The Columbus Dispatch

Biased boyfriend’s hatred can be basis for breakup

- — Fiancee Write to Carolyn Hax —whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com.

Dear Carolyn: I am engaged to a great guy with many wonderful qualities and I am looking forward to spending the rest of my life with him.

But he is prejudiced against one specific race, which also happens to be the race of several of my ex-boyfriends. He works in law enforcemen­t, so part of me wants to attribute the racism to the fact that he has seen this particular race do many horrible things that I haven’t. This seems like a pretty trivial thing — we all have some sort of bias or prejudice — but it’s getting to the point where I can’t even talk to a member of this race in a work meeting about a work-related project without my fiance turning it into a huge fight and accusing me of trying to be a liaison for all [race] people.

He doesn’t think he’s doing anything wrong, and I end up being the one to apologize and try to fix things. The amount of time and energy we have spent arguing about this race is embarrassi­ng.

I know you can’t change anyone, you can only change yourself, but short of moving to a commune in Massachuse­tts, I’m not sure what I can do. This seems like such a small thing to break up over, but it also seems like something I can’t argue about for the rest of my life.

If thinking you’re superior by birth to an entire group of humans is “trivial,” then what exactly is significan­t?

Do your [race] ex-boyfriends also wave off racism as “such a small thing”? Since they ... haven’t lost out on jobs for being [race]? Or been the butt of dehumanizi­ng jokes? Or been looked down upon as a less-worthy other, wordlessly so as to deny them any recourse against it?

Or been pulled over and interrogat­ed for no discernibl­e infraction besides driving while [race] by your “great guy” [race]-prejudging fiance?

Would you admit to them, to their faces, that these things register as trivial to you because they don’t affect you personally?

And: When was the last time you saw a race do something horrible?

A person. A person does something horrible. Not a race.

And yes, we all have some biases and prejudices, but the duty of all decent people is to hold ourselves to the highest standards and be vigilant about not acting on them — not to rage at our loved ones in defense of our roiling hate.

The person you want to marry and you say has “many wonderful qualities” is doing something horrible and wrong and needs either to get counseling immediatel­y for his judgment-impairing anger or get out of law enforcemen­t. Ideally both.

Sweet deity. I fear for [race] people in his jurisdicti­on.

And I fear for you. If you’re not connecting these dots yourself, what others aren’t you connecting? And why?

You can break up with your fiance immediatel­y. Over these terrible, horrible, not at all trivial things.

And be careful when you do. Anger is notorious for splashing onto whoever stands too close.

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