It seems to me that a common consequence of this belief is that when most well-meaning white people witness or hear about a new act of racism, or encounter new evidence of institutional racism, it doesn’t stick with them. It’s not a big deal in the grand scheme of things, because things are getting better, so why remember it? And so, the example doesn’t get added to the many earlier examples that they’ve witnessed or heard that also didn’t stick with them. The evidence doesn’t accumulate into an understanding that racism is nowhere near going away, because in response to the latest example, something inside of us often says, “Well, that’s sad, but hey, things are getting better. Eventually, that kind of racism won’t happen much at all anymore. Just like racism in general.”
So when I try to talk about racism with white people, one thing that’s blocking their reception is this sense that it’s not as important as I’m trying to say it is. Because, you see, things are just not as bad as they used to be, and they’re certainly going to be better in the future.
This kind of thinking sort of short-circuits serious consideration of today’s racism; it also lets white individuals who are willing to at least acknowledge racism off the hook in terms of actually doing anything about it.
–stuff white people do: think that in terms of race, things are getting gradually better
. :: jadedhippy:cooledskin :: .
(via resmc)
Read the whole article. It articulates a lot of my own frustrations when trying to have conversations with white folks and even other people of colour (which sometimes hurts me even more) say that “it’s getting better.” It’s easy to make empty statements when you yourself do not have to live with the implications of having a different skin colour, when your families are not being hunted down and deported, or being exploited as “temporary status” labourers. Or, when you’re criminalized based on the colour of your skin, or when people assume that you’re from “somewhere else” because again, your not white. You do not have to work against institutional racism. So, if you don’t experience it, then how do you know? And furthermore, how dare you delegitimize the real pain and trauma that people of colour go through daily because, guess what, regardless if it’s “gotten better,” it still exists.
(via shakepaper)
(via novazembla) (via guerrillamamamedicine)
(via abagond)
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Yes yes lord novazembla:
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. :: jadedhippy:cooledskin :: .
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