Posted on 07/27/2013 4:48:50 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
In 2002, Michael Green extracted a single promise from me during the year I spent reporting about his life after he spent 13 years in prison for a rape he did not commit.
Green, who is African-American, knew Id be giving a lot of speeches about his story, including at high schools in Cleveland. He saw an opportunity to save lives.
Tell the boys, he said to me over and over. Tell the boys this comes from me: If the police stop you, dont ever run. Take your hands out of your pockets. Immediately. Put your hands over your head. Immediately. Stand perfectly still, and keep your opinions to yourself.
You have to promise, he said. You have to warn them.
Ive written about this promise a number of times over the years. I do that because I want to keep my word and share the warning in as large a forum as possible. If Im honest with myself, though, I have to admit I also do it because I want to feel a little less guilty about my unearned privilege as a white woman. As a white mother, to be precise. My worries never rival those of most African-American mothers. Most days, Id rather not think about that. Again, such privilege.
A decade ago, neither Green nor I knew to warn about the likes of George Zimmerman. He was no cop, despite his fancy notions of himself as a civilian enforcer. Instead, he was empowered by a law cooked up by the National Rifle Association and a certainty in his right to pursue an unarmed teenager who fit his description of a suspect. Some warned that this could happen, but we all should have seen it coming.
Earlier this month, in a speech to the NAACP, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder described a family ritual all too familiar to many in the audience. His father sat him down. The talk his father gave, Holder said, was about how, as a young black man, I should interact with the police, what to say and how to conduct myself if I was ever stopped or confronted in a way that I thought was unwarranted. Now, Im sure my father felt certain at that time that my parents generation would be the last that had to worry about such things for their children.
Some family traditions just wont die in this country. After Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin, Holder sat his own 15-year-old son down.
This was a father-son tradition I hoped would not need to be handed down, he said. But as a father who loves his son and who is more knowing in the ways of the world, I had to do this to protect my boy. I am his father, and it is my responsibility not to burden him with the baggage of eras long gone but to make him aware of the world that he must still confront. This is a sad reality in a nation that is changing for the better in so many ways.
Ever since the verdict was announced and Zimmerman walked free, Ive been trying to write this column. How can I not have something to say about this?
Yet every approach feels wrong.
I feel conspicuously white and defensive embarrassingly eager to talk about how I raised my children to be better than their parents and their grandparents before them, how they never see race before face, how they never think to describe their friends by the color of their skin.
Just saying that out loud makes me wince. Oh, great. Another obnoxious white liberal celebrating her own good intentions.
I keep fighting the urge to explain myself to my black friends, to offer evidence of how I could have turned out worse than this clumsy version of me.
There are many, many times when I miss my father, but this week isnt one of them. Im glad not to have that conversation that rips open old wounds and launches another round of estrangement. He once grounded me for an entire summer after he found out about my seventh-grade crush on a black boy.
We dont mix, he yelled, eyes bulging, fists flexing at his side. I look back on that summer as the first time I realized my beloved father was wrong, just wrong, and I no longer wanted to be just like him.
After more than a decade as a columnist, I know whats coming. Just telling that story will trigger another round of angry emails. Some white readers will demand to know what kind of daughter says such things about her father.
On and on it goes.
“White Privilege” is nothing more than a really bigoted excuse for why a certain minority can neither produce nor achieve.
It is driven by a gut wrenching hated for whites fueled by a thing called “white envy.”
When I see stories about false conviction of rape (wrong suspect or malicious report by a woman) I think that prosecutors need to be exercising better judgment rather than just pursing feel good victories. Nifongism does happen.
A couple of guys were recently violently assaulted (by the woman’s boyfriend) and faced charges of rape but they had some video from the night that showed she was a very willing participant who’d later lied to her revenge seeking boyfriend.
The officials said the “suspects” were LUCKY they had that video.
Rape is a horrible crime. But feminism has made sure that justice is NOT blind. Social justice they call it.
And skin color has nothing to do with that.
A decade ago, neither Green nor I knew to warn about the likes of George Zimmerman. He was no cop, despite his fancy notions of himself as a civilian enforcer. Instead, he was empowered by a law cooked up by the National Rifle Association and a certainty in his right to pursue an unarmed teenager who fit his description of a suspect. Some warned that this could happen, but we all should have seen it coming.
white intellect + white effort = white privilege
Can we have a telethon for the poor white victims who weren’t born with a sense of white guilt?
Clearly I’m supposed to feel it but just don’t.
In reality it is a well-earned birthright, but one which she does not deserve to inherit, because she is unworthy of it.
You answered your own question.
If it was a privilege for me to be born white then it must be considered some sort of disadvantage to be born black.
Blacks are taught that from birth. That is why they hate us.
But they don’t call that racism. Perhaps it is jealousy.
Whatever it is about 95% of blacks suffer from it. The ones who voted for an idiot.
If “white privilege” was a fact, how then do you explain Japan, who was as primitive as most of Africa circa 1850, and went from bonking each other over the head with bamboo sticks, to decimating the US fleet at Peal Harbor, IN LESS THAN 100 YEARS?
From 1863 when the Emperor declared, “If westerners can do it, so can we.”
Japanese capital ships of the line were marvels of their day. And they did that in LESS than 50 years.
So, why has nothing like this ever come from Africa?
Well, I guess to all the apologists and haters of any white achievement, “that’s whitey’s fault.” Somehow, whitey could NOT suppress the Japanese or Chinese, but managed to suppress all of Africa.
Think people, think.
White privilege theory is, well, racist
http://www.alligator.org/opinion/columns/article_a2a28a68-f34a-11e2-92ef-001a4bcf887a.html
Well... if we're going to judge her (guilty or not guilty), then I want to see a picture.
If we are critiquing the article, then... I'll have to go back and figure out what she said. I read the excerpt, and it seems to be a mental circle jerk.
How bout why donchu go ask Mrs. West what SHE THINKS about your stupid little diatribe?
JUSTICE FOR ANTONIO WEST!!
Bet this idiot Connie doesn’t even know who Antonio West is.
Bet you a hundred dollars.
What you posted is true, and it is also the reason that those who say reform must come from within the Black community are wrong.
History, which can easily be reviewed and checked by simply examining the life quality of todays countries which are ruled by Blacks, suggests that they will be unable to conform to civilized behavior.
I am always amazed by the fact that in 1941, there were Japanese alive who rememberd when the samurai walked the streets with their two swords. It took less than one lifetime.
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