Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
Showing Original Post only (View all)White progressives’ racial myopia: Why their colorblindness fails minorities — and the left [View all]
Challenge to white progressives, especially supporters of Sanders and Warren: try to read this without being in a defensive mindset from the get-go. There's some good insight in here. And, no, no one is calling anyone a racist, or accusing anyone of not taking issues of racial inequality seriously.
http://www.salon.com/2015/06/01/white_progressives_racial_myopia_why_their_colorblindness_fails_minorities_and_the_left/
So could Elizabeth Warrens. I love her stirring stories about her upbringing: the days when her mothers minimum wage job could support a family, when unions built the American middle class, and when Warren herself could attend a public university for almost nothing. Like a lot of white progressives, she points to the post World War II era as a kind of golden age when income inequality flattened and opportunity spread, the result of progressive action by government. Ive written about the political lessons of that era repeatedly myself.
But the golden age wasnt golden for people who werent white. Yes, African American incomes rose and unemployment declined in those years. But black people were locked out of many of the wealth-generating opportunities of the era: blocked from suburbs with restricted covenants and redlined into neighborhoods where banks wouldnt lend; left out by the GI Bill, which didnt prevent racial discrimination; neglected by labor unions, which discriminated against or outright blocked black members. (Thats why I gave my book, Whats the Matter with White People?, the subtitle Why We Long for a Golden Age that Never Was.)
Conservatives look back at those post-World War II years as a magical time when men were men, women raised children, LGBT folks didnt exist or stayed closeted, and the country was white. Progressives point to the government support that created that alleged golden age, but they too often make it sound rosier than it was for people who werent white. In fact some of those same policies of the 1950s helped create the stunning disparities between black and white family wealth, which leaves even highly paid and highly educated African Americans more vulnerable to sliding out of the middle class.
...
Ironically, our first black president has exhausted the patience of many African Americans with promises that a rising economic justice tide will lift their boats. President Obama himself has rejected race-specific solutions to the problems of black poverty, arguing that policies like universal preschool, a higher minimum wage, stronger family supports and infrastructure investment, along with the Affordable Care Act, all disproportionately help black people, since black people are disproportionately poor.
At the Progressive Agenda event last month, I heard activists complain that theyd been told the same thing: the agenda will disproportionately benefit black people, because theyre disproportionately disadvantaged, even if it didnt specifically address the core issue of criminal justice reform. (De Blasio later promised the agenda would include that issue.) But six years of hearing that from a black president has exhausted peoples patience, and white progressives arent going to be able to get away with it anymore.
...
And American politics today requires that they be corrected: no Democrat can win the presidency without consolidating the Obama coalition, particularly the African American vote.
But the golden age wasnt golden for people who werent white. Yes, African American incomes rose and unemployment declined in those years. But black people were locked out of many of the wealth-generating opportunities of the era: blocked from suburbs with restricted covenants and redlined into neighborhoods where banks wouldnt lend; left out by the GI Bill, which didnt prevent racial discrimination; neglected by labor unions, which discriminated against or outright blocked black members. (Thats why I gave my book, Whats the Matter with White People?, the subtitle Why We Long for a Golden Age that Never Was.)
Conservatives look back at those post-World War II years as a magical time when men were men, women raised children, LGBT folks didnt exist or stayed closeted, and the country was white. Progressives point to the government support that created that alleged golden age, but they too often make it sound rosier than it was for people who werent white. In fact some of those same policies of the 1950s helped create the stunning disparities between black and white family wealth, which leaves even highly paid and highly educated African Americans more vulnerable to sliding out of the middle class.
...
Ironically, our first black president has exhausted the patience of many African Americans with promises that a rising economic justice tide will lift their boats. President Obama himself has rejected race-specific solutions to the problems of black poverty, arguing that policies like universal preschool, a higher minimum wage, stronger family supports and infrastructure investment, along with the Affordable Care Act, all disproportionately help black people, since black people are disproportionately poor.
At the Progressive Agenda event last month, I heard activists complain that theyd been told the same thing: the agenda will disproportionately benefit black people, because theyre disproportionately disadvantaged, even if it didnt specifically address the core issue of criminal justice reform. (De Blasio later promised the agenda would include that issue.) But six years of hearing that from a black president has exhausted peoples patience, and white progressives arent going to be able to get away with it anymore.
...
And American politics today requires that they be corrected: no Democrat can win the presidency without consolidating the Obama coalition, particularly the African American vote.
If you want blacks, Latinos, and young people to tune you out, base your rhetoric on how awesome things were in the 1950's.
99 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
White progressives’ racial myopia: Why their colorblindness fails minorities — and the left [View all]
geek tragedy
Jun 2015
OP
Given that the article exerpt you provided contains at least one major historical inaccuracy
mythology
Jun 2015
#6
Just wanted to add, that if you want to find a racist agenda you'll probably find it
Baitball Blogger
Jun 2015
#7
Are economic populists trying to go back to the worst aspects of the 50s? I think not.
bklyncowgirl
Jun 2015
#9
l agree, but the trick is to do this without turning off too many working and middle class whites.
bklyncowgirl
Jun 2015
#12
Frederick Douglass said the same things about free Blacks and Irish immigrants back in the 1850s.
bklyncowgirl
Jun 2015
#79
"Workers of the world unite! You have nothinig to lose but your chains. You have
KingCharlemagne
Jun 2015
#80
The concern that I/we have with the economic populist "looking back, going forward" ...
1StrongBlackMan
Jun 2015
#89
Before they left, there were black posters here who talked about how they had land that was straight
Number23
Jun 2015
#20
When black people say these things, we are "manufacturing outrage" and "calling Sanders a racist"
Number23
Jun 2015
#14
Yes, "stop and listen" would be a great strategy when running for Pres. Imagine Bernie feels
Cha
Jun 2015
#51
This web site has been hostile to black opinions for a long time. NONE of this shit is new
Number23
Jun 2015
#43
"NOT ONE of the folks that dived head long over the cliff with the "manufactured outrage" and "Stop
Cha
Jun 2015
#52
Some things were better in the 1950s, like tax rates. We have to be able to say that.
Cheese Sandwich
Jun 2015
#19
I've never heard ANYONE- except members of the religious right- say things were awesome in the 50s.
Warren DeMontague
Jun 2015
#27
Anyone who did not bail on the GOP by 1972, fails the racial awareness test.
McCamy Taylor
Jun 2015
#30
I don't hold that republican membership against Warren or anyone that has awaken ...
1StrongBlackMan
Jun 2015
#71
Reaganomics and deregulation aren't good policy because they happened after the civil rights act
TheKentuckian
Jun 2015
#38
The consenus is that Obama has not addressed these issues, as his approach was not specific to
Jefferson23
Jun 2015
#46
If this election were strictly about who has the best voting record, Bernie would be the
geek tragedy
Jun 2015
#60
The Pres hasn't rejected all "race specific solutions", Jefferson.. from my previous post to the OP
Cha
Jun 2015
#81
The OP is what I am referring to, Cha..and good morning. Here she lends her opinion
Jefferson23
Jun 2015
#84
Yeah, and if I thought that that bland descriptor was an accurate gauge, I would agree.
Bonobo
Jun 2015
#49
2008 definitely strained relations, but this is someone who's been in the public
geek tragedy
Jun 2015
#66
Yep. That tactic is as old as the hills. And it certainly helps when some of the folks in that 13%
Number23
Jun 2015
#87
Some people are going to be shocked when this campaign goes south and west
DemocratSinceBirth
Jun 2015
#53
Warren was a Republican for 30 years. She is very much not my cup of tea due to her reluctance
Bluenorthwest
Jun 2015
#62