalism
has taught people that sin is “breaking
the rules,” and that God will eternally torment people for doing so. This,
combined with the dehumanizing of people outside of the faith, has led to an
automatic vindictiveness toward anyone who is perceived as having broken a rule
- particularly if that person is outside the white Evangelical tribe. We try to
emulate our gods, and when they are cruel and vindictive, we become so too.
The combination of these factors is why a depressing number
of white people in my life keep defending the indefensible destruction of the
lives of others, and can’t seem to get basic compassionate ethics right.
Honestly, I feel like I don’t even inhabit the same moral
universe anymore. Many of the people who taught me my morals and ethics turn
out to...not really believe them. I was taught hurting people was wrong. I was
taught racism was wrong. I was taught that good people didn’t stand by and let
minorities get abused by the government. I was told by people that they would
have opposed slavery and supported the Civil Rights Movement. That one turned
out to be bullshit once an actual, real life civil and human rights issue
affected them. I am ashamed.
***
Here is the other question that I asked - and have never yet
received an ethically informed answer.
What possible good
would come out of denaturalizing and deporting people?
Clearly, it is horrible for the people having their lives
destroyed. But what GOOD does it accomplish? These aren’t dangerous, criminal
people. (And if they were committing crimes, presumably they were arrested and
prosecuted just like any other citizen. Okay, if they had brown skin, probably
they were more likely to be arrested and prosecuted.)
How is this good for the United States? You just kicked out
a productive citizen. You created fear and uncertainty for thousands of others
- including plenty who were literally born here but who would get harassed
anyway. You made it less likely that they will feel like they (and people with
their skin color) will feel welcome here and part of our nation. You just made
it less likely that they will report genuine criminals to law enforcement. You
have torpedoed the good will that they felt.
How is this a good thing?
***
Okay, how about the elephant in the room.
There is a class of people for whom the response is
definitely “destroy the lives of innocent people.” There are people who think
that discouraging immigration from so-called “shithole countries” is a good
thing. These are the people who think that preserving the ethnic makeup of the United States
is a legitimate policy goal.
The term for these people
is “Racists.”
I’m not going to sugarcoat that one. If you want to keep -
and force - people out who don’t share your skin color or national origin, then
you are by definition racist. And racism is not in any way consistent with the
teachings of Christ. Sorry not sorry. That’s the truth, and I will keep saying
it.
The core belief here is one that has plagued the United States since its founding - although it
isn’t just a problem in the United
States. It is a belief in the inherent
superiority of white people of European descent. That’s also known as “White
Supremacy.” It is also completely
incompatible with the teachings of Christ.
And please don’t give me the fiction of “we have to punish
innocent people so others won’t break our laws.” First, that’s ethically
ludicrous - find a way to punish the guilty, not the innocent. Second, wouldn’t
a better way to fix the problem be to give people a reasonably easy and
available way to come here legally? As in, actually fix our laws so that hardworking
people who wish to immigrate can actually do so without restriction? (Like
most of our [white] ancestors did, remember?)
And at this point in virtually every conversation I have had
about immigration policy, the person shifts to some variant of “but we already
have too many of those kind of people here.” Thus revealing that it is, in
nearly all cases, really about racism after all.
***
One of the things I purposed to do in the wake of the
election of The
White Supremacist Who Shall Not Be Named is that no
longer would I let racism and hate pass without comment from people I know.
I was not going to just let people defend policies that actually hurt people
without saying something. I was going to speak up. Yes, that makes people
(particularly older white people) VERY uncomfortable, and they get defensive
and try to make it about my tone. Sorry not sorry. I’m going to keep using the
“R word,” and I am going to call you out if you support cruel, racist policies,
or say racist shit on my posts.
***
I’ll end this post with a couple verses from Proverbs
3:29-30
Hint: This verse isn’t about people who make you
uncomfortable when you defend racist policies or candidates. It’s about ACTUAL
harm to your neighbor. Like putting kids in cages, separating families, kicking
citizens out of our country, harassing brown-skinned people, and murdering
African Americans. That’s real harm - not just white fragility.
***
I linked it above, but I really think it is worth reading.
When I discovered it in the aftermath of the election (I
believe an African American friend posted it), it really changed my thinking. I
recognized the source of my own defensiveness - which I still fight against. It
also explained why using the “R word” freaked many of my white friends and
family out. Around the same time, I read Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter
from a Birmingham Jail” with my kids. Among other things, I was really
struck by his view of the purpose of
protest: to increase tension and discomfort. The enemy of reform isn’t angry
racists - it’s white moderates who want to be comfortable and self righteous
while quietly voting against reform. By challenging them, we make them take a
side. They can either stop silently supporting the oppressors, or they can be
exposed as racists. They can choose how to react, but the fault is not with
those of us who make them uncomfortable.
***
And this one too,
which is pretty much how any discussion of racism goes these days (follow the link for the whole thread):
I am a white woman who was raised in the Midwest. Other than on television, I'd never seen a black or brown human in person till I was 12 years old. At 14 my life changed as we moved to Southern CA and my life expanded exponentially. kind, generous and fun.
ReplyDeleteI see this country now and I am ashamed. My mom who died at 94 this year was a Republican her whole life (my dad used to say that Roosevelt sold us down the river to Stalin during WW2). Until 2016. She didn't like Hilary but she hated Trump. When she was in the hospital we'd watch the news and she'd say how did he get elected? What were people thinking. She hated him. She said he was evil and we'd come to no good if he continued as president. Most of my friends are liberals, we grew up in the late 60's, through college in the 70's. There are some who are so mind bogglingly racist that I've found that to keep my sanity I don't communicate with them. My inlaws who live in TX and OK believe the sun rises and falls on this president. They also adored Bush. We do not talk politics or religion...their dear brother, my husband is now an Atheist. I'm not but because of my association with him, I'm in the same handbasket heading to hell.
I'm so tired of reading about the evangelicals who would have crucified Obama, had he done what this president has done, allowing this president "the freedom to repent and not do it again". I can only hope that the Blue Resistance makes a marked difference in November.
I wonder whether constant, passive TV watching has reduced the general ability to use one's own imagination to create a little narrative about what it is like to live in another's shoes.
ReplyDeleteSimilarly, one might create for onesself a little narrative of living in another's shoes, but doubt whether data gathered in that way (via imagination) is objective and convincing, when weighed against empirical data or voices of authority.
It's so hard to understand how people cannot empathize with one another, as it seems to come unbidden to me, and I expect to everyone else... but apparently not, or they can weigh it differently, or something. How am I supposed to put myself in the shoes of a person who does not seem to put themselves in other's shoes? I can't imagine how they can fail to imagine the lives of others. Almost like a little contradiction or vicious circle.
It's a good question. I'm not much of a TV watcher - I prefer books, as you can tell. I do think that decades of "us v them" in Evangelical circles has destroyed empathy within that tribe. As has what Morgan Guyton calls "Suburban Theology," or the belief in the total depravity of everyone outside the tribe - which means that the practice of Christianity is protecting one's self from evil outsiders. (Mostly brown-skinned people, naturally...)
DeleteI also think you are on to something with the "voices of authority." Whether Fox News or Trump, there is definitely a belief that they have the authority - and thus tell the truth, even in the face of overwhelming evidence.
This is a series of quotes from a "Christian" forum that I think people need to see:
ReplyDelete"Martin: Peter
Can you show me where the Bible says that an unbeliever is capable of doing good?
Peter: Stop being ridiculous. Is having more faith than anyone in Israel for example not doing good? Jesus regularly went out of his way to praise the works of those the religious conservatives labelled unbelievers on the basis of the bible. What do you think the parable of the Good Samaritan was about? The clue is in the title!
Martin: Peter
Faith is the gift of God, and where does Jesus say they are unbelievers?
And Jesus said to him, Why do you call me good? No one is good except God alone. (Luke 18:19 [ESV])
You will, of course, note that nowhere does Jesus call the Samaritan good.
Peter: "Nowhere does he call the Samaritan good".
That's what your theology leads to. The polar opposite of the point of the parable.
You couldn't make it up.
Martin: No, it's not the polar opposite of the point of the parable. Jesus never calls the Samaritan good, he says he was a neighbour. Be honest and admit it."
Yeah, you just read that. The Good Samaritan is "not good", because theonomy...
Does it go without saying that Martin here is a big supporter of presuppositionalism?
Yeah, pretty much. You could also add in the bit in Romans 3 about gentiles who show faith and follow Christ even without knowledge. Or Melchizedek.
DeleteThe Good Samaritan is such an underrated parable. Mostly because people miss or ignore the revolutionary point of it. After all, why is it the good *Samaritan*, and not the good Jew?
I think you have to start at verse 25 to understand. The whole point of the parable is "what must I do to inherit eternal life?" And the answer isn't that the Jews with good theology obtain it. It is that the heretical, foreign, race-traitor Samaritans do.
I have wanted to blog about that parable for a while.