Tagged: colorblind universalism

“Senate Republicans revealed this week that they have eliminated the phrase ‘civil rights and human rights’ from the title of a Senate Judiciary subcommittee charged with overseeing those issues. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) became chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee this month and announced the members of the six subcommittees this week. With Grassley’s announcement, the subcommittee formerly known as the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Human Rights suddenly became the Subcommittee on the Constitution. The new chairman of the newly named subcommittee is Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas). His office confirmed that it made the switch.”

I wonder how many people of color sit on this committee. This is not a good thing for African Americans since racism and racial inequality is worsening by the day in the United States of America. It’s the original version of the Constitution that they worship, the one in which blacks were considered three-fifths of a person because, we weren’t….human….and had no rights — civil, social, political or any other type of right that one could think of — to which they had to respect. If they are making decisions like this, it’s clear that many in Congress don’t think racism exists and/or that the Civil Rights Act of 1964 needs to be amended and strengthened if companies like William Morris Endeavor Entertainment (formerly known as the William Morris Agency) can intentionally maintain employment practices, policies and procedures that exclude qualified African Americans from meaningful positions and/or profit immensely by using their control over Hollywood to project the myth of black inferiority onto the conscience of the world.

I guess one could also argue, why does it matter since if committee hasn’t really done anything to eradicate institutionalized racism since it was created. No matter how you look at it, this is not a good thing for African Americans and there probably won’t be another president of color for a veeerrry long time… As stated earlier this week, it’s time that we start thinking politically, form our own political party and/or get the fuck out of this country after we collect our #reparations.

Source: Dana Liebelson and Danny J. Reilly. “Senate Republicans Remove ‘Civil and Human Rights’ From Subcommittee Name.” Huffington Post. January 23, 2014. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/23/civil-rights_n_6534922.html.

“May an [officer of the court’s] personal moral code in any way contradict the profession’s code of ethics? May an [officer of the court’s] political and/or religious beliefs and/or agenda be contrary to existing law?”

If one’s culture believes that biologically, God made them superior over all others, is it truly possible for that culture to live by the expression that “all men are created equal”? Or is that just a bunch a bullshit to make us believe that one day, that will be the actual reality in which we live and treat our fellow [wo]man?

Source: Carla D. Pratt. Should Klansmen be Lawyers? Racism As An Ethical Barrier to the Legal Profession. 30 Fl. State Law Review 857, 863. 2003.

should one’s belief in white/”Jewish” supremacy be constitutionally protected in our 21st century, “post-racial” America?

“As presidential politics began more and more to determine the nature of judicial policy and politics, the Supreme Court reflected this new trend, as Republican presidents nominated like-minded judges to the bench. The Court became the means by which Republican presidents could ensure the end of liberal civil rights policy because Justice have life tenure. These justices promulgated a formalist position on civil rights that marked a return to narrow concepts of jurisprudence and a rejection of liberal judicial activism. In the eyes of activists, the Supreme Court was no longer an articulate voice in favor of civil rights and liberties; instead, it became a threat, for the justices seemed able to limit precedents or do away with them altogether.”

Source: Bernie D. Jones. Critical Race Theory: New Strategies for Civil Rights in the New Millennium? Harvard Blackletter Law Journal. Vol. 18, pg. 2-3. 2002.

the “origins and trajectory” of “post-racial liberalism.”

[The rhetoric of post-racial liberalism] wasn’t something invented by the current President[,] [r]ather, it has its roots in the period immediately following the passage of civil rights laws in the 1960s. It was Daniel Patrick Moynihan, for instance — an advisor to President Johnson before becoming a United States Senator — who first suggested that the nation would do well to engage in “benign neglect” when it came to the issue of race.

According to Moynihan, persistent inequities between whites and blacks could best be addressed by the passage of race-neutral, universal programs to help all in need; that, in addition to focusing on presumed cultural defects in the black community, from single parent families to crime to an inadequate attachment to education and the labor market. While conservatives made some of the same arguments about so-called black cultural pathology during this period, what distinguished post-racial liberalism from the new cultural racism of the right was its stated commitment to reducing racial disparities, albeit by non-racial means.

By the late 1970s, the leading herald of post-racial liberalism was University of Chicago sociologist, William Julius Wilson, an African American scholar (now at Harvard) whose books, The Declining Significance of Race, and later, The Truly Disadvantaged, put forth the two main pillars of post-racial thought. The first of these was that racial inequities were now mostly the result of race-neutral factors like deindustrialization, the mismatch between jobs (increasingly in suburbs) and people of color (who lived mostly in cities), and inadequate investment in education and other public goods. The second pillar of Wilson’s position was the political calculation that white backlash to things like affirmative action now made it necessary to push universal, race-neutral solutions to those problems, rather than race-specific programs and efforts. In short, we needed to talk less about racism, and more about class.

It is this race-neutral approach (which involves both a rhetoric of racial transcendence and a colorblind public policy agenda), which Barack Obama advocated in his best-selling policy book, The Audacity of Hope. And it is this same approach that he endorsed all throughout the campaign for the Presidency, and which he has articulated consistently since winning the election. When asked about persistent health disparities between whites and blacks, for instance, Obama has maintained that universal coverage and making health care more affordable for all is the best way to close those gaps. When asked about the depression-level job situation in communities of color (in which even blacks with college degrees are nearly twice as likely as their white counterparts to be out of work, and college educated Latinos 2/3 more likely than similar whites to be unemployed), Obama has insisted that a “rising tide lifts all boats,” and so the stimulus package and other measures to get the economy “moving again” are the best remedies for the suffering of folks of color.

But as I show in my new book, Colorblind: The Rise of Post-Racial Politics and the Retreat from Racial Equity, President Obama and other adherents to the post-racial liberal philosophy are flatly wrong. In fact, not only are they wrong about the ability of “universal” programs to reduce racial disparities in health, income or education; they are also wrong about the political value of race-neutral approaches. At the end of the day, avoiding conversations about race will not boost support for progressive social policy, and may in fact undermine it.

Written in 2010, Tim Wise’s commentary and analysis on this topic was dead on. Having been taught by critical race theorist Derrick Bell at Harvard Law, President Obama knows very well that taking a race-neutral approach in a highly-race conscious society is not the solution to address the racial inequality that pervades all aspects of our society. His choices are very political and well calculated. Of course he doesn’t want to piss off racist whites any more than he’s already have by being a person of color in the White House. Notice that less than a decade after the Civil Rights Act of 1964’s passage, many of the so-called “liberals” were advocating that “the nation would do well to engage in ‘benign neglect’ when it came to the issue of race” and basically ignore things such as institutional, systemic and societal forms of racism. 40 years later, they are still trying to do same while still believing in the myth that they are racially superior to blacks and other people of color! Smdh. Unfortunately, this is all happening at the expense of the African American community and it must stop. Many of the gains made during the civil rights movement have been eviscerated and given that we have no real political power in this country, we cannot realistically expect that things will ever get better for us unless we mobilize our efforts and follow in the footsteps of our ancestors.  Honestly, based on this country’s history, particularly when it comes to race, I don’t think that there is any person better than Obama or time than now, to address and help  eradicate global white/”Jewish”supremacy once and for all.

Source: http://www.timwise.org/2010/06/colorblind-ambition-the-rise-of-post-racial-politics-and-the-retreat-from-racial-equity/.