The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Election is teaching divisivene­ss in schools

- By Carlo Manuel Carlo Manuel is a senior at Wheeler High School in Cobb County. He is a writer and content creator for the school’s student-produced “Wildcat TV.” Carlo will attend Georgia State University next year and plans to study filmmaking.

Whatever you think of him, Donald Trump has irrevocabl­y altered America. That includes education, and not just by putting Betsy DeVos in charge of it.

He has also changed the experience of education.

I’m a senior at Wheeler High School in east Cobb. Over the past year, I’ve seen a shift in how kids interact. Everything has become more tense — between liberals and conservati­ves, between races, genders and religions.

Amongst minorities, a focal point of bitterness has become those who paraded the hallways in victory after Trump’s win. And in the year since his inaugurati­on, something unsettling has been building among many young minorities who are fed up with Donald Trump:

Some of us are learning not to trust white people.

“Him being president has shown a lot of true colors of the white people around me,” Destiny Gossett, a black junior at my school told me by text. “Like them publicly agreeing with him, or wearing ‘Make America Great Again’ stuff.”

Those in the four-year age range that fill high schools only experience­d two presidents before Trump. There was George W. Bush, who we were too young to pay attention to, then Barack Obama, a black president who is Trump’s polar opposite in every imaginable way.

During the Obama

years, a sense of unity pervaded my school, which is 73 percent minority and 45 percent female. Kids of all different background­s sat together at lunch. We participat­ed in afterschoo­l programs and clubs together. When I went to parties, I found diversity.

I was lucky enough to grow up during these years. I’m not saying things were perfect. Racism, sexism, homophobia and xenophobia existed, but they seemed to be in the recesses of our minds.

Tensions bubbled up as the 2016 election season slugged along. Trump spoke disparagin­gly of Hispanics; white people cheered as black people were attacked at Trump rallies.

In my world, divisions emerged.

At school the morning after the election, Trump supporters in red hats and MAGA shirts — exclusivel­y white, mostly male — radiated arrogance. Clinton supporters walked the halls with heads bowed in anguish. Tensions boiled.

Our principal appeared

on the school’s morning news broadcast to remind us that all elections ended with happy and unhappy people, and it was important to “keep a level head” about things. Clearly, he saw land mines ahead.

But the fact that the principal had to address the student body in such a way — as if addressing an epidemic of school fights or conduct infraction­s — spoke volumes about what this election meant for our future.

Where we once engaged each other in minor bickering over political opinions, now we realigned into cliques, mostly along racial lines, eyeing others

with cold detachment.

Little things started to add up.

We always swapped racial jokes, but now they were less in jest and more for offense. Self-segregatio­n amped up in the cafeteria. Both white and black students uttered racial slurs once thought off-limits.

Over time — as we lived through Charlottes­ville, the dog-whistle cabinet appointmen­ts, the callousnes­s toward Puerto Rico — I noticed more black, Hispanic and Asian students talking about “how white people are.”

“People were already standoffis­h towards white

people anyways,” Destiny, the junior at my high school, said, “and their public actions on news outlets and social media just make it worse.”

Alex Robinson, a black senior at Chapel Hill High School in Douglas County, remembers a pre-Trump incident that became a harbinger of things to come.

“I remember a couple years ago a group of white people came to Douglasvil­le waving around Confederat­e flags on their trucks and terrorizin­g a little black kid’s birthday party,” he told me in a text message. “If constant negative images of white people keep being shown on the news then we will begin to form even more negative stereotype­s.”

At lunch one day, I saw a white football player start to sit down with a group of black athletes. One of the athletes looked up and shouted, “Nah, you’re supposed to sit over there, right?”

I’d never seen anything like that happen.

I asked Renata Santos, a senior at my school whose parents immigrated from Brazil, about anti-white sentiments among Hispanics. She was blunt: “They have a valid reason.”

For whites, it hurts being put on the defensive.

A senior at Westlake High School, August Wilson, supported Trump during the election but says he has since changed his mind.

“I didn’t know that things would get this bad with him,” August said. “(Trump) is giving white people a bad rep, kind of, but I think people also should be mindful that all of us aren’t like that.”

As for me, I just want us all to keep talking. Trump won’t be in charge forever. My suspicion is he’ll be like the flu: really hard to take, but ultimately survivable.

 ?? STEPHEN B. MORTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A vendor sells “Make America Great Again” hats before a rally for then-candidate Donald Trump in North Augusta, S.C., in February 2016. Today’s writer, a Cobb County high school student, says the election of President Trump has changed race relations...
STEPHEN B. MORTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES A vendor sells “Make America Great Again” hats before a rally for then-candidate Donald Trump in North Augusta, S.C., in February 2016. Today’s writer, a Cobb County high school student, says the election of President Trump has changed race relations...
 ??  ?? Carlo Manuel
Carlo Manuel

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