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Anti-Racism Is Becoming Racist | LEVEL

 3 years ago
source link: https://level.medium.com/dear-woke-allies-your-assistance-with-racism-is-no-longer-required-c29207c46606
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Anti-Racism Is Becoming Racist

Responses (442)

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Surprised to see this thoughtful, insightful piece on Medium which seems to be dominated by the very micro-aggression hysteria that Mr. Steve describes so well.
My thought exactly. This anti racism movement is meant to divide, not unite us.

“Anti-Racism” Is Becoming Troublingly Racist

This is the best article I’ve ever read on Medium. I would have written something just like this (less elegantly I’m sure), if it weren’t for the fact that I’m White so I’m not granted the opportunity to help on this topic unless that “help” involves self-flagellation.
Thank you.

The grownups have important work to do.

If I had a plug fucking nickel for every time I saw a Justice Warrior write something inane to prove how woke they were I'd have my own island in the Seychelles. It is no more and no less, but with far worse long term consequences, than folks who…...

They’re learning, at eight years old, that the most fundamental aspects of who they are will forever mark them as “oppressor” or “oppressed”.

This is not simply miseducation, it is maleducation. This whole neo-totalitarian project began decades ago in our universities. From there it seeped into HR departments and the bureaucracies running public education. From there, it is now…...

You’re pushing regressive policies and calling them progress.

Yep, this is exactly right. Thanks for the much needed corrective to the woke madness Steve!
This piece tickled me so. Thank you. It’s frustrating engaging in antiracism. You’ve done a great job laying out the crazy we’re forced to deal with. It’s why hardly anything gets done.
I loved this. You left out one consequence of their idiocy - which is the racists seize those idiocies to effectively gaslight the entire movement.
In a world where everything is racist it logically follows that nothing is. Unthinking adherents of social justice are idiots who want to be on the ‘good’ side of history without doing any of the philosophical foundational thinking about what this…...
Thanks.
A quick test: Does the action we're proposing, the article we're writing, the speech we're planning, actually do anything to move the needle toward justice for all? If so -- great! If not, it's just performative.
I just read about a teacher in…...

Or there’s Meyerholz Elementary School, where eight-year-old children are instructed to rank themselves according to the power and privilege of their race, gender and sexuality.

Oh god that's disturbing. I'm very much not a fan of the "You have X Y privileges so you are an oppressor and are not allowed to disagree with people who don't have X Y privileges" mentality that has spread damn near everywhere in progressive…...

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Anti-Racism Is Becoming Troublingly Racist

You might think it’s helping — it’s not

Black and white photo of young boy with hand on head.
Black and white photo of young boy with hand on head.
Photo: Nappy.co

You’re not supposed to talk about how frustrating it is to watch children screw things up.

You’re supposed to be patient when it takes them 17 minutes to tie their shoelaces. You’re supposed to applaud their migraine-inducing attempts to play the violin. You’re supposed to give your undivided attention as they tell stories that somehow lack a beginning, a middle, and an end.

But worst of all is when a child wants to “help” you with something. You know that accepting their help will quadruple the time, energy, and resources required to get anything done. You realise that it’d be far simpler to do the job yourself. You’re aware that they’ll get bored halfway through and give up. But what are you supposed to tell them? They’re so enthusiastic, so earnest, so eager to contribute. So you take a deep breath, grit your teeth into a smile, and watch them make a mess.

If you’ve been watching the trajectory of anti-racism over the past few years, you can probably relate. It’s become an exercise in patiently explaining things that should be painfully obvious. It’s an endless parade of clickbait headlines and performative outrage. It’s dominated by people who seem as if they want to help but are hopelessly confused about how to do so.

For example, Los Angeles private institution Brentwood School recently announced plans to segregate parent-teacher meetings by race as part of its (and I’m not kidding here) “Inclusive Excellence Racial Equity” initiative. White parents will meet with White teachers, Black parents will meet with Black teachers, Latinx parents with Latinx teachers. I presume that interracial families will need to separate in the name of progress.

Watching these “allies” blunder their way around the anti-racism landscape feels like watching a toddler trying to perform open-heart surgery. The stakes are too high. The mistakes are too costly.

If a child had an idea this asinine, it would be easier to cope. You could explain in clear, age-appropriate language why racial segregation is not the best path to “inclusive excellence.” You could point out that while some parents may have issues directly related to their race, preventing other parents and teachers from hearing them is likely to make those problems worse. You could remind them in your gentlest, most tender-hearted voice that classifying people by race promotes racism, rather than — what was it again? Oh yes, INCLUSIVE EXCELLENCE AND RACIAL EQUITY!

A few hours north in the Bay Area, there’s Meyerholz Elementary School, where eight-year-old children learn to rank themselves according to the power and privilege of their race, gender, and sexuality. It’s how you might reimagine Jane Elliott’s famous “brown eyes, blue eyes” experiment if you utterly failed to understand it.

These children aren’t learning to look beyond their superficial differences. They aren’t learning the importance of treating others with compassion. They’re being taught, at eight years old, that the most fundamental aspects of who they are will forever mark them as “oppressor” or “oppressed.” They’re learning to think of each other as a collection of labels instead of complex human beings. They’ll likely carry the hangover of this “education” for the rest of their lives.

Then we have the people who treat racism as if it’s a treasure hunt. They scurry around in search of increasingly abstract, petty, blink-and-you’ll-miss-it forms of racism to submit for our approval. Gardening, rocks, Mozart, knitting, the countryside, cycling, floristry, fast food (but also veganism), and more have been “called out” in the name of anti-racism. Even worse, respected news organisations uncritically publish this nonsense so that everybody can see how “woke” they are.

If I were a more cynical person, I might suspect that these people aren’t trying to fight racism at all. I might ask whether headlines like “Can Dogs Be Racist?” are designed to do anything more than attract clicks and advertising dollars. I might even suggest that the people who write this garbage are motivated by nothing more than greed and the desire to collect virtue-signaling brownie points on Twitter.

And while I’d like to give them the pat on the head they’re so desperately seeking, it’s hard to ignore the fact that every column inch wasted on “articles” about whether the Smurfs were racist could have been used to write about real issues. Some issues feel a little more pressing: That Black male offenders still receive prison sentences which are, on average, 20% longer than White offenders for the same crime; that Black families are only half as likely to own their homes as White families; or that there are still serious disparities in treatment and outcomes for students of colour.

Last, but by no means least infuriating, are the saviors: People who are so excited to show off what they learned during their mandatory diversity training that they haven’t noticed (or simply don’t care) how racist they’re being.

These are the people who target Black police officers at protests so that they can scream in their faces about Black rights. Or they turn up at Black Lives Matter rallies with whip marks painted on their bodies without the tiniest glimmer of self-awareness. They’re the same people who explain that people of colour need special treatment if we turn up late for appointments because it’s “culturally insensitive” to expect us to demonstrate time management skills. They have taken terms like “White supremacy” and diluted their meaning to the point that we’re losing the ability to differentiate between benign ignorance and true hatred.

Watching these “allies” blunder their way around the anti-racism landscape feels like watching a toddler trying to perform open-heart surgery. The stakes are too high. The mistakes are too costly. The constant distractions make it too difficult to focus on the issues that matter. While I want to believe that their hearts (if not their brains) are in the right place, it’s time to be blunt.

So, on behalf of everybody who has a stake in this fight, this “help” is not helping. You’re pushing regressive policies and calling them progress. You’re squandering opportunities to say something meaningful with garbage clickbait. You’re framing the fight for equality as a battle between “Whiteness” and “Blackness” when, if you were a little wiser, you’d know that it’s always required people of all colours.

Look, I promise, as soon as we’ve finished making the world a safer and fairer place for people of colour, we’ll move straight onto pressing issues like why so many robots are White. We’ll conduct a thorough investigation into the racist history of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. We’ll answer all of your questions about why racial segregation is not a marker of progress. But until then, why don’t you go and play with your toys or something?

The grown-ups have important work to do.


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