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I am white. I have spent years studying what it means to be white in a
society that proclaims race meaningless, yet is deeply divided by race.
This is what I have learned: Any white person living in the United
States will develop opinions about race simply by swimming in the water
of our culture. But mainstream sources—schools, textbooks, media—don’t
provide us with the multiple perspectives we need.
Yes, we will
develop strong emotionally laden opinions, but they will not be informed
opinions. Our socialization renders us racially illiterate. When you
add a lack of humility to that illiteracy (because we don’t know what we
don’t know), you get the break-down we so often see when trying to
engage white people in meaningful conversations about race.
Mainstream dictionary definitions reduce racism to individual racial
prejudice and the intentional actions that result. The people that
commit these intentional acts are deemed bad, and those that don’t are
good. If we are against racism and unaware of committing racist acts, we
can’t be racist; racism and being a good person have become mutually
exclusive. But this definition does little to explain how racial
hierarchies are consistently reproduced.
Social scientists understand racism as a multidimensional and highly adaptive system—a
system that ensures an unequal distribution of resources between racial
groups. Because whites built and dominate all significant institutions,
(often at the expense of and on the uncompensated labor of other
groups), their interests are embedded in the foundation of U.S. society.
While
individual whites may be against racism, they still benefit from the
distribution of resources controlled by their group. Yes, an individual
person of color can sit at the tables of power, but the overwhelming
majority of decision-makers will be white. Yes, white people can have
problems and face barriers, but systematic racism won’t be one of them.
This distinction—between individual prejudice and a system of unequal
institutionalized racial power—is fundamental. One cannot understand how
racism functions in the U.S. today if one ignores group power
relations.
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Source: The Good Men Project
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