Column: Looking globally to confront racism in America today

Thursday, March, 13, 2008; 12:00 AM | 4 | | Print

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Yet at the same time, intolerance and bigotry are still thriving. According to new data released by the Southern Poverty Law Center, hate groups are on the rise, numbering 888 in its latest statistics, a figure that's up from 602 in 2000. One of the most interesting things about hate is that it is non-discriminatory -- it is an equal opportunity emotion. Americans of all races are capable of hating people of different races; no one is exempt. I have received my share of outright racism ranging from receiving clearly racially related gestures and comments when walking in one part of D.C. to being taunted by a Nation of Islam street speaker in New York City who called me a "white devil."

Most racial tensions in this country, though, rarely extend to a blatant level of intolerance. In her groundbreaking book, "Why are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?" Beverly Tatum approached the issues regarding the invisible racial lines that separate white from black from Latino from Asian that go far beyond our skin pigmentation. She correctly highlights innate racial identities that are formed at a young age and influence our perspectives on race for the rest of our lives.

Racism is something we are all aware of and it manifests itself in a multitude of ways. One of those ways can be used as a weapon against it. I, along with many other students and the BSA (the hosting organization), welcomed comedian Aries Spears to campus last semester for his stand-up routine. In his performance, Spears made fun of just about every major racial group in America and played to stereotypes, yet he did all this in a way that diminished them -- belittling the stereotypes instead of the stereotyped by confronting them head on. While I wait for the day that a white comedian will be as free to pose similar jokes, I still applaud Spears and his powerful set.

My point is that certain inherent racism is one of those things that our society is nearly universally bound by. Only by confronting this debate in a way that ensures that we fully participate and that our children fully benefit from being raised in a diverse and tolerant society will we rid ourselves of those widely publicized and inhumane racist acts such as the recent one at UFS. Also, and perhaps more importantly, we will be able to rid ourselves of those countless racially related boundaries and injustices that occur everyday and go unreported by the international media. By blurring the conflictual differences between our various races, we will finally be free to live in a world where racism plays an increasingly marginalized role.

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Yeppity | # March 12, 2008 @ 11:25 PM — Flag Comment

Quote, "I, along with many other students and the BSA (the hosting organization), welcomed comedian Aries Spears to campus"... I didn't know that black comedians needed the support of a white guy named "Matt Eldrige" to perform at Virginia Tech. Seriously, is that the author's way of trying to give himself street cred by proclaiming to the world that he's a fan of a comedian? Or is he trying to vaguely claim credit for an event that was organized by a group of people that the author has no ties with...

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Anonymous | # March 13, 2008 @ 9:49 AM — Flag Comment

"While I wait for the day that a white comedian will be as free to pose similar jokes..." There will never be a day when a white comedian will be able to make jokes about a non-white group of people without Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson or someone else coming out of the woodwork to pull the race card and gain media attention for their own agenda.

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Amanda | # March 13, 2008 @ 12:51 PM — Flag Comment

Yeppity, you're just looking for something to get upset over. In the sentence you quoted, the author was simply saying that he attended and enjoyed the show, while acknowledging that the BSA organized the event, and all as a means of introducing the point he wanted to bring up about the comedian's work. You are perpetuating the type of small-minded racism that is denounced by this article. What would be the progress of the past 30 years, if a multi-racial audience could not attend and enjoy an entertainer together? He says, "Americans of all races are capable of hating people of different races; no one is exempt." You are proving him right.

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Yeppity | # March 13, 2008 @ 1:01 PM — Flag Comment

To quote Amanda who quotes Eldridge, +"Americans of all races are capable of hating people of different races; no one is exempt." You are proving him right. + Wait, so Amanda is claiming Yeppity is black? Interesting assumption...

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