Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

We can’t ignore the realities of racism

- Grant Oliphant is president of The Heinz Endowments. Maxwell King is president & CEO of The Pittsburgh Foundation.

The Post-Gazette has done our community and the cause of justice a grave disservice with its Jan. 15 lead editorial, “Reason as Racism,” published of all days on Martin Luther King Day, when we as a nation commemorat­e the ongoing fight to end racism in our country.

The editorial, which also appeared in the Toledo Blade, is a silly mix of deflection and distortion that provides cover for racist rhetoric while masqueradi­ng as a defense of decency. It is unworthy of a proud paper and an embarrassm­ent to Pittsburgh.

You would think an editorial loftily decrying “name calling” in public life would criticize the president for his reported recent descriptio­n of Haiti and some African nations as “s-hole countries.” Sadly, however, the piece aims its venom at those who rightly described the president’s words as racist.

It is a sorry pastiche of whitewashi­ng drivel. It builds a straw-man argumentth­at the term “racist” is too often used to silence opponents, completely ignoring this president’s well-establishe­d pattern of repeatedly invoking race to divide the country and attack his enemies.A president who defends Nazis and white supremacis­ts has defined himself, as did his initial failure to deny the language from his immigratio­n meeting and the reported glee his advisers took in his “tough language,” which they thought would play to the base. If you don’t want to be called a racist, don’t be racist.

The editorial dismisses racism as an overused word that should be “confined” to mass murderers like Dylann Roof and convenient­ly distant bigots of the past like Bull Connor. But the very struggle at the heart of Martin Luther King’s fight for civil rights was the insidious way racism permeates everyday life and language. Damning countries where people are primarily brown or black while wishing for more immigrants from a predominan­tly white country “like Norway” is the very definition of a racist lens, and the only way racism will ever end is for those with power to call it what it is.

Instead, the Post-Gazette editorial hides behind the idea that all presidents speak crassly in private, and that a different word would have offended less, as though the word was the issue and not who it was used to describe. Never mind that this president, more than any in modern memory, uses private vulgarity as public pronouncem­ent. Never mind that how the American president characteri­zes other countries, races, ethnicitie­s, religions and peoples sets the tone for how we are seen by others around the world. Never mind that belittling whole swaths of the planet’s population is unworthy of a great nation, let alone a compassion­ate people.

“So what?” asks the PostGazett­e twice, as if to underscore its dismissal, calling the whole controvers­y a distractio­n from the “real” issue of immigratio­n. That is the most offensive flaw in its argument. Here’s what it forgets: Perhaps the central point of contention in this nation’s immigratio­n debate is the role of race and racism in deciding who is welcome here. No serious person disagrees that we should have more secure borders. But who gets to come inside those borders, and how that’s decided, and how to ensure it is done fairly and without bias, is the fundamenta­l question.

It matters profoundly whether the Trump administra­tion’s stance on who belongs in America is rooted in any kind of racial view of who is or gets to be an American. In dismissing this controvers­y as irrelevant, the Post-Gazette proves itself ignorant of or indifferen­t to what’s really being debated in Washington, and to the ongoing fight for justice that Martin Luther King Day commemorat­es.

Pittsburgh, like many communitie­s around the country, still struggles with becoming the sort of fair and inclusive community where all feel welcome and have real opportunit­ies to thrive. We remain committed to that goal and believe we can get there.

But it will require honesty from all of us, including our newspaper of record. The president’s words were simply and frankly racist. To excuse racism in the name of politics, to attempt to dress it up in fancy clothes and camouflage it, is to condone it.

Does the Post-Gazette really want to be on that side of history? We urge the newspaper to rethink its position and stand squarely with those working toward a more just future for all the people who call our community home.

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