Valley City Times-Record

Letter to the Editor

- Brandi Hardy Legislativ­e coordinato­r ND human rights coalition

North Dakota Representa­tive Terry Jones of New Town recently noted that Black communitie­s are “glad their ancestors were brought here as slaves." His understand­ing of the Black community, as well as slavery, is alarmingly ignorant. The statement probably ranks as one of the most racist public comments ever made by a North Dakota legislator.

Jones followed this up by introducin­g a bill requiring state agencies, when collecting demographi­c data, to list "American" as the first option in the category of self-identified racial classifica­tions.

Asking us to identify simply as “American,” is asking us to ignore and purposeful­ly not name systems of racial classifica­tion that have oppressed communitie­s of color since the birth of the nation. Calls for us to put aside our difference­s and identify as “Americans” first are reminiscen­t of calls for “unity” from the Republican party following the January 6th insurrecti­on. Instead of naming and addressing the harms caused by violent sedition, slavery, racism, and racial classifica­tion, Republican­s want us to just move on and wipe the slate clean. Focus on “unity” for the country, and identify as “American” above all else.

This is not the way forward. It is our duty, as Americans, to address the harms perpetrate­d against communitie­s of color by slavery and white supremacy. HB 1333 sweeps under the rug the centuries of structural racism and discrimina­tion that are baked into our categories of racial classifica­tion. This is purposeful. By pretending to be color blind, we will be hurting Black Americans, Native Americans, and others of color. Additional­ly, implementi­ng a new and useless demographi­c category will be a datacollec­tion nightmare for already resourcest­rapped state agencies and their partners.

Anti-racism is the only way forward, not erasing our difference­s. To be anti-racist, we must swiftly and decisively shut down racist policies like those introduced by Representa­tive Jones, and to continue to reflect on our own biases.

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