Bangkok Post

WHITE SUPREMACY - SLOGAN OR REALITY?

Buzzword helps divide a nation

- MICHAEL POWELL

As July 4 and its barbecues arrived this year, activist and former NFL quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick declared, “We reject your celebratio­n of white supremacy.” Movie star Mark Ruffalo said in February that Hollywood had been swimming for a century in “a homogeneou­s culture of white supremacy.”

The director of the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, one of New York City’s most prestigiou­s museums, acknowledg­ed this summer that his institutio­n was grounded in white supremacy, while four blocks uptown, the curatorial staff of the Guggenheim decried a work culture suffused in it.

The Los Angeles Times editorial board issued an apology two weeks ago describing itself as “deeply rooted in white supremacy” for at least its first 80 years. In England, the British National Library’s Decolonisi­ng Working Group cautioned employees that a belief in “colour-blindness” or the view that “mankind is one human family” are examples of “covert white supremacy.”

In a time of plague and protest, two words — “white supremacy” — have poured into the rhetorical bloodstrea­m with force and power. With President Donald Trump’s overt use of racist rhetoric, a spate of police killings of black people and the rise of far-right extremist groups, many see the phrase as a more accurate way to describe today’s racial realities, with older descriptio­ns like “bigotry” or “prejudice” considered too tame for such a raw moment.

News aggregator­s show a vast increase in the use of the term “white supremacy” (or “white supremacis­t”) compared with 10 years ago. The meaning of the words has expanded, too.

Ten years ago, white supremacy frequently described the likes of the Ku Klux Klan and David Duke, the neo-Nazi politician from Louisiana. Now it cuts a swathe through the culture, describing an array of subjects: the mortgage lending policies of banks, a university’s reliance on SAT scores as a factor for admissions decisions, programmes that teach poor people better nutrition, and a police department’s enforcemen­t policies.

Yet the phrase is deeply contentiou­s. Influentia­l writers such as Ta-Nehisi Coates and Ibram X Kendi, a Boston University professor, have embraced it, seeing in white supremacy an explanator­y power that cuts through layers of euphemism to the core of American history and culture.

It speaks to the reality, they say, of a nation built on slavery. To examine many aspects of American life once broadly seen as race-neutral — such as mortgage lending or college faculty hiring — is to find a bedrock of white supremacy.

“It is not hyperbole to say that white supremacy is resting at the heart of American politics,” KeeangaYam­ahtta Taylor of Princeton, a socialist activist and professor of African American studies, said in a speech in 2017.

But some black scholars, businessme­n and activists — on the right and the left — balk at the phrase. They hear in those words a sledgehamm­er that shocks and accuses rather than explains. When so much is described as white supremacy, when the Ku Klux Klan and a museum art collection take the same descriptor, they say, the power of the phrase is lost.

Orlando Patterson, a sociology professor at Harvard University who has written magisteria­l works on the nature of slavery and freedom, including about his native Jamaica, said it was too reminiscen­t of the phrases used to describe apartheid and Nazi Germany.

“It comes from anger and hopelessne­ss and alienates rather than converts,” he said.

The label also discourage­s white and black people from finding commonalit­ies of experience that could

move society forward, Mr Patterson said. “It racialises a lot of problems that a lot of people face, even when race is not the answer,” Mr Patterson said.

As legally sanctioned segregatio­n ended in the 1960s, intellectu­als and activists sought to describe a world in which laws had changed and yet much remained ineffably the same.

The words “prejudice,” “bias” and “intoleranc­e” came to be seen as insufficie­nt. Martin Luther King Jr, Malcolm X and James Baldwin wrote of white supremacy as part of their searching critiques of American society.

Critical race theory, however, met with decades of resistance, from conservati­ves and from liberals alike, who saw its claims as too sweeping.

But in 2008, the concept broke through to a broad audience, when Coates started writing a series of essays in The Atlantic and several popular books in which he argued that the United States was mired from its inception in the muck of white supremacy and racist violence.

Schools, language, the economy and politics — nearly everything in the United States, he wrote, bore the mark of a white supremacis­t identity.

“Black nationalis­ts have always perceived something unmentiona­ble about America that integratio­nists dare not acknowledg­e — that white supremacy is not merely the work of hotheaded demagogues, or a matter of false consciousn­ess, but a force so fundamenta­l to America that it is difficult to imagine the country without it,” Coates wrote in a seminal essay in The Atlantic in 2014.

Coates’ work helped reshape how scholars and activists talked about racism. A new directness took hold.

“‘Structural racism’ is more direct in its condemnati­on,” said Khiara Bridges, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley. “But it still obscured who was winning.”

She added, “There is nothing implicit about ‘white supremacy.’ It’s whites who are winning and people of colour who are losing.”

Angela Dillard is a professor of Afroameric­an and African studies at the University of Michigan. She has examined the history of racism in her work and views it as a nearperman­ent feature of American society.

Yet the words “white supremacy” catch in her throat. “It’s really jarring to the modern ear; it gets in the way,” she said. “It conjures the movie Birth of a Nation and Richard Wagner booming over the speakers.”

It became more jarring when she heard the words applied to herself. She was an associate dean of students at Michigan when the university decided that it could not, as a public institutio­n, deny Richard Spencer, a white racist and neo-Nazi, a chance to speak on campus.

Student protesters staged a sit-in at the dean’s office in 2017 and held up signs stating, “U of M Upholds White Supremacy as Usual.”

“To have students screaming at me that I was supposed to dismantle a white supremacis­t university,” said Ms Dillard, who is black. “What does that even mean? It was like they were reading me out of the race.”

Barbara J Fields, a professor of history at Columbia University who describes herself as Afro-American, said the phrase was a slogan rather than a belief.

In the book Racecraft, which explores the relationsh­ip between racism and inequality, she quoted approvingl­y her old mentor, C Vann Woodward, the historian of the American South, who argued that holding power over black people allowed the white upper class to dominate lowerclass white people as well, by using racism to divide them.

“The real question,” Woodward wrote, “was which whites should be supreme.”

“I wish people would stop talking about white supremacy and privilege,” Ms Fields said. In an allusion to the Sermon on the Mount and class powerlessn­ess, she added, “If you believe that white working people are privileged and responsibl­e for all your pain, tell me when the meek inherited the earth.”

John W Rogers Jr is the founder, chairman and chief executive of Ariel Investment­s, one of the larger blackowned investment firms in the nation, with many billions of dollars under management. (He also sits on the board of The New York Times.)

Asked about white supremacy, he speaks of his greatgrand­father J B Stradford, who was born to a freed slave, graduated from Oberlin College and, in the first decades of the 20th century, became a leading citizen in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the Greenwood neighbourh­ood known as Black Wall Street.

He opened the Stradford Hotel, the largest black-owned hotel in America at the time, with posh suites, dining rooms, a saloon and a pool hall, and planned to build more to serve a rising black bourgeoise.

Then World War I ended, and a wave of falling wages, anxiety and racism among the white citizens of Tulsa led to a riot in 1921. White residents destroyed Black Wall Street, leaving more than 200 black Americans dead and 35 blocks gutted.

Stradford was investigat­ed for the act of defending himself and his neighbourh­ood. He fled to Chicago, where his son — Mr Rogers’ grandfathe­r — defended him against extraditio­n attempts.

The tale did not end there. Mr Rogers’ mother, Jewel, became the first black woman to graduate from the University of Chicago Law School.

None of the city’s premier law firms would hire her. “She was still working at age 75, while mediocre white lawyers had retirement homes in West Palm Beach,” Mr Rogers recalled.

His father was a Tuskegee airman in World War II and a county judge. He purchased homes, but as a Black man, he could buy only on Chicago’s South Side, and the properties appreciate­d slowly.

“They didn’t really have a chance to create any true wealth,” Mr Rogers said of his parents.

Mr Rogers sees unquestion­able truths: He has been terrifical­ly successful, and racism deprived his family of millions of dollars in generation­al wealth.

Asked if white supremacy defined his family’s story, Mr Rogers paused and replied no. White supremacy, he said, was what his great-grandfathe­r endured in Tulsa and Rep John Lewis faced in Selma, Alabama.

To argue that such primal violence and discrimina­tion extended to the modern day struck him as defeatist.

But he listens to some chief executives insist they have vanquished bias and feels a swell of impatience.

“You see your grandparen­ts not treated fairly, and your parents, and your resentment builds,” Mr Rogers, 62, said.

“I don’t see white supremacy,” he said. “But many wellmeanin­g whites don’t understand the challenges.”

 ??  ?? Protesters gather in Brooklyn on June 2 to denounce the death of George Floyd while in police custody.
Protesters gather in Brooklyn on June 2 to denounce the death of George Floyd while in police custody.
 ?? ABOVE PHOTO: TULSA HISTORICAL SOCIETY & MUSEUM/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A photo provided by the Tulsa Historical Society & Museum shows Greenwood Avenue in Tulsa, Oklahoma, including the remains of a building believed to be the Stradford Hotel, which was destroyed by a racist white mob in 1921. /
ABOVE PHOTO: TULSA HISTORICAL SOCIETY & MUSEUM/THE NEW YORK TIMES A photo provided by the Tulsa Historical Society & Museum shows Greenwood Avenue in Tulsa, Oklahoma, including the remains of a building believed to be the Stradford Hotel, which was destroyed by a racist white mob in 1921. /
 ??  ?? RIGHT J B Stradford with his wife, Augusta. Stradford was born to a freed slave, graduated from Oberlin College and, in the first decades of the 20th century, became a leading citizen in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the Greenwood neighbourh­ood known as Black Wall Street.
RIGHT J B Stradford with his wife, Augusta. Stradford was born to a freed slave, graduated from Oberlin College and, in the first decades of the 20th century, became a leading citizen in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in the Greenwood neighbourh­ood known as Black Wall Street.

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