Earlier today, the New York Times published a piece where Margaret Renkl, a very nice white lady, instructed other very nice white ladies and gentlemen on how to be nicer to their racist brethren. If youâve ever thought to yourself, Self, how can I be more magnanimous to racists?, âHow to Talk to a Racistâ is your huckleberry.
Admittedly, for this new subgenre of discourse that rose to prominence after the electionâwhere liberal whites either twisted themselves into logical origami trying to explain the feelings of Trump voters without using the words âraceâ or âracismâ or where they took deep and empathetic dives into the hearts of said racistsâRenklâs piece isnât the worst. She correctly acknowledges that white people can harbor racist beliefs without believing themselves to be racist. She makes clear that there arenât many degrees of separation from the self-righteous white liberal and the Trump voter sharing anti-Obama memes on Facebook. And, most importantly, she implied that itâs on âgoodâ white people to change the hearts and minds of racists.
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We (black people) just donât have the same accesses they do and we donât have the same ability to elicit any sort of sympathy in racists. Study after study has proven that, when confronted on their racism by black people, white people actually get more racist. This is a problem white people built, and itâs a problem they need to fix.
Where Renklâs piece faltersâand where many similar pieces in this subgenre have also falteredâis when she attempts to distinguish between white people who harbor some prejudices and âvicious white supremacists.â
Vicious white supremacists live among us, no doubt, and if they get their way they will be marching again on Aug. 12.âthe anniversary of their deadly rally in Charlottesville, Va., last yearâthis time in Washington D.C. Such unrepentant racists will probably never come to understand the harm they have done and are doing to this country, much less the harm they are doing to their own souls. Every minute of public outrage feeds their hunger for validation. Ignore those people. When this episode of âThe Ugly Americanâ is finally canceled, theyâll crawl back into their hidy-holes again.
Youâd think that, by now, the white people who seem committed (or, at the very least, want to seem committed) to battling and extinguishing racism would have realized that these âvicious white supremacistsâ like the ones who marched in Charlottesville arenât just conspicuous Nazis and nitwits with neckbeards. Theyâre grad students and accountants. Theyâre pharmacists and school principals. Theyâre police officers and baristas. Theyâre tattoo artists and radiologists in the Bronx. You carpool with them, you live next to them, and youâve matched with them on Tinder. They are everywhere. And because they are everywhere, you canât just, as Renkl suggests, âignore those people.â
The impulse to ignore this reality is understandable, though, because acknowledging it makes this problem far deeper, far more pervasive, far more labyrinthic, and far more essential to America than something that can be solved with a few polite conversations with your Fox & Friends-frequenting neighbor. There is no foreseeable cancellation of âThe Ugly Americanâ because itâs our highest-rated and longest-running show.
But man, if it ainât fucking annoying reading and watching and listening to these white people who claim to want to get to the bottom of Americaâs sludgy morass of racism without listening to us tell them exactly how deep this shit is. And also without realizing that to get to the bottom, they need to get their whole entire asses in there too. You canât do that and also get to be polite. It just doesnât work that way. But I guess thatâs the point.
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