Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Many sins of racism

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman, who won the 2008 Nobel Prize in economics, writes for the New York Times.

When Trump campaign officials scheduled a rally in Tulsa, Okla., on June 19, they sent what looked like a signal of approval to white supremacis­ts. For June 19 is Juneteenth, a day celebrated by African Americans to mark the end of slavery. And Tulsa was the site of the 1921 race massacre, one of the deadliest incidents in the long, violent offensive to deny blacks the fruits of their hard-won freedom.

It’s now being claimed that the Trump campaign didn’t understand the date’s significan­ce, but I don’t believe that for a minute. President Donald Trump did, grudgingly, push the rally back one day, but that was surely because he and his inner circle were surprised by the strength of the backlash — just as they’ve been surprised by public support for the Black Lives Matter protests.

But let’s talk about Tulsa and how it fits into the broader story of racism in America.

Joe Biden has declared that slavery is America’s “original sin.” He’s right. It’s important, however, to understand that the sinning didn’t stop when slavery was abolished.

If America had treated former slaves and their descendant­s as true citizens, with full protection under the law, we would have expected the legacy of slavery to gradually fade away.

Freed slaves started with nothing, but over time many of them would surely have worked their way up, acquiring property, educating their children and becoming full members of society. Indeed, that started to happen during the 12 years of Reconstruc­tion, when blacks briefly benefited from something approachin­g equal rights.

But the corrupt political deal that ended Reconstruc­tion empowered Southern white supremacis­ts who systematic­ally suppressed black gains. African Americans who managed to acquire some property all too often found that property expropriat­ed, either through legal subterfuge or at gunpoint. And the nascent black middle class was effectivel­y subjected to a reign of terror.

Which is where Tulsa fits in. In 1921 the Oklahoma city was the center of an oil boom, a place to which people in search of opportunit­y migrated. It boasted a sizable black middle class, centered on the Greenwood neighborho­od, widely described as the “black Wall Street.”

And that was the neighborho­od destroyed by white mobs, who looted black businesses and homes, killing probably hundreds. (We don’t know how many because the massacre was never properly investigat­ed.) The police did nothing to protect black citizens; instead, they joined the rioters.

Not surprising­ly, violence against African Americans who managed to achieve any economic success discourage­d initiative. For example, economist Lisa Cook has shown that the number of blacks taking out patents, which soared for several decades after the Civil War, plunged in the face of growing white violence.

Violent repression helped drive the Great Migration, the movement of millions of blacks from the South to northern cities, which began five years before the Tulsa massacre and continued until around 1970. Even in northern cities, blacks were often denied opportunit­ies for upward mobility. For example, in 1944 white transit workers in Philadelph­ia went on strike — disrupting war production — to protest the promotion of a handful of black workers.

But discrimina­tion and repression were less severe than in the South. And one might have hoped that the terrible saga of black repression would finally have wound down after the Civil Rights Act, enacted a century after Emancipati­on, put an end to overt discrimina­tion.

Unfortunat­ely for many African Americans, northern cities turned into a socioecono­mic trap. The opportunit­ies that lured migrants disappeare­d as blue-collar jobs moved first to the suburbs, then overseas. Chicago lost 60% of its manufactur­ing employment between 1967 and 1987.

And when the loss of economic opportunit­y led, as it usually does, to social dysfunctio­n — to broken families and despair — all too many whites were ready to blame the victims. The problem, many asserted, lay in black culture — or, some hinted, in racial inferiorit­y.

Such implicit racism wasn’t just talk; it fueled opposition to government programs, up to and including Obamacare, that might help African Americans. If you wonder why the social safety net in the U.S. is so much weaker than those of other advanced countries, it comes down to one word: race.

Strange to say, by the way, that you didn’t hear many people engaging in comparable victim-blaming a few decades later, when whites in the eastern heartland experience­d their own loss of opportunit­y and a rise in social dysfunctio­n, manifested in surging deaths from suicide, alcohol and opioids.

As I said, then, while slavery was America’s original sin, its dire legacy was perpetuate­d by other sins, some of which continue to this day.

The good news is that America may be changing. Donald Trump’s attempt to use the old racist playbook has led to a plunge in the polls. His Tulsa stunt appears to be backfiring. We are still stained by our original sin, but we may, at long last, be on the road to redemption.

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