I am sure that you have heard about the firing of USDA official, Shirley Sherrod, based on remarks she made at an NAACP event. Some blogger, who has made quite a name for himself, posted on YouTube portions of Ms Sherrod's speech about her struggle to help white farmers when she considered how Black farmers had historically been treated. Upshot is that Ms. Sherrod was asked to resign without so much as a hearing; only to find out that the clip was edited and posted out of context.
My response to this set of events is the same as my response to all similar ones: RACISM is as AMERICAN as CAPITALISM. And you can not talk about one without evoking the other.I wonder what will be the financial gains for the blogger. Yes, it's always at work--present blogger included.
Anyway, Ms Sherrod's actions/emotions towards the white farmers was an American of African descent's knee-jerk response in at least two ways: 1)She possesses a Black American collective consciousness based on historical and personal experiences in America; and 2) Rooted in that
consciousness is an African-informed mindset that is spiritually based that was also born out the survival necessities of her African ancestors. The latter would not allow her to Other even the descendants of an Oppressor. Similarly, with her sense of justice and perhaps her spiritual consciousness, she was compelled to share with the group how the problem was not it appeared. And experienced a sense of personal growth and enlightenment, an experience her audience probably shared.
I agree with her sentiments in that the problem is not as it appeared. For Ms Sherrod, it was not race but class--about haves and have-nots. For
me it's not ONLY about race and captial; it is about honesty. Until American gets honest--as did Ms Sherrod, She will always be apologizing for something.
I am so sick of the superficial apologies for which no one is really sorry. Except in this case--the White House official that fired her were
acting out of the usual American hypocrisy-- another knee-jerk racist response. I'm referring to is our infamous penitent non-apologetic apologies. Can we just stop with the insincerity. For me, it's like asking a child to apologize when they sincerely and wholeheartedly intended to kick the adult
that pissed them off.
What we need to do is acknowledge the pervasiveness of our racism and TALK PEOPLE. As hopeful as I am, I get the sense that we'd rather "go on pretending and living a lie" (a la Gladys Knight) than to be honest about the poverty of our race relationships.
BUT, if we are not going to take this doctor's advice then we should all
resign--just quit. My looming fear is that we already have, which is why we continue to apologize for things we are not at all sorry about.
Sunday, July 25, 2010
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment