NYT report on the death of Dijon Kizzee, who was shot to death by sheriff's deputies in LA:
On Monday, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s officials said deputies tried to stop a Black man who was riding a bike in South Los Angeles. They said he was stopped for a code violation related to the bike, but wouldn’t elaborate on what the alleged violation was.Wednesday, September 2, 2020
The unnecessary death of Dijon Kizzee
"Asking people to be hyper-conscious of race is likely to aggravate, not fix, racial injustice."
Refusing to ascribe importance to something morally neutral is a virtue. And because colorblindness is a refusal to discriminate against others on the basis of their skin color, it remains the best remedy for old-fashioned racism that we have.
The world is a much more peaceful place today than it was as recently as a century ago—largely because of attempts to emphasize our common humanity. If we focus on what unites us, our altruistic instincts take over and we become kinder and more trusting towards each other.But our tendency to favor the ingroup can never be completely eradicated.
Perhaps the answer, then, isn't to embrace some unachievable notion of colorblindness, but A) to refuse to discriminate against others on the basis of their skin color, B) recognize that many people are discriminated against on the basis of their skin color, then C) act accordingly. Recognizing that people are and have been discriminated against and that this fundamentally transforms their relationship to ingroups and outgroups and groups of all sorts doesn't have to be "hyper-conscious." It just has to be conscious.
@RyanLCooper: "Facebook, in short, is destroying America"
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
"Republicans started and recessed in less than 30 seconds"
I wrote Monday at The Week: "You can't demand peaceful protests and dismiss them at the same time." That remains the case. Republicans couldn't be bothered to pretend they care about issues of concern to Wisconsin's Black community. It's kind of breathtaking.
Andrew Sullivan smears Ben Smith: "Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!"
Ben Smith's profile of Andrew Sullivan was about as respectful -- even loving -- as you can get while still rejecting Sullivan's long-and-ongoing history of just asking questions about whether some groups of people are genetically inferior or superior to each other.
Sullivan opens his response thusly:
Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition! But the press is mercifully free and Ben Smith can write what he wants. To be fair to Ben, he’s a man with ambitions at the New York Times. After the woke coup there earlier this summer, he had no choice but to call yours truly a racist if he seeks a future at that paper. He knows what happened to James Bennet for crossing the critical race activists now in control of what was once the paper of record. And he reported a lot about my career that the far left wants to erase entirely from the record, for which I am grateful.
Would you still love America if America didn't love you back?
A good question by Peter Weber. I had a conservative friend who disliked the poet Langston Hughes -- who did some of his growing up in the town where I live -- because he wasn't very patriotic. Her attitude stunned me as a failure of empathy and moral imagination. Black people have been patriotic throughout America's history, even if America hasn't always reciprocated the love. But why on earth would you expect a Black man who was living in Jim Crow America to be patriotic?
Here's an excerpt from a story I wrote in 2003, about Hughes' testimony before Congress during the McCarthy era:
In Lawrence, Hughes said, he attended a “nickelodeon” movie theater every afternoon.
One day, Hughes said, “the woman pushed my nickel back and pointed to a sign beside the box office, and the sign said something, in effect, ‘Colored not admitted.’
“My playmates who were white and lived next door to me could go to that motion picture and I could not,” he told the senators. “I could never see a film in Lawrence again, and I lived there until I was 12 years old.”
Not for nothing, one of the chief interrogators of Hughes that day was Roy Cohn -- Donald Trump's future consigliere.
For so much of our history, Black Americans were treated as property. Then they were treated as second-class citizens, if that. Even now, the way Black people are policed, and the way they suffer disproportionately from society's ills, suggests America hasn't fully embraced them. Expecting people to love when they haven't been loved isn't laudable. It's abusive.
Stubborn desperation
Oh man, this describes my post-2008 journalism career: If I have stubbornly proceeded in the face of discouragement, that is not from confid...
-
Just finished the annual family viewing of "White Christmas." So good. And the movie's secret weapon? John Brascia. Who'...
-
Warning: This is really gross. When the doctors came to me that Saturday afternoon and told me I was probably going to need surgery, I got...
-
A funny thing happened while reading Tim Alberta's new book. I thought about becoming a Christian again. That's maybe not the reacti...