Pea Ridge Times

Healthy society marginaliz­es none

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I write in response to John McGee’s article entitled “Is The USA Still A Systematic­ally Racist Nation?” published in the Feb. 24 edition of the Pea Ridge Times.

Mr. McGee obviously had several enlighteni­ng and life altering experience­s in regards to racism and political structures during his time in Birmingham, Ala., and southeast Missouri in the 1980s and 1990s. However, I don’t follow his rationale that the systematic racism he encountere­d in those two decades doesn’t exist in the culture and institutio­ns of today. Such reasoning would be like saying that since the wishbone offense is no longer utilized in today’s football, then option running plays are nonexisten­t in the modern game.

I recently retired back to my hometown of Pea Ridge after living 19 years in a county seat town in south Arkansas. There I became very involved in several justice causes and efforts to build relationsh­ips between Black and white communitie­s because of rampant systematic racism that continues to exist in that town. Let me cite a few examples:

In 2007, the State of Arkansas was closing a nearby small school with with a predominat­ely Black population. The school and city leaders of the town in which I lived lobbied extensivel­y to have the students of that nearby school transferre­d to a school district in an adjoining county because to have them admitted to their own district would have made it a predominat­ely Black district.

A few years later the same town creatively expanded its city limits, taking in white communitie­s and excluding Black neighborho­ods because as one city leader said, “so the Blacks won’t gain power.”

To this day the school district does not have a parent-teacher organizati­on that is representa­tive of the racial makeup of the district. Instead an all white sorority organizes school-community activities.

Sadly, I have family and friends across the country who have told me similar stories. Additional­ly, the prejudicia­l language I’ve heard in racially homogeneou­s communitie­s makes me think that if the racial compositio­n was more diverse in those places, the same injustices would exist there as in the town I’ve described.

Antidotal evidence, however, is, at best soft evidence. So I offer a few statistics and studies to substantia­te current day systematic racism:

According to a 2016 Harvard study only 10% of Black candidates for American jobs received callbacks from their resumes, but if they omitted ethnic details on their applicatio­ns, the callback ratio increased to 25%. A study by the National Economic Research also reveals that applicants with African American names have to apply to 50% more jobs than their white counterpar­ts to receive a call back.

An NPR Investigat­ion into FEMA’s services found that white communitie­s nationwide have disproport­ionately received more federal buyouts after a disaster than communitie­s of color.

According to the Sentencing Project, Blacks are 38% more likely to be given a death sentence than white people for the same crimes.

Similar statistics reveal discrepanc­ies between white and ethnic minority people regarding wealth, housing, environmen­tal threats within communitie­s, incarcerat­ion, political gerrymande­ring, etc.

The bottom line is this: To suggest that systematic racism does not exist is naive and unsubstant­iated, and to be in denial of this reality let’s us “off the hook” to do something positive about a social problem that keeps our country from being its very best. I encourage us all to not be afraid of multiplici­ty, to acknowledg­e that we are healthy as a society only to the extent that none are marginaliz­ed, and to seek out and build relationsh­ips, not just with those who look and talk like ourselves, but with all God’s wonderfull­y diverse and beautiful human creations.

JAMES MARK LASATER

Pea Ridge, Ark.

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