race in usa Andrew M. Manis For
much of the last forty years, ever since America "fixed"
its race problem in the Civil Rights and Voting Rights
Acts, we white people have been impatient with African
Americans who continued to blame race for their
difficulties. Often we have heard whites ask, "When
are African Americans finally going to get over it? Now I
want to ask: "When are we White Americans going to
get over our ridiculous obsession with skin color? Recent
reports that "Election Spurs Hundreds' of Race
Threats, Crimes" should frighten and infuriate every
one of us. Having grown up in "Bombingham,"
Alabama in the 1960s, I remember overhearing an avalanche
of comments about what many white classmates and their
parents wanted to do to John and Bobby Kennedy and Martin
Luther King. Eventually, as you may recall, in all three
cases, someone decided to do more than "talk the
talk." Since
our recent presidential election, to our eternal shame we
are once again hearing the same reprehensible talk I
remember from my boyhood. We white people have controlled
political life in the disunited colonies and United
States for some 400 years on this continent. Conservative
whites have been in power 28 of the last 40 years. Even
during the eight Clinton years, conservatives in Congress
blocked most of his agenda and pulled him to the right.
Yet never in that period did I read any headlines
suggesting that anyone was calling for the assassinations
of presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan, or either of the
Bushes. Criticize them, yes. Call for their impeachment,
perhaps. But there were no bounties on their heads. And
even when someone did try to kill Ronald Reagan, the
perpetrator was non-political mental case who wanted
merely to impress Jody Foster. But
elect a liberal who happens to be Black and we're back in
the sixties again. At this point in our history, we
should be proud that we've proven what conservatives are
always saying -- that in America anything is possible,
EVEN electing a black man as president. But instead we
now hear that school children from Maine to California
are talking about wanting to "assassinate Obama."
Fighting the urge to throw up, I can only ask, "How
long?" How long before we white people realize we
can't make our nation, much less the whole world, look
like us? How long until we white people can - once and
for all - get over this hell-conceived preoccupation with
skin color? How long until we white people get over the
demonic conviction that white skin makes us superior? How
long before we white people get over our bitter
resentments about being demoted to the status of equality
with non-whites? How
long before we get over our expectations that we should
be at the head of the line merely because of our white
skin? How long until we white people end our silence and
call out our peers when they share the latest racist
jokes in the privacy of our white-only conversations? I
believe in free speech, but how long until we white
people start making racist loudmouths as socially
uncomfortable as we do flag burners? How long until we
white people will stop insisting that blacks exercise
personal responsibility, build strong families, educate
themselves enough to edit the Harvard Law Review, and
work hard enough to become President of the United States,
only to threaten to assassinate them when they do? How
long before we starting "living out the true meaning"
of our creeds, both civil and religious, that all men and
women are created equal and that "red and yellow,
black and white" all are precious in God's sight?
Until this past November 4, I didn't believe this country
would ever elect an African American to the presidency. I
still don't believe I'll live long enough to see us white
people get over our racism problem. But here's my three-point
plan: First, everyday that Barack Obama lives in the
White House that Black Slaves Built, I'm going to pray
that God (and the Secret Service) will protect him and
his family from us white people. Second,
I'm going to report to the FBI any white person I
overhear saying, in seriousness or in jest, anything of a
threatening nature about President Obama. Third, I'm
going to pray to live long enough to see America surprise
the world once again, when white people can "in
spirit and in truth" sing of our damnable color
prejudice, "We HAVEovercome." Andrew
M. Manis is associate professor of history at Macon State
College in Georgia and wrote this for an editorial
in the Macon Telegraph. |