San Antonio Express-News

It’s not radical to say America is racist nation

- By Charles M. Blow

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina recently added himself to the long list of Republican­s who have denied the existence of systemic racism in this country. Graham said on “Fox News Sunday” that “our systems are not racist. America’s not a racist country.”

Graham argued that the country can’t be racist because both Barack Obama and Kamala Harris had been elected and somehow, their overcoming racial hurdles proves the absence of racial hurdles. His view seems to be that the exceptions somehow negate the rule.

In the rebuttal to President Joe Biden’s address to a joint session of Congress, the other senator from South Carolina, Tim Scott, the lone Black Republican in the Senate, parroted Graham and became an apologist for these denials of racism, saying too that the country isn’t racist. He argued that people are “making money and gaining power by pretending we haven’t made any progress at all, by doubling down on the divisions we’ve worked so hard to heal.”

Scott’s argument seems to leave open the possibilit­y that America may have been a racist country but that it has matured out of it, that it has graduated into egalitaria­nism.

I personally don’t make much of Scott’s ability to reason. This is the same man who said in March that “woke supremacy,” whatever that is, “is as bad as white supremacy.” There is no world in which recent efforts at enlightenm­ent can be equated to enslavemen­t, lynching and mass incarcerat­ion. None.

It seems to me that the disingenuo­usness on the question of racism is largely a question of language. The question turns on another question: “What, to you, is America?” Is America the people who now inhabit the land, divorced from its systems and its history? Or, is the meaning of America inclusive of those systems and history?

When people say that America is a racist country, they don’t necessaril­y mean that all or even most Americans are consciousl­y racist. However, it is important to remember that nearly half the country just voted for a full-on racist in Donald Trump, and they did so by either denying his racism, becoming apologists for it or applauding it. What do you call a country thus composed?

Historical­ly, however, there is no question that the country was founded by racists and white supremacis­ts, and that much of the early wealth of this country was built on the backs of enslaved Africans, and much of the early expansion came at the expense of the massacre of the land’s Indigenous people and broken treaties with them.

Eight of the first 10 presidents personally enslaved Africans. In 1856, the chief justice of the Supreme Court wrote on the Dred Scott case, in an infamous ruling that would be issued in 1857, that Black people “had for more than a century before been regarded as beings of an inferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in social or political relations; and so far inferior, that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect.”

The country went on to fight a Civil War over whether some states could maintain slavery as they wished. Even some of the people arguing for, and fighting for, an end to slavery had expressed their white supremacis­t beliefs.

Abraham Lincoln said during his famous debates against Stephen A. Douglas in 1858 that among white people and Black ones “there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I, as much as any other man, am in favor of the superior position being assigned to the white man.”

Some will concede the historical point and insist on the progress point, arguing that was then and this is now, that racism simply doesn’t exist now as it did then. I would agree. American racism has evolved and became less blunt, but it has not become less effective. The knife has simply been sharpened. Now systems do the work that once required the overt actions of masses of individual racists.

So, what does it mean for a system to be racist? Does the appellatio­n depend on the system in question being openly, explicitly racist from top to bottom, or simply that there is some degree of measurable bias embedded in those systems? I assert the latter.

America is not the same country it was, but neither is it the country it purports to be. On some level, this is a tension between American idealism and American realism, between an aspiration and a current condition.

And the precise way we phrase the statement makes all the difference: America’s systems — including its criminal justice, education and medical systems — have a pro-white/antiblack bias, and an extraordin­ary portion of America denies or defends those biases.

Saying that America is racist is not a radical statement. If that requires a longer explanatio­n or definition, so be it. The fact, in the end, is not altered.

 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press ?? Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., recently said the elections of Barack Obama and Kamala Harris dispel the argument that America is a racist country. But overcoming racial hurdles does not prove the absence of racial hurdles.
Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., recently said the elections of Barack Obama and Kamala Harris dispel the argument that America is a racist country. But overcoming racial hurdles does not prove the absence of racial hurdles.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States