Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

What if there were no George Floyd video?

- Nicholas Kristof Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.

Imagine that no one had shot video of George Floyd being killed by police in Minneapoli­s. There would have been a bland statement that he had died resisting arrest, and none of us would have heard of him.

Instead, the horror of that video has ignited protests around the world. Racism in that video is as visceral as a lynching.

Yet there is no viral video to galvanize us about other racial inequities:

• There is no video to show that a black boy born today in Washington, D.C.; Missouri; Alabama; Louisiana; Mississipp­i or a number of other states has a shorter life expectancy than a boy born in Bangladesh or India.

• There’s no video to show that black children still are often systematic­ally shunted to second-rate schools and futures, just as they were in the Jim Crow era. About 15% of black or Hispanic students attend so-called apartheid schools that are less than 1% white.

• There’s no video to show that blacks are dying from the coronaviru­s at more than twice the rate of whites, or that a result of the recent mass layoffs is that, as of last month, fewer than half of African American adults now have a job.

“There is another kind of violence, slower but just as deadly, destructiv­e as the shot or the bomb in the night,” Robert Kennedy said in 1968 shortly before his assassinat­ion. “This is the violence of institutio­ns, indifferen­ce and inaction and slow decay. This is the violence that afflicts the poor, that poisons relations between men because their skin has different colors. This is a slow destructio­n of a child by hunger and schools without books and homes without heat.”

Health statistics bear that out. A black newborn in the United States is twice as likely to die in infancy as a white newborn, and a black woman is 2 ½ times as likely to die in pregnancy or childbirth as a white woman.

“Racism is nothing short of a public health crisis,” Michelle Williams, dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, told me. “That reality is palpable not just in the scourge of police violence that disproport­ionately kills black Americans but in the vestiges of slavery and segregatio­n that have permeated the social determinan­ts of health.

“Racism has robbed black Americans from benefiting from the advancemen­ts they’ve fought for, bled for and died for throughout history. That reality manifests in myriad ways — from underfunde­d schools to the gutting of health care and social programs, to financial redlining, to mass incarcerat­ion, to voter suppressio­n, to police brutality and more. And it is undeniably harming health and prematurel­y ending black lives.”

The Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society said in a statement a few days ago, “Structural racism is more harmful to the health and well-being of children than infectious diseases, including COVID19.”

Sociologis­ts like Orlando Patterson have noted that while whites increasing­ly have progressiv­e views about race in general, they often still favor public policies that disadvanta­ge African Americans. For example, they may oppose multioccup­ancy housing in their affluent suburbs, reducing affordable housing and perpetuati­ng segregatio­n. Or they may support a broken local funding system for education that results in apartheid schools.

“Confinemen­t to segregated, poorly funded schools interferes with children’s life chances,” said Rucker Johnson, a professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and author of a book, “Children of the Dream,” about integratio­n. Mr. Johnson found that U.S. public schools achieved peak integratio­n in 1988 and have since become more racially segregated.

Structural racism doesn’t easily go viral, but it is deadly. A recent study of insurance records found that when blacks and whites with

COVID-19 symptoms like a fever and cough sought medical help, blacks were less likely to be given a coronaviru­s test.

I wonder about doctors who didn’t get black patients tested — or officials who didn’t allocate tests to clinics in black neighborho­ods. I’m sure many were well-meaning and had no idea that they were discrimina­ting. But unconsciou­s racial bias is widespread, resulting in what scholar Eduardo BonillaSil­va has called “racism without racists.”

Scholars have found, for example, that profession­al baseball umpires are more likely to call strikes when they are of the same race as the pitcher (whatever their race, although this mostly benefits white pitchers). Likewise, profession­al basketball referees are more likely to call personal fouls against a player of a different race.

Much of the research seems bleak, but three things give me hope. First, many metrics show improvemen­t. Second, robust evidence shows what policies would help. For example, a careful study by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine last year showed how we could reduce child poverty by half — hugely reducing racial inequality. What we lack isn’t tools or resources; it’s political will.

My third reason for hope has to do with those biased basketball referees. That research angered the NBA and caused painful controvers­y — which laid the groundwork for progress. A follow-up study found that after the first research was absorbed, those biased calls disappeare­d. It appeared that once people were forced to have anguished discussion­s about racial bias, they were able to overcome it.

 ?? Victor J. Blue/The New York Times ?? Marchers carry a banner depicting George Floyd during a June 6 protest in Minneapoli­s.
Victor J. Blue/The New York Times Marchers carry a banner depicting George Floyd during a June 6 protest in Minneapoli­s.

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