Posted on 12/27/2015 5:44:51 AM PST by Altura Ct.
n an open letter to white Americans, Emory University professor of philosophy George Yancy asked readers to deeply consider âthe ways in which you perpetuate a racist society, the ways in which you are racist.â
Yancy called his letter âDear White Americaâ â published in the New York Times on Christmas Eve â a âgift.â In it he also asked readers to not ârun to seek shelter from your own racism. Donât hide from your responsibility. Rather, begin, right now, to practice being vulnerable. Being neither a âgoodâ white person nor a liberal white person will get you off the proverbial hook.â
More from Yancyâs letter: George Yancy (Image source: GeorgeYancy.com)
George Yancy (Image source: GeorgeYancy.com)
I can see your anger. I can see that this letter is being misunderstood. This letter is not asking you to feel bad about yourself, to wallow in guilt. That is too easy. Iâm asking for you to tarry, to linger, with the ways in which you perpetuate a racist society, the ways in which you are racist. Iâm now daring you to face a racist history which, paraphrasing [James] Baldwin, has placed you where you are and that has formed your own racism. Again, in the spirit of Baldwin, I am asking you to enter into battle with your white self. Iâm asking that you open yourself up; to speak to, to admit to, the racist poison that is inside of you.
Again, take a deep breath. Donât tell me about how many black friends you have. Donât tell me that you are married to someone of color. Donât tell me that you voted for Obama. Donât tell me that Iâm the racist. Donât tell me that you donât see color. Donât tell me that Iâm blaming whites for everything. To do so is to hide yet again. You may have never used the N-word in your life, you may hate the K.K.K., but that does not mean that you donât harbor racism and benefit from racism. After all, you are part of a system that allows you to walk into stores where you are not followed, where you get to go for a bank loan and your skin does not count against you, where you donât need to engage in âthe talkâ that black people and people of color must tell their children when they are confronted by white police officers.
As you reap comfort from being white, we suffer for being black and people of color. But your comfort is linked to our pain and suffering. Just as my comfort in being male is linked to the suffering of women, which makes me sexist, so, too, you are racist. That is the gift that I want you to accept, to embrace. It is a form of knowledge that is taboo. Imagine the impact that the acceptance of this gift might have on you and the world.
Take another deep breath. I know that there are those who will write to me in the comment section with boiling anger, sarcasm, disbelief, denial. There are those who will say, âYancy is just an angry black man.â There are others who will say, âWhy isnât Yancy telling black people to be honest about the violence in their own black neighborhoods?â Or, âHow can Yancy say that all white people are racists?â If you are saying these things, then youâve already failed to listen. I come with a gift. Youâre already rejecting the gift that I have to offer. This letter is about you. Donât change the conversation. I assure you that so many black people suffering from poverty and joblessness, which is linked to high levels of crime, are painfully aware of the existential toll that they have had to face because they are black and, as Baldwin adds, âfor no other reason.â
âWhat Iâm asking is that you first accept the racism within yourself, accept all of the truth about what it means for you to be white in a society that was created for you,â Yancy wrote. âIâm asking for you to trace the binds that tie you to forms of domination that you would rather not see. When you walk into the world, you can walk with assurance; you have already signed a contract, so to speak, that guarantees you a certain form of social safety.â
More from Yancyâs letter:
White America, are you prepared to be at war with yourself, your white identity, your white power, your white privilege? Are you prepared to show me a white self that love has unmasked? Iâm asking for love in return for a gift; in fact, Iâm hoping that this gift might help you to see yourself in ways that you have not seen before. Of course, the history of white supremacy in America belies this gesture of black gift-giving, this gesture of non-sentimental love. Martin Luther King Jr. was murdered even as he loved. [...]
Take one more deep breath. I have another gift.
If you have young children, before you fall off to sleep tonight, I want you to hold your child. Touch your childâs face. Smell your childâs hair. Count the fingers on your childâs hand. See the miracle that is your child. And then, with as much vision as you can muster, I want you to imagine that your child is black.
In peace,
George Yancy
While it appeared many of the more than 1,600 comments gave Yancyâs letter a thumbs up, there were detractors.
âThe article should have been titled âDear Humanity.â Racism isnât endemic to whites only,â reader Song Yu commented. âGrowing up in the 70s as one of the few Asian Americans in my neighborhood in Connecticut, I occasionally experienced racism from other kids. Particularly relentless badgering about how âfunnyâ I looked and spoke came from Puerto Rican and Black kids who did not already know me. Desire to feel superior and belonging to a âbetterâ group is a natural human instinct. We need to fight this instinct through education and awareness. However just picking on the whites is ignoring the true nature of the problem.â
Another commenter wrote: âThis focus on getting white people to admit their privilege instead of focusing on conversations about how to improve black schools, inner cities and poverty makes no sense. I donât buy all whites are racists but for the sake of argument, suppose the white race (which itself is very diverse you realize?) admits this. Fine, now what? Whatâs next? How do we destroy gangs in the city? How do we ensure all kids get a good education? How do we stop the violence? Those are topics worth a long-winded NY Times editorial. This isnât.â
âDear White Americaâ: Black Professorâs Open Letter Asks Readers to âAdmitâ to the âRacist Poison That Is Inside of Youâ
There are people who are obsessed by race.
Almost all of them are Democrats.
If you are a Democrat, and you are not obsessed by race, you are in the wrong party, its time to come out of it and leave it behind.
Dear George Yancy: You go first...
I might consider it, but only after Blacks admit to the ignorance that’s inside of them.
Dear Race Obsessed Blacks:
Blame God for your skin color! We’ve had enough of you lecturing us about your preconceived “racist” behavior of anybody different from your own.
Most of us won’t listen or care anymore about your pathetic insecurities!
They are obsessed with race because they are racist...!
Seems like they expend a lot of effort looking to blame others for their constant and perennial failure at just about everything.
All about the Benjamins. ..r-e-p-a-r-a-t-i-o-n-s
Isn’t Benjamin white?
To a hammer, everything looks like a nail... He fears racists so he interprets every behavior as racist...
In his open letter to Yancy, Normie told Yancy to find a hole, crawl back in it and remain there until starvation claims him. Because if I’m a racist, so be it.
Ok.... I took his advice and did some serious navel gazing and deep introspective on my inmate racism do to my whiteness...
To my shock and dismay, I found none....
I don’t judge people by the color of their skin, but by their character and behavior....
I know how UN PC of me not to admit to being a raging racist....
I can live with myself....
Get past your self-hatred Yancy.
I was raised in a flat white community in NJ
I didn’t know anyone was any different than anyone else
Nor di I care
We moved to Atlanta when I was 9 years old
Abruptly race awareness was at the top of my friends thoughts
Still, I had black friends, and things were friendly
Then I moved to New Orleans
Where I’ve had guns and knives pulled on me, and chased by muggers
There was an indelible combinations n in the lethal threats
Age 16-25
Male
Black
Now I’m growing eyes out of the back of my head
With that combination
I will if he will.
In a debate on gun control between Orin Hatch and Jesse Jackson, Jesse was going on-and-on about stiffer laws on guns and the usual stuff you'd expect from Jesse. After so much of this where Orin couldn't get a word in edgewise, Orin said: "Mr. Jackson. If we removed the murders committed by black males between the ages of 18 and 30, we'd have a lower murder rate than Switzerland." Jesse's response: crickets. Is it racist to know that, or is it merely an observed reality?
If it's an observed reality, then blacks need to clean up their own house before they start yelling racism every time they have a problem.
Says the racist.
I don’t really care what he thinks, he is a silly damaged old man with such insecurities as to make him a pathological man with violent tendencies. I’ll bet the old fruit dreams of white genocide, what a pig and still conservatives will line up and declare him a god, pitiful.
Dear George:
GFY.
Let me list the forms of my white priviledge.
Conceived out of wedlock.
Sock drawer for a crib.
Sears toughskins pants with iron on patches to cover up holes.
Commodities program (aka welfare food handouts of dehydrated milk, govt cheese, dry beans etc.)
Parents shared grill cheese sandwhich for dinner 5x week and ate other meals at enlisted club where mom cocktail served to make ends meet so they could pay for a house.
Dad took his vacation days every year from air force and worked at the state fair to make extra money.
Mom sewed a lot of our clothes by hand.
Pawn shops were for buying bargains.
Coupons saved the day.
Spaghetti 2x week when grilled cheese sandwiches were not on dinner menu.
Ground beef gravy and egg noodles = a feast.
White priviledge was awesome!
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