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Edited on Sat Feb-21-09 02:26 PM by Empowerer
I'll begin with a true story (stay with me - it has a point)
When I was a young associate working as the first and theretofore only black lawyer in a large law firm, a client who had never seen me repeatedly used the n-word in a telephone conversation. I immediately went to the firm's senior partner - I'll call him Rob, because that was his name -, who just laughed it off. The fact that I was shaking and in tears meant little to him - he just told me I needed to grow a thicker skin.
I then went to speak to my direct report, a more junior partner, whom I'll call John because that was his name. John listened to me and then said, "I'm sorry that happened. I can understand why you're upset."
A few weeks later, John came into my office and told me that the previous night at his country club, a friend told a "black" joke. This was a common occurrence, he said and he never thought much about it before.
"But last night I thought about you and how you would have felt if you were in the room, I felt terrible. So I told him he was way out of line and everybody just stared at me because no one had ever challenged him before."
This siuation is very similar. It's often hard for those in the majority to really understand how painful and offensive racist expressions such as this cartoon are to minorities. But when they witness a black friend or colleague get subjected to such things, it brings an entirely different perspective.
In this instance, the cartoonist was like the country club jokester who had always gotten away with his unacceptable behavior because no one ever called him on it.
But he and his editor misread the environment. President Obama has become such a familiar figure that even many white Americans who have rarely interacted with blacks now see him as a friend. In the past, many of them may never have thought twice about that cartoon, but now they see it through an entirely different lens and know it was a vicious swipe at their black President-friend. Like John, they are speaking up and some folks are stunned because they're no longer dealing with just a small group of blacks that they can try to dismiss, marginalize and shut up with bullying accusations that they're "playing the race card."
Yet they can still depend on their apologists - the Robs of the world - who will try to downplay the whole thing and tell the growing numbers of people who recognize and object to such racist expressions, "Oh, just grow a thicker skin!".
Fortunately, such apologists are being exposed, are outnumbered and have so little credibility that they will soon be irrelevant
This is a very positive change.
The End
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