Los Angeles Times

An awakening?

Re “How to sustain momentum,” Opinion, July 7

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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s moving op-ed article about social reform hit on a reason for apathy from white moderates when tensions subside after achieving momentum from protests. He cites the brilliant observatio­n by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that the white moderate “prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice.” Abdul-Jabbar suggests “reform in our systems of justice, policing, healthcare, education and economic security, all of which give preference to white people.”

A more effective message to white people is this: The “presence of justice” for Blacks does not mean less justice or increased economic insecurity for whites but rather more security for everyone. If you are the guy at the top, you don’t want to trade places with the guy at the bottom, but our social system does not have to be a vertical structure. A social contract with room for all on a wide plateau can serve everyone equally. I will not be knocked off my perch as a white woman if I share it with more Black people.

Kathy Harty, Sierra Madre

Abdul-Jabbar makes several excellent points, including that “meaningful and measurable progress for any marginaliz­ed group — people of color, immigrants, women, LGBTQ+ people, Muslims, Jews — can be achieved only when all besieged groups pull together.”

What all such marginaliz­ed groups have in common is that they are dehumanize­d by another more powerful group.

No one enjoys unfair and dehumanizi­ng treatment from another, whether it be a single person or an entire society. In fact, scientific studies show that even dogs and chimpanzee­s can recognize and will protest unfair treatment.

Finally, our inability or unwillingn­ess to “walk a mile in their shoes,” something that permits us to dehumanize and abase one another, is itself a form of self-dehumaniza­tion.

Chuck Almdale

North Hills

Abdul-Jabbar asks why the antiracism that is taking hold now did not do so after events in the past. I believe that we have a historic confluence of events at this moment in time.

Much of the credit has to go to President Trump, who put racism front and center, exposing the evil in sharp contrast to the ideals that most Americans long attributed to themselves. There seems to be the will to rid ourselves of the shame and burden of the lawless and mean-spirited Trump administra­tion in this country right now.

The other aspect is the Black leadership that rose to meet the challenge. After the killing of George Floyd in May, Black Lives Matter was able to organize large and peaceful demonstrat­ions with a strong message of inclusion and justice.

This is a moment in history. The things that can be achieved now, as happened during the civil rights era of the 1960s, are monumental.

Michael Telerant

Los Angeles

I applaud Abdul-Jabbar’s proposal for a centralize­d website devoted to social justice reforms. Let’s keep brainstorm­ing.

Assembly Bill 3121, introduced by state Assemblywo­man Shirley Weber (DSan Diego) and moving through the California Legislatur­e, would create a task force to study the legacy of slavery and recommend who would be eligible for reparation­s and what form compensati­on would take.

In the meantime, what if a celebrity with the bona fides of Abdul-Jabbar created a fund to collect donations from individual­s and businesses that can be used for college tuition, student loan forgivenes­s, housing down payments, business grants and other help for

Black people in Los Angeles?

Kathy Saenz

Los Angeles

In calling for sustaining momentum in social reform, Abdul-Jabbar poses a very necessary next step now that greater numbers of Americans have awakened to oppressive inequality.

His suggestion of a website for monitoring proposals and progress is a refreshing reminder that facts, data and proof matter in measuring what’s important. Moving to a position of evidence-driven action when we’ve lived so long in an era that valorizes opinion won’t be easy.

But to underscore the importance of data, such a dashboard, accessible to all, could be the daily public face of efforts coordinate­d under a new Cabinet-level position.

Roberta Lessor

Newport Beach

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS raise their hands at a Black Lives Matter protest in Los Angeles on June 20.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times DEMONSTRAT­ORS raise their hands at a Black Lives Matter protest in Los Angeles on June 20.

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