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freshwest

(53,661 posts)
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 10:21 PM Jan 2014

Between Barack and a Hard Place: Challenging Racism, Privilege and Denial in the Age of Obama



Uploaded on Apr 7, 2010

Celebrated anti-racism activist Tim Wise, author of Between Barack and a Hard Place: Challenging Racism, Privilege and Denial in the Age of Obama, will appear at Villanova University March 29 to share his insights and wit, and to issue challenging calls to action.

I also posted another video with Tim Wise in V&MM and AA:

White Privilege, Racism, White Denial & The Cost of Inequality




...Tim Wise 'gets it.' I've posted his words several times at DU with mixed responses. I don't know how anyone could disagree with him. The facts are so obvious...

I saw reports that communities of color are the ones doing worst in the water crisis in West Virginia. This has been going on for so long, so much that environmental justice advocates always find it in play.

The cause of troubles in the AA community is systematic, I've seen it all my life. It was blatant and in the past it was discussed in the media, but now nothing is said.


http://www.democraticunderground.com/11874904#op

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Between Barack and a Hard Place: Challenging Racism, Privilege and Denial in the Age of Obama (Original Post) freshwest Jan 2014 OP
The Pathology of Privilege sheshe2 Jan 2014 #1
These are the people I spoke of many times before, who suffered and died without healthcare in quiet freshwest Jan 2014 #2
Tim Wise is a dynamic speaker. sheshe2 Jan 2014 #3
Song and lyrics about the victims of Katrina: freshwest Jan 2014 #4
No words~ sheshe2 Jan 2014 #5
Great post. IrishAyes Jan 2014 #8
I'm going to rec it here JustAnotherGen Jan 2014 #6
Thanks for a great OP. IrishAyes Jan 2014 #7
Yes, Katrina.. there are many images I can't get out of my mind, but those people IrishAyes Jan 2014 #9
when will we ever learn hopemountain Jan 2014 #10
Kick! sheshe2 Jan 2014 #11
I watched the top one treestar Jan 2014 #12

sheshe2

(83,746 posts)
1. The Pathology of Privilege
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 11:24 PM
Jan 2014

MEDIA EDUCATION
F O U N D A T I O N 60 Masonic St. Northampton, MA 01060 | TEL 800.897.0089 | info@mediaed.org | www.mediaed.org


The Pathology of Privilege
Racism, White Denial & the Costs of Inequality

Transcript


MEDIA EDUCATION FOUNDATION | www.MEDIAED.org
This transcript may be reproduced for educational, non-profit uses only. © 2008

http://www.mediaed.org/assets/products/137/transcript_137.pdf


snip/

What does it say about our culture and the politicians, the choices we’ve been given for
leader of the so-called free world, that none of these candidates sees fit to mention, as
they talk about health care, which is a subject they do talk about with some regularity,
what does it say that none of them mention the research that was published in the
American Journal of Public Health in 2004, which had looked at ten years of excess
mortality data for African Americans, from 1991-2000, looking at the number of black folks who had died above and beyond the number that would have died, but for their
blackness, in effect, and the social and economic conditions that ascribe and essentially
adhere to blackness in this country?
And what they found in this study, which received almost no media attention again, published in an academic journal, not read by theaverage American, not read by political candidates, read by doctors and people who
research the health care industry, but that’s about it. This study found that between
1991 and 2000, there were almost one million black people in this country who died who
would not have died had they merely been white and had the average health care
quality and access of the typical white person in this country, had they been living in
neighborhoods, like white neighborhoods, in which the levels of exposure to toxicity had
been as low as it is in the typical white neighborhood, as opposed to excess exposure to
toxics, pollutants, etc. in black and brown spaces. Almost one million excess dead
people, in this case black folks, who wouldn’t have died had the system of health care
access and exposure to toxins been equal between white folks and black folks. How is a
million dead black people not news?
You see, if James Bird gets dragged to death
behind a truck in Jasper, Texas, you will hear about that and well you should. If one
individual is the victim of a vicious hate crime, you will hear about that and well you
should. But if nearly one million people die, not because of bigotry, not because of
hatred, not because of some white supremacy organization, but because of systemic
and institutionalized injustice, you will not hear anything.

How is it not news, and why are no candidates mentioning, that according to the
department of justice, in a study released in 2004, black and Latino males are three
times more likely than white males to have their cars stopped and searched for drugs –
even though white males are four and half times more likely to actually have drugs on
us on the occasion when we are stopped. Now think about that.
Because that suggests
racial profiling is not just racist. That is redundant. But it is also pretty stupid-ass law
enforcement. Or is it? Because I guess it is only stupid if you think the war on drugs is
actually to get drugs off the street. Because if that were the purpose, putting aside that
whether or not we ought to deal with a medical and a health problem known as drug
addiction with war metaphors in the first place – different lecture for a different night.
Even if we assume that that is a good policy, let us be clear that that is not what we’re
fighting. We are not fighting a war on drugs because the first rule of any war is to go
where the enemy is, and if the white folks are the ones with the drugs in the car and the
black and brown folks are the ones that are getting stopped, the people fighting this war
are either supremely stupid or just have really bad short term memory. Like they keep
forgetting, “Oh damn, I pulled over another guy named Martinez! Gar! I keep forgetting.
It’s white people. It’s white people. Damn it! I got to write a note, and put it on the
dashboard. I don’t know what’s wrong with me.” Maybe that’s it, you know. Or maybe
it’s something else.

I do training with law enforcement. Not a hell of a lot, for reasons you can probably
guess. And I ask law enforcement officers, “What is the first thing you think when you
see a young black or Latino male driving a nice car in your neighborhood?” And they all, without fail and exception, will say, “Drug dealer.” I then ask them, “What’s the first thing
you think when you see a young white male, same age, driving the same type of car, in
that same community?” And they will say without exception, without hesitation, without
fail, “Spoiled little rich kid. Daddy probably bought him a car.”
Keep in mind we have
been together for about 90 seconds of the workshop at this point. We have about 2
hours left, and they just outed themselves as racists. Because what they have just said
is that they are making snap judgments on the basis of only color that work to the
detriment of people of color and the benefit of white people. We still have two hours to
go so you know it’s going to be fun from that point forward. These are people sworn in
to protect and to serve. It’s right there on the car. Right there on the side of the car, and
in the first 90 seconds they are acknowledging this racial bias. How is this not an issue?
How is it not an issue that according to that justice department report, while black and
brown folk are having their wheel wells ripped apart on the side of the road, their trunks
splayed open, their dashboards ripped apart, all in the search for drugs that aren’t even
there, white people like me – notice I said ‘like me’ because I am not trying to tell you
anything about me that you don’t need to know, and for which the statue of limitations
has not yet expired, are driving by the road block with a trunk full of weed, and we’re just
waving. Because we are not suspected, therefore we are not detected. Therefore we
are not punished. How is that not an issue?

snip/

Heartbreaking reality freshwest. I am ashamed of our country for our history. Privilege, what a dirty souless word.




freshwest

(53,661 posts)
2. These are the people I spoke of many times before, who suffered and died without healthcare in quiet
Thu Jan 16, 2014, 11:54 PM
Jan 2014
but Obama heard them and saw them. There are so many millions that are invisible to media. They are worthy of equal care, yet they are constantly demonized by media.

If you had time to listen to the entire video or read the entire transcript (thanks, BTW) you will see they are not the trouble makers, not the ones who bankrupt this society and world. But every petty excuse to say they are the problem, has been used for years. So dishonest, so unjust and hypocritical to pull up the safety net and grants to give opportuntiy and say no more, by others who have benefitted.

It's why I can't stand those who want it gone as they got the benefit for all their lives or from generations past, and still cry victim, even being creative and cynically stealing from the civil rights movement for people of color to describe their sudden misery, or so they say.

They don't know the meaning of the word.

sheshe2

(83,746 posts)
3. Tim Wise is a dynamic speaker.
Fri Jan 17, 2014, 12:35 AM
Jan 2014

I have only listened to part of it. Yet read the transcript.

This study found that between
1991 and 2000, there were almost one million black people in this country who died who
would not have died had they merely been white and had the average health care
quality and access of the typical white person in this country,


That is a terrifying statistic! Had they been white...had they been white! Damn, I love this country yet I hate the people that advocate the suffering.

Almost one million excess dead
people, in this case black folks, who wouldn’t have died had the system of health care
access and exposure to toxins been equal between white folks and black folks. How is a
million dead black people not news?


And there was Katrina...







There were bodies, I can not post them. This! Another example of AA left behind, while the clueless Privileged partied on...



freshwest

(53,661 posts)
4. Song and lyrics about the victims of Katrina:
Fri Jan 17, 2014, 12:58 AM
Jan 2014


What will satisfy the pathologically powerful and privileged?

Nothing.

Not the death of a city, a culture or an innocent people.

Because they are sick unto death themselves.


IrishAyes

(6,151 posts)
9. Yes, Katrina.. there are many images I can't get out of my mind, but those people
Fri Jan 17, 2014, 02:41 PM
Jan 2014

shot on the bridge ranks high among them. The power elite used the storm to practice a little ethnic cleansing. And I'll never let anyone forget that Canada's relief reached NOLA before ours did. Shameful on so many fronts.

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