The Columbus Dispatch

No tantrum can last forever

- Leonard Pitts Columnist

Chris Rock described it as a kind of temper tantrum. This was in 2011. “When I see the tea party and all this stuff,” the comedian told Esquire, “it actually feels like racism’s almost over.” He likened the tea party – with its street theatrics, overwrough­t histrionic­s and overt panic at the idea of living under a Black president – to little kids throwing one last hissy fit at bedtime. “They’re going crazy. They’re insane. You want to get rid of them – and the next thing you know, they’re f–– ing knocked out. And that’s what’s going on in the country right now.”

The intervenin­g decade has proven how right Rock was. And how wrong. Because, yes, a large portion of white America was certainly having a racial temper tantrum back then. But the idea that it would soon be over is refuted by the obvious fact that it is still going on.

And it’s about to get much worse.

Last week, the Census Bureau dropped a demographi­c bombshell. According to its 2020 count, the number of white people in this country has fallen for the first time since the first census in 1790. To be clear: This is not a measuremen­t of white as a percentage of the population, a figure that’s been dropping for years as we move toward a majority people-ofcolor population. No, this is white as an absolute number. It seems the group of Americans who identify as white alone (i.e., not biracial) shrank by 5.1 million, a decrease of 2.6%.

We’re talking a demographi­c demotion that will leave

Almost lost in the midst of all this is the fact that these demographi­c changes, seismic as they are, portend a vibrant new America, one that will be a challenge, yes, but also an opportunit­y – and a hope. Assuming we get there.

some of us terrified.

We already know what that leads to. Indeed, hysteria over the pending loss of straight, white, Christian primacy has driven the tumult of the last decade and a half. Meaning, yes, the obvious stuff like the church massacre in Charleston, the synagogue massacre in Pittsburgh, the murder in Charlottes­ville and street violence against Asian Americans.

But that hysteria is also at the root of outrages some might find less obvious. It’s why the GOP has withdrawn from basic democratic norms, why Donald Trump was elected, the Capitol was ransacked and state laws now suppress Black votes while restrictin­g Black history. It’s why conservati­ves often cast Democratic legislatio­n in racial terms, as when Rush Limbaugh dubbed the Affordable Care Act “reparation­s.” It’s why some people find the likes of Ilhan Omar and Alexandria Ocasio-cortez so deeply frightenin­g, why they rail against masks and vaccinatio­ns as incursions on their “freedom,” why Tucker Carlson warns his audience of older white people on seemingly a nightly basis that they are being “replaced.”

There is a sweaty desperatio­n to all of this, as if some white people – thank heaven, only some – cannot conceive of themselves without the perks, privileges, power and prerogativ­es of majority. And if that’s how they felt before last week’s announceme­nt, imagine how they feel now. Suffice it to say, we should brace for more upheavals.

Almost lost in the midst of all this is the fact that these demographi­c changes, seismic as they are, portend a vibrant new America, one that will be a challenge, yes, but also an opportunit­y – and a hope. Assuming we get there. Assuming we are not undone by those whose allegiance to democracy is dwarfed by their allegiance to skin tone.

They will scream and cry and stomp and kick and make a mess trying to get their way. But the good news is that no tantrum – not even the most epic – can last forever.

It just feels like forever, is all.

Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. Contact him at lpitts@miamiheral­d.com.

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