The Difference Between Racial Bias and White Supremacy

Joe Money

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The Difference Between Racial Bias and White Supremacy

John McWhorter is an associate professor of English and comparative literature at Columbia University.

‘The rhetorical brush is being applied much too broadly’
The list of white supremacists is getting longer all the time of late. John C. Calhoun. Theodore Bilbo. George Wallace. David Duke. Bernie Sanders. Mother Teresa. Others have argued that universities like Amherst are bastions of white supremacy, and expecting students to show up on time is white supremacist behavior. It seems that any white person who disagrees with a non-white one’s opinion about race issues is given the label.

Few will disagree that the first four belong on the list. But there will be reasonable disagreement over the final four. Among too many these days, the term “white supremacy” has become, of all things, a kind of hate speech.

Of course, the meaning of words and terms always changes and always has. “Audition” once referred to hearing and only gradually came to refer to hearing someone try out for a singing part on stage, upon which the term was extended to any kind of tryout at all. Like “white supremacy” has, terms have a way of coming to refer to less extreme manifestations of what they first referred to—”terrible” once meant truly horrific and now can be used about getting stuck in traffic.

But words can be more than words. The N-word, the F-word referring to gay men and the C-word referring to an anatomical part are slurs, tools for injury, not just dictionary terms. We also all understand that a word or term or reference can be a dogwhistle. “Law and order” can have a racialized meaning, for example.

Chef, writer, and 'Fresh Off the Boat' producer Eddie Huang talks about how he wants to portray his Asian-American experience in the new ABC show.

The term “dogwhistle” is even an example, in that we typically use it in reference to the right wing. However, white supremacy is now a dogwhistle itself. A leftist contingent is now charging any white person who seriously questions a position associated with people of color as a white supremacist. The idea is that if you go against a certain orthodoxy, then it isn’t only that you disagree, but that you also wish white people were still in charge, that you want people of color to sit down and shut up.

This is hasty and unfair. David Duke is, indeed, a white supremacist. The alt-right is, indeed, white supremacist. For one, they openly say so. Are there some whites who are more codedly white supremacist, even if they don’t quite know it? One assumes so—but the rhetorical brush is being applied much too broadly. After all, if whites accept anything a person of color states, is this not a new form of condescension? These days, the term “white supremacy” is being used not as an argument but as a weapon.

“White supremacist” is a new way of saying “racist” while stepping around the steadily increasing awareness that that word, too, is being wielded in sloppy ways. Writing “white supremacist” is a way of making the reader jump, in the way that “prejudiced” and “racist” once were. What handier way of driving your critique home than implying that your target would have broken bread with the Confederacy, stood at the school doors at the behest of Orville Faubus, or today would be happy to sip coffee at conferences with well-spoken alt-righters?

Of course, no one means precisely that—but educated people cannot lecture the world on how words must be used carefully, that we must understand words’ larger resonances, while casually throwing around a term that calls to mind black men hanging from trees. Never mind that it’s mean.

More to the point, the left sinks to the level of the right with its own dogwhistles, intolerance and exaggerations. This is not a call for the left to suppress their anger or lie down with the right as the lamb to their lion. Criticism is vital, and not always in emotionless tones. However, we must avoid the mores of the sandbox. Nietzsche’s point, that too often punishment is rooted in a desire for revenge rather than correction, is relevant.

If you make a claim that someone desires that white people be in charge and muzzle the opinions and opportunities of people of color, you should be able to prove it. No, the fact that psychological tests reveal subtle racial biases in whites does not justify calling any white person’s questioning of the views of a person of color a white supremacist. That’s an athletic jump from the subtle to the stark, from the subliminal to the egregious.

It is tragic how ordinary that jump is becoming—it isn’t only the famous being paintballed this way. My Columbia colleague Mark Lilla has presented an argumentthat the extremes of identity politics should be pruned in favor of a class-based politics in order to further the goals of liberals and the left. Katherine Franke of the Columbia University law school has tarred him for this as, well, you can guess. This is the quintessence of linguistic violence.

To use “white supremacy” as a battering ram is, in the end, as uncivilized as anything offensive to liberals scrawled on a wall or spewed into a comments section. Criticism? Of course. Recreational abuse? One is to rise above it.

http://time.com/4584161/white-supremacy/
 
It's almost 2017 and Black academic John McWhorter is still writing convoluted dribble about racism against people of African descent in America. Institutionalized white supremacy against African people and their descendants has been legally codified into the American way-of-life since the year 1619 in the then British ruled Virginia State colony.

McWhorter writes these articles and books pretending to not-know about the literal bludgeon of white supremacist ideology that has been used against Black people since 1619; —Chattel slavery, 'Jim Crow' apartheid, Black convict leasing, & Terrorism (Lynchings, Torture, Extrajudicial murders).

Racism equals prejudice plus power.

A poor cac who doesn't like Black people is prejudiced, but when he gets that prison guard job now he has the power to inflict illegal pernicious torment on the Black prisoners.
A poor Black man can be prejudiced and even hate his cac boss because the boss always gives him the worst assignments & the least pay; but he has no power to affect that cacs life.

Racism equals prejudice plus power.

The National Football League (NFL) is a monopoly capitalism oligarchy. The 32 NFL teams are 99% owned by extremely rich white people (Green Bay Packers are owned by the town)— the 32 teams split the Billions of television money they get evenly (democratic socialism).

Despite the fact that 70% of the NFL players are Black, there was and is a dramatic paucity of Black head coaches.

In 2002 Johnnie Cochran (yes O.J. Simpson's lawyer) wrote a report that opened the NFL’s eyes to its teams’ unfair hiring processes. Within two months, the League had formed a diversity committee, headed by Pittsburgh Steelers owner Dan Rooney, and announced a diversity plan, which included the requirement that each team interview at least one minority candidate prior to selecting a head coach. The requirement came to be known as the Rooney Rule, and it changed the face of head coaching in the NFL.

What was happening in the NFL was that the white owners of the teams were not even interviewing qualified Black men for head coaching jobs — Racism equals prejudice plus power — their behavior was racism.
Now some of them admitted that they never thought of even interviewing a Black guy for the head coaching job. Was that subconscious racism? Was the fact that the uber rich white men who own these teams have NO Black friends or business partners in the elite circles that they habitat and therefore their exclusionary hiring practices seemed normal to them?
Were the NFL owners practicing institutionalized racism?— absolutely. Did the simple remedy that Johnnie Cochran suggested help alter their "blind spot"?— yes.

The pervasiveness of institutionalized racism in America is not a subject that should be cavalierly discussed in the ignorant manner that McWhorter does.


 
White supremacy and black separatists is the same animal. Both think they are better and want "their race" (that they think they own), to be separate. It's not blackie hate whitie or whitie hate blackie, its a matter of Satan. Satan, whether you believe or not, is the master of sin. Fools, do you not see how you are being played? No one owns a race or speaks for a race. Van Jones is an utter idiot cause he and the others trying to keep blacks on the plantation have a vested financial and leadership interest in keeping hate alive. Just like Jackson and Sharpton. But yet, no one speaks of Archibald Carey...who was the first civil rights leader. Your schooling probably kept him out of print but he spoke at the 1952 Republican Convention, he was a lawyer and judge. You recall him right? MLK plagiarized his dream speech from Carey. NPR released the audio a few years back of the 1952 speech, listen and learn.

You are so swelled up in hatred, racism, bigotry, you cant see the forest for the trees. We will always experience hate, regardless of race. Life is not fair, regardless of who you are, where you live. It is you and only you who can change your lot in life. Your attitude determines your altitude. Enough of your parents hate, learn to live your own life.
 
From the piece:

...A leftist contingent is now charging any white person who seriously questions a position associated with people of color as a white supremacist. The idea is that if you go against a certain orthodoxy, then it isn’t only that you disagree, but that you also wish white people were still in charge, that you want people of color to sit down and shut up....

...More to the point, the left sinks to the level of the right with its own dogwhistles, intolerance and exaggerations.....

The author is right, especially about the bolded. The bubble worlds of social media are really brining out the ugly in people. The left was supposed to be the sensible side. Now, bubble worlds and mob mentality have shown an ugly side. It's now extremists running around with their talking points and god forbid if you disagree. Let's see what other phobia they produce in the near future.

As for the first comment, I don't think folks realize they are just making more enemies running around calling everyone a white supremacist or screaming white privilege. I see it in comment sections all the time. White people will agree with racism existing, but don't want to hear about being privileged. In the real world, most white people don't seem to feel privileged. I keep seeing comments about how much they work, bills, and all types of shit.

No amount of 'kicking knowledge' to them about their white privilege seems to work. It works on college kids living in dorms or with their parents, but it seems like white people who have bills don't want to hear it. But it's amazing that the same folks will admit racism and the problems it brings is real, but they just don't feel personally privileged. It is what it is, why bring more hurdles into the discussion about equality?

And yes, slogans and words can bring people to you or push them away. It's just a fact that we need white allies in this country. Although white privilege exists, it's best talking about it in its other name: systematic racism. End systematic racism, you end white privilege.
 
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