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Why America needs to reject the Charleston massacre’s dangerous narrative of forgiveness
Salon ^ | June 27, 2015 | Ericka Schiche

Posted on 06/27/2015 11:54:19 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

~~Well-intended forgiveness has been seized on by the media and those in power as an excuse to ignore white supremacy~~

Unfortunately, forgiveness, that element of moral sanctity which facilitates assuaging of grief, has morphed into a barrier obstructing the path to justice and accountability in the United States — a place weakened by the ubiquitousness and insidiousness of racism.

Although it’s tough to direct a critical lens at the concept of forgiveness when the situation involves grieving family members tearfully addressing an expressionless, depraved killer who isn’t even asking for it, for posterity’s sake this must be done. What happened in Charleston, South Carolina, last week wasn’t an anomaly or isolated incident. It’s just the latest of many incidents of racial hatred exploding into a violent expression of a flawed, commonly espoused belief: that black people are to remain dehumanized and oppressed.

One has to admit it’s absolutely stunning to hear a hurt family member speak publicly so soon after the loss of a family member to such a heinous crime as the one that resulted in the sanguinary terminus of a prayer meeting in one of the most sacrosanct places: a place of worship. What kind of twisted criminal justice system does South Carolina have that would even encourage a family member to address a killer before a trial has even transpired? Charleston County Chief Magistrate James B. Gosnell Jr., a person who allegedly once uttered the word “n***er” in court, ought to be ashamed of himself for even exposing grieving family members to videotape of the cretinous killer standing with his back to armed guards less than 48 hours after the shootings. The looming question is: Who is protecting and advising these families which are now permanently damaged by the massacre of their loved ones in this moment of extreme shock, sorrow and bottomless dejection?

It should be argued the people who benefit most from a public offering of forgiveness are those who actually don’t have those moments of deep introspection that cause them to walk away from hatred, abject ignorance and the pervasive tentacles of systemic racism. It lets them off the hook in the same way Dylann Roof’s family, friends and the sick culture he comes from have been let off the hook. It’s the status quo, and none of the people who benefit from it the most are willing to or convicted enough in their hearts and souls to change it.

Renouncing white privilege in a society where the dominant culture suffocates and subjugates any forms of otherness and maintains its tightening grip on the jugular of blackness is something most white people either refuse to or simply manage to avoid doing. That’s understandable. Why would someone suddenly exchange the birthright benefits of being white to board the same sinking ship everyone else is chained to ad infinitum? Yes, poor whites often say they have no privilege, but they are confused about something: Simply being white opens all kinds of doors even the richest black people never have access to.

To be white isn’t just a race thing, but often also a money thing. The two are inextricably linked, not mutually exclusive. Read any book by Ferdinand Lundberg, especially “The Rich and The Super Rich: A Study in the Power of Money Today” and “America’s 60 Families,” and it becomes clearer how power structures operate here and how most Americans — not just black people — are actually poor. Lundberg’s focus wasn’t on race, but he deftly and inadvertently examined the American beast from inside out and outside in. All the unhealed sores and festering wounds of racism the beast knows about but refuses to seek ointments and tinctures for continue to be under-examined and unhealed.

The truth is, President Obama needs to bring the hammer down when it comes to race and stop worrying about what some deluded, disengaged white people think by circumventing the obvious ugly truths. For anyone to be willfully obtuse in these times is a luxury none of us can afford. Ducking and dodging when it comes to systemic and cultural racism only keeps the racist inebriated as if said person just drank a whole bottle of moonshine and doesn’t have a care in the world. And this country was built in part on the genocide of Native Americans, the crippling Three-Fifths Compromise and a number of other originally flawed documents, including the U.S. Constitution — all of which justified systemic racism.

Charleston, South Carolina, like Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, is such a beautiful town. Except for all the markers of slavery customs and monuments to the Confederacy, it’s actually one of the few places in America that looks like a painting come to life. The beauty of the place is false, though. It’s still one big functioning plantation in the 21st century. It’s a place where time just sat under the bridge like an ogre and decided to curl up and die. Nothing has really changed there. It’s easy to wonder why a black person would even want to live in such a place, but packing up and leaving doesn’t necessarily solve the problem. The real problem are all those people who are comfortable with racist beliefs and do absolutely nothing to address their own shortcomings in this area.

It’s not just a South Carolina problem or a Southern problem, but a nationwide problem. And though this incident has rightly been labeled a massacre and an act of terror, it’s also an assassination. Why are so few people using the term assassination in reference to the shooting of Rev. Clementa Pinckney, who also served as a South Carolina state senator — a man deeply concerned, ironically enough, with the aftermath of the Walter Scott shooting? The loner tropes and outlier narratives being ascribed to Mr. Roof are part of some larger spiel to get us to forget all the real ugliness of racism and hatred behind these killings.

Well intended forgiveness is actually being manipulated, as it always is, when a black person dies so violently for reasons which suggest black skin is itself perceived as a weapon. Forgiveness in itself has unfortunately been twisted into a narrative; not by the families, but by the mainstream media, the systems in place, politicians, and the public. Forgiveness, which is a right and also often a necessary component of healing — a moral bridge between devastation, solemnity, and true peace with freedom attached — should never be used in the way it’s being used now: as an escape hatch to a neverland where the deep rooted problems of this country are never fully confronted and never resolved.

Last month, Sheriff David Clarke of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, someone who often says the wrong thing at the wrong time, said black people need to forgive America for slavery. There are plenty of backwards (sometimes, unctuous or clueless) people who want black people to forgive, forgive, forgive, as if that is the main portal we all must enter to solve the problems of this country. Again, forgiveness has its place; it should be a more personal space, though, and not a “carrot” dangled publicly in front of those who’ve done no work towards being worthy or towards resolution. Now that the Voting Rights Act has been eviscerated and it seems as if the specter of Jim Crow is dancing a jig right now, it’s also worth pointing out there is an air of anti-black sentiment which continues to threaten and undermine America’s integrity and position as a global power.

Racism isn’t some gargantuan Sasquatch hiding in the hills, who only occasionally makes appearances in the South. Racism is practically encoded in the DNA of the majority of people who think we’re living in a post-racial, evolved society. It exists in every state of the Union. All the recent incidents of police brutality against unarmed black citizens prove there is no place of safe harbor for black people anywhere in this country. Malcolm X effectively hit the nail on the head when he said, “As far as I’m concerned, Mississippi is anywhere South of the Canadian border.” Isabel Wilkerson’s Jan. 10, 2015, New York Times column titled “When Will the North Face its Racism?” complements the idea of racism being a ubiquitous phenomenon.

Still, the shackles and strictures which have been placed on black South Carolinians for centuries do need to be addressed. The bloody Stono Rebellion of 1739, which occurred near Charleston, claimed 44 black lives and 21 whites, is a reminder of how racism functions to stifle and oppress. The black slaves, under the leadership of a commander named Cato, wanted to escape South Carolina to join the Spaniards in Florida. Denmark Vesey, one of the founders of the church which later became Emanuel A.M.E. Church, was executed along with five other black slaves on suspicion of organizing a slave revolt in 1822. The “South Carolina Black Code” dated December 21, 1865 was used against black citizens in a post-Civil War environment suggesting there would be no true upward mobility for former slaves. The Orangeburg Massacre, which transpired in Orangeburg, South Carolina on February 8, 1968 claimed the lives of three young black men: Delano Middleton, Samuel Hammond, and Henry Smith; numerous others were also injured. Black residents of Orangeburg were simply protesting segregation practices at the local bowling alley called the All-Star Bowling Lane.

Bakari Sellers, a former member of South Carolina House of Representatives, had the right idea when he typed the following words: “In 2015 you can get murdered because of the color of your skin. Let that process for a moment. Then pray. #CharlestonStrong.” Perhaps the best way to honor the nine victims of the church massacre is to do away with racism once and for all. Tears, flowers and discussions are a good starting place, but true progress has to be the end result.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: 1739; charleston; demagogicparty; erickaschiche; forgiveness; media; memebuilding; partisanmediashill; partisanmediashills; racism; salon; southcarolina; whiteprivilege
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Where to begin?

The elected president of the United States is black.

Dylann Roof is recognized by everyone as a sick, twisted person who should never again see the light of day.

People in the South don't need the "help" and advice of people like Ericka Schiche telling them how to live.

Seems there wasn't a proper protracted Ferguson type riot, nor the right kind of media exploitation to suit Ericka Schiche.

1 posted on 06/27/2015 11:54:20 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Yes, & there’s going to be hell to pay as a result.


2 posted on 06/28/2015 12:00:05 AM PDT by KGeorge (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_Underground)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Uh, probably because no looting and rioting ensued? I’m sure the lyin’ king and the just-us bros ain’t too pleased that things didn’t go bad like B’more or Ferguson. Actually, they’re probably livid.


3 posted on 06/28/2015 12:01:19 AM PDT by rktman (Served in the Navy to protect the rights of those that want to take some of mine away. Odd, eh?)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Who is asking anyone to “forgive” Roof? Answer: No one.


4 posted on 06/28/2015 12:02:44 AM PDT by Impy (They pull a knife, you pull a gun. That's the CHICAGO WAY, and that's how you beat the rats!)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Why don’t they talk about the killers socialist beliefs


5 posted on 06/28/2015 12:03:58 AM PDT by GeronL
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Um, its the relatives of the victims who began the forgiveness narrative and they are black.

I understand that marxists want to use the raw power of govt to crush all opposition which is how millions died in marxists regimes.

6 posted on 06/28/2015 12:04:05 AM PDT by RginTN
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

I actually have no forgiveness in my heart for what the Left and the race-hustlers are doing to this country.


7 posted on 06/28/2015 12:05:11 AM PDT by windsorknot
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Perhaps there are two people who spell their name “Ericka Schiche,” but it would appear that before Ms. Schiche was an “on-line contributor” for Salon and one other media outlet, she was some kind of artist/DJ/real-estate agent in NYC.


8 posted on 06/28/2015 12:06:59 AM PDT by Steely Tom (Vote GOP: A Slower Handbasket)
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To: GeronL

This article is from the Devil’s very ink well.


9 posted on 06/28/2015 12:07:51 AM PDT by cowboyusa
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

If there were no racism, Ericka Schiche and Salon would have to invent it.


10 posted on 06/28/2015 12:10:57 AM PDT by clearcarbon
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To: All
...Renouncing white privilege in a society where the dominant culture suffocates and subjugates any forms of otherness and maintains its tightening grip on the jugular of blackness is something most white people either refuse to or simply manage to avoid doing.

Actually, Ericka Schiche wants "otherness" celebrated; she disapproves of the unity and community of Charleston.

I suggest this piece in rebuttal.

2001 The Perils of Designer Tribalism

[SNIP]

".........Another side is the inversion of traditional moral and intellectual values. Europe once sought to bring enlightenment—literacy, civil society, modern technology—to benighted parts of the world. It did so in the name of progress and civilization. The ethic of Third Worldism dictates that yesterday’s enlightenment be rebaptized as today’s imperialistic oppression. For the committed Third Worldist, Bruckner points out,

salvation consists not only in a futile exchange of influences, but in the recognition of the superiority of foreign thought, in the study of their doctrines, and in conversion to their dogma. We must take on our former slaves as our models. . . . It is the duty and in the interest of the West to be made prisoner by its own barbarians.

Whatever the current object of adulation— the wisdom of the East, tribal Africa, Aboriginal Australia, pre-Columbian America —the message is the same: the absolute superiority of Otherness. The Third Worldist looks to the orient, to the tribal, to the primitive not for what they really are but for their evocative distance from the reality of modern European society and values.

It is all part of what Bruckner calls “the enchanting music of departure.” Its siren call is seductive but also supremely mendacious. Indeed, the messy reality of the primitive world—its squalor and poverty, its penchant for cannibalism, slavery, gratuitous cruelty, and superstition—are carefully edited out of the picture. In their place we find a species of Rousseauvian sentimentality. Rousseau is the patron saint of Third Worldism. “Ignoring the real human race entirely,” Rousseau wrote in a passage Bruckner quotes from the Confessions, “I imagined perfect beings, with heavenly virtue and beauty, so sure in their friendship, so tender and faithful, that I could never find anyone like them in the real world.” The beings with whom Rousseau populated his fantasy life are exported to exotic lands by the Third Worldist. As Rousseau discovered, the unreality of the scenario, far from being an impediment to moral smugness, was an invaluable asset. Reality, after all, has a way of impinging upon fantasy, clipping its wings, limiting its exuberance. So much the worse, then, for reality. As Bruckner notes, in this romance adepts “were not looking for a real world but the negation of their own. . . . An eternal vision is projected on these nations that has nothing to do with their real history.” .............

[SNIP]

11 posted on 06/28/2015 12:13:51 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: cowboyusa

bump!!

Now I will always think of Salon as that


12 posted on 06/28/2015 12:19:34 AM PDT by GeronL
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Forgive? Never. Judge? Yes. These are two flawed Christian concepts.

Racism is evil. It is in our practice by the victims and smeared on everyone, whether they are racist or not. Every group that has a racist component: Hispanic Chamber of Congress, Black Student Union, etc. are by their very nature racist. Eliminate it everywhere, starting without groups and associations, with our affiliations.

I've always figured that if you cannot substitute White then the group is inappropriate. I think this is still very importantly valid.

13 posted on 06/28/2015 12:31:04 AM PDT by Reno89519 (For every illegal or H1B with a job, there's an American without one. Muslim = Nazi = Evil)
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To: KGeorge; All
Ericka Schiche doesn't like it that Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke is off the "blame white privilege" plantation. He will be shunned and denounced, as are all non-compliant-to-a-victimhood-mentality ('cause they're black) people are, by the Left.

..Last month, Sheriff David Clarke of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, someone who often says the wrong thing at the wrong time, said black people need to forgive America for slavery. There are plenty of backwards (sometimes, unctuous or clueless) people who want black people to forgive, forgive, forgive, as if that is the main portal we all must enter to solve the problems of this country. Again, forgiveness has its place; it should be a more personal space, though, and not a “carrot” dangled publicly in front of those who’ve done no work towards being worthy or towards resolution. Now that the Voting Rights Act has been eviscerated and it seems as if the specter of Jim Crow is dancing a jig right now, it’s also worth pointing out there is an air of anti-black sentiment which continues to threaten and undermine America’s integrity and position as a global power. ....

14 posted on 06/28/2015 12:32:58 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
"~~Well-intended forgiveness has been seized on by the media and those in power as an excuse to ignore white supremacy~~"

Shove it up your ass, Ericka.

15 posted on 06/28/2015 12:38:49 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: Reno89519
.... And this country was built in part on the genocide of Native Americans, the crippling Three-Fifths Compromise and a number of other originally flawed documents, including the U.S. Constitution — all of which justified systemic racism.

The U.S. Constitution.

This is their real target.

16 posted on 06/28/2015 12:38:54 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

I want to put up a middle finger when she says that Charleston is fake. Black lives are safer in Charleston than in progressive and enlightened Chicago and L.A. Gang crime is so much worse elsewhere in this country, but that doesn’t fit her desired narrative.


17 posted on 06/28/2015 12:48:03 AM PDT by Yaelle ("You're gonna fly away, Glad you're going my way...")
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

The author speaks like she is in an unstoppable cycle of hate.


18 posted on 06/28/2015 12:51:38 AM PDT by KC_Conspirator
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Christianity could unite all kinds of people who would otherwise be divided.

We can’t have that now can we?/

It throws a wrench into their divide and conquer gameplan.


19 posted on 06/28/2015 12:53:56 AM PDT by Califreak (Hope and Che'nge is killing U.S./CDC=Contagion Distribution Center)
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To: Califreak
Christianity could unite all kinds of people who would otherwise be divided.

AME Emanuel Church FULL SERMON. Charleston Church First Sunday Service Since Shooting

So unlike:

Obama's Church of "God Damn America

20 posted on 06/28/2015 1:00:35 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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