On Wednesday morning The Rootâs political editor, Jason Johnson, appeared on MSNBC Live, as he often does, alongside Matt Schlapp of the American Conservative Union. Johnson is a veteran political analyst, writer and politics professor at Morgan State University. (Although I have no idea how he does all of this, because every time I turn on my TV, he is a guest on various news shows explaining politics to the audience. My personal theory is that there is a group of highly intelligent Jason Johnson clones who study politics by night and educate the public by day.)
Everything was going along swimmingly until they delved into the April Ryan-Sean Spicer controversy. Then this happened:
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Stop shaking your head.
This exchange is a perfect illustration of an argument The Root tries to make daily: White people do not get to determine whether something is racist or not, and Johnson tries to make this point before the discourse turns into a boxing-match promotion. (By the way, Vegas has 3-1 odds on Johnson in the fifth round.)
Unlike most of the White House pool, April Ryan ainât scared of the Trump administration, and âScrappy-Dooâ Spicer doesnât like that. For context, we should remember that Ryan is the same correspondent who confronted Donald Trump about dodging the Congressional Black Caucus, and Donald Doll-Hands responded by asking her to set up a cookout for him to meet them. Ryan is the same reporter whom the Trump administrationâs secretary of black stuffâOmarosa Manigaultâthreatened by telling Ryan that the White House had a dossier on her.Â
Anyone who thinks that telling an adult human being what she should do with her body has nothing to do with her sex or race should refer to the time NBCâs Peter Alexander told Trump his Electoral College boasts were lies, and Trump told him to stop smiling. You should stream the video of how condescendingly Spicer treated CNNâs Jim Acosta when Acosta asked the same question about Russia that Ryan asked. Maybe Johnson didnât see the clip when Spicer told another correspondent to sit down, or to stop acting like that.
Oh, right. That has never happenedâexcept to April Ryan.
Whenever the Ronald McDonald of presidents is confronted on his racism, anti-Semitism or xenophobia, he always responds with, âI am the least racist person you know,â and moves on to the next subject of his incompetence. In his mind, painting black people as poorly educated victims of inner-city crime or in need of âlaw and order,â or insinuating that all Muslims are terrorists-in-waiting, isnât racist because itâs not what he meant. Many Caucasians donât hate people of color, and since they donât get on their knees and ask strawberry-blond Jesus to wipe black people off the face of the earth, nothing that they ever do could possibly be racist.
Schlappâs writing off of Sean Spicerâs act as not racist or sexist would be the equivalent of his watching Spicer run over Ryan with a truck and explaining it away by saying, âShe canât be hurt because he didnât mean to hit her. Come on, Spicer has a lot of stuff going on when he drives, but he drives like this all the time. Stop complaining just because he crushed her internal organs.â
Thatâs not how this works. Thatâs not how anything works.
Racism and sexism are measured by their impact, not their intent. You donât get to punch people in the mouth and tell them whether or not they should bleed. Jason Johnson tried to explain this to Schlapp, but the conservative water carrier took exception to Johnson becauseâof courseâSchlapp understands that the white-privilege emergency kit comes with explicit instructions on deflecting racism: Never admit to its existence.
And that is the problem.
Schlapp yelled at, turned his back on and interrupted Johnson for the same reason Spicer reprimanded Ryan: because Spicer and Schlapp canât bear to hear anyone contradict their lies. Spicer is apt to get plum-faced and confrontational with anyone, as is Schappâbut the disrespect of Johnson and Ryan is indicative of Spicerâs and Schlappâs privilege. Their whiteness endows them with enough arrogance to tell another human being to shut the hell up. How dare April Ryan question Sean Spicer just because she is paid to ask questions during a question-and-answer session? What gives Jason Johnson the right to comment on racism just because MSNBC invited him to specifically comment on racism?
Johnson knows that the only reason anyone would tell a grown-ass woman what she could do with her body is sexism or racism. Perhaps neither Spicer nor Shlapp even realizes that their actions are subtle acts of reductive supremacy. During this entire exchange, I couldnât turn the channel or scream at the television because I couldnât believe that in 2017, Johnson actually had to sit on national TV and explain why a white man telling a black woman what she can do with her body, emotions and gestures wasnât acceptable.
I was even more flabbergasted at the sight of a white man telling Johnsonâand Iâm paraphrasing hereââYou donât know what youâre talking about when it comes to racism, but I do.â I wanted to scream or at least have Johnsonâs clone invite him outside.
But I couldnât stop shaking my head.
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