Tuesday, January 13, 2009

One week til Inauguration and all things are not equal

Inauguration Day is one week away. I'm taking the day off work to watch, with my spouse and a few close friends. No doubt we will cry. No doubt we will remember forever that moment as history unfolds.

Obama said this on election night: "If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible; who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time; who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer."

While the dream is very much alive and a global sense of hope and possibility leaped ahead at warp speed the moment he was elected, all things are not equal -- far from it -- and I'm worried about white people. I'm worried about us as a large foreboding mass of ignorance about race and racial injustice. I'm worried that too many white people who have little or no experience with all things African American will believe that racial equality has been achieved in America because we elected a black man as president.

I'm worried that conservatives will use Obama's presidency as a reason to overturn civil rights laws. It's already begun with an
appeal to overturn The Voting Rights Act. And affirmative action? A new study suggests that if affirmative action was to vanish, the result would be
a 35 percent drop in the enrollment of students from underrepresented minority groups at the most competitive colleges — but little gain for white students.

The truth is, and we hold these truths to be self evident: Obama's election deepens the fissure between those who are achieving and those who are not. We all may be created equal, but we are far from achieving equality.

It starts early. When my kids were in grade school, I remember heading to their school for yet another visit with the principal because my son had been acting bad again. When I got to school -- an arts magnet in the Minneapolis Public Schools -- and turned into the school office, I saw my son and four other kids lined up on the bench waiting to see the principal. They were all black, all boys.

I had peeked into the auditorium on my way to the office and saw the school orchestra practicing -- about 75% girls and and about 85% white. This is a school that was majority kids of color, and of those kids, majority African American.

Now either you fundamentally believe that black children are somehow less capable than white children or you know something is wrong with that picture.

Something was very wrong with that picture -- a snapshot among many in my life -- and something is very wrong with pictures and statistics about how black people, especially African American men, are faring across the country.

Here are few gleaned from the African American Men Project in Hennepin County a few years back:

  • 28 percent of African American males enrolled in the Minneapolis Public Schools graduate in four years
  • Young African American men are twice as likely to die and 27 times more likely to go to jail as are young white men
  • Forty-four percent of young African American men are arrested each year
  • Homicide is the No. 1 cause -- 64 percent -- of all deaths
I am absolutely certain that those stats hold up today, or are worse.

On election day, 95% of African Americans who voted cast their vote for Obama. But did you know that over a million African American men who might have voted could not. Not did not. Could not, because of felony convictions. Could not, even if their time had been served.

This is called disenfranchisement.
The Sentencing Project has this to say about the issue: "Nationally, an estimated 5.3 million Americans are denied the right to vote because of laws that prohibit voting by people with felony convictions. This fundamental obstacle to participation in democratic life is exacerbated by racial disparities in the criminal justice system, resulting in an estimated 13% of Black men unable to vote."

Last fall, the organization released a report, "Losing the Vote," that makes stark this problem. A couple of "highlights:"


  • 1.4 million African American men are disenfranchised, a rate seven times the national average.
  • Given current rates of incarceration, three in ten of the next generation of black men can expect to be disenfranchised at some point in their lifetime. In states that disenfranchise ex-offenders, as many as 40% of black men may permanently lose their right to vote.
  • 2.1 million disenfranchised persons are ex-offenders who have completed their sentences.
I could go on, but I won't. For now.

I just want to make sure we are all clear about this self evident truth -- Obama's election is a dream made real 45 years after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. stood at the Lincoln Memorial and called for a better world for his children, and for ours. It is. But we aren't there yet, not by a long shot. People of color, African Americans in particular, understand this truth explicitly.

But white people.... I'm worried about us. So listen up. Next Tuesday, when Barack Obama becomes the 44th President of the United States, embrace that moment as perhaps the achievement in the fight for racial justice in our lifetime. But more important, embrace that moment as the first next step toward the incredible, difficult work that's left to be done. We must always move forward from wherever we are now, and must never turn back.

4 comments:

  1. I have to say I am still on the fence. I truly believe things will get worse before they get better, nevertheless, will get better. I do have faith.

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  2. well said, ann. i also want to add that i'm worried about ALL people - brown, black, light, white... i'm worried that people are thinking because we've elected a black president, that he'll now take care of everything and we can all sit back and relax. i think this is so far from true. our political system is still as corrupt and money/power driven as ever. he is going to be part of that system, and i don't think he'll be quite as radical as people are dreaming of. (not to say that i'm not really happy that he's our man now! i am). but i'm really hoping that people will either start, or continue to be involved in our country's politics - we still need a revolution... those are my two cents for the day.

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  3. I agree. Our work has only just begun. I see too many white folks take the attitude that we are somehow absolved from being racist (or, heck, our whole country is forgiven) because we voted for - and elected- a black man for president.
    I recently attended a meeting in my neighborhood called to continue the grassroots activism of Obama's campaign by inviting neighbors to come together and decide on an action to take before the inauguration. I sat in my northside neighbor's home with all white people from the neighborhood, save for one African American woman who had grown up there as a child and now lives in St. Paul.
    As the discussion and brainstorming session brought up ideas of food and clothing drives, or other acts of charity, I pointed to the absence of our neighbors of color, of folks to whom this charity would be addressed as well as neighbors of color active in creating change who may not need a hand-out (would the first thing that came to mind for a neighborhood action in Linden Hills be a food drive for their neighbors?). I suggested an action that would connect neighbors to neighbors on an equal foothold -rather than the "I'm here to help you" relationship.
    Well, I was told I was taking the discussion off track - and away from their "concrete actions, which was our task today"
    So, I sit as a person on a border.
    I am a white person who is so many times at odds with white people.
    And I am a white person, so that is the only existence I know- i.e. I cannot presume to know what it is to walk in a person of color's shoes; that is not my reality either.
    A border crosser?
    No. I think I live on the line betweem.

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