Barriers Broken, Barriers Remain

stumble digg reddit del.ico.us news trust

Posted April 4, 2008 | 08:16 AM (EST)



Show your support.
Buzz this article up.

There are many ways in which the country acknowledges the assassination of the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. Most retrospectives focus on his speeches and how his eloquence inspired a nation. Unfortunately, too often the reason why King and his generation were making demands of the country in the first place is lost. The fierce, stubborn, and systemic racism that served as one of the pillars on which America was built left Black people in a degraded social, economic, and political state that has shackled African Americans for generations. The Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) recently released a report that lays bare that with all of King's successes, much more needs to be done to bring about the fairness and equality he and his generation fought so courageously to attain.

The report -- 40 Years Later: The Unrealized Dream -- examines some of the racial disparities that exist in important societal indicators. While enormous strides have been made in educational attainment, poverty reduction, income and wealth, asset development, and social development, the date are incontrovertible in showing where we are as a nation.

In education attainment, for example, the change has been astonishing. Fewer than 30 percent of African Americans were graduating high school in the mid-1960s; now that figure is about 80 percent. The African American high school graduation rate has increased by over 214% despite the fact that a majority of African American high school students attend resource-poor public schools. At this rate, however, African Americans will reach equality with white Americans by 2018 -- 64 years after Brown v. Board of Education.

White opponents of affirmative action in higher education appear to be driven, in part, by a fear that Blacks are overrunning American colleges and universities and pushing out Whites. The report makes clear that while the African American college graduation rate has increased by almost 400% since 1968, there is still room for significant improvement. At the current rate, it will take another 80 years to overcome the inequality in Black and White college degree attainment.

Educational attainment is a major factor in wealth accumulation and these educational improvements would suggest that income disparities are closing. The reality is that there has been a scant reduction in income disparities between Whites and Blacks. African Americans, on a per capita basis, earn less than 60 percent of what Whites earn. Even with inflation-adjusted Black incomes increasing by 150 percent during the last 40 years, "African Americans have closed the gap with whites by only 3 cents on the dollar over the course of nearly four decades." At that rate, it will take more than five centuries to reach income parity.

Not all of these problems lend themselves to policy solutions. However, acknowledgment of the current state of play is necessary if we are to ever get beyond the surface, gut-level reactions to race that pollute our discussions of racism and its impact on our society. Too many people, White and non-White alike, want to ignore these issues in hopes that they will just fade away.

Senator Barack Obama's recent speech that touched on race has led many commentators to hope that we are on the verge of open and honest discussion on the role race places in American society, not just politics. I believe that America is in desperate need of such a discussion and hope that the facts presented in this report lie at the forefront of the conversation. For those who are serious about moving the country onto higher ground, the continuing significance of racial disparities, despite all of the great changes that have taken place in the nation, should drive any discussion.

Michael K. Fauntroy is an assistant professor of public policy at George Mason University and author of the recently published book Republicans and the Black Vote. A registered Independent, he blogs at: www.MichaelFauntroy.com.

 
 

Comments
59
Pending Comments
0

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:

Life is hard; get over it. My father, god rest his soul (a cab driver), once told me and my brothers that "the world don't owe you a living", so you had better find a job, save some money of a rainy day and make your plans. WORK towards those plan. . .if you don't care about your life, no one else will. Well, all of us kids took him to task; we all graduated from high school, 3 of us 6 kids went to college (worked our way through), 1 went on to do a journymanship as a sheet metal fabricator and the other is a laborer and one learned to lay cable and now has his own crews (he works 60 hours a week). We never believe life would be easy and respect has to be earned. In fact, EVERYTHING IN LIFE HAS TO BE EARNED, the truth be told. Be white only goes so far and there are far more poor white folks than there are black. It is time to bury the past and look to the future.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 04/06/2008

As has been pointed out here, many of the barriers, especially in education, are still there Middle class blacks have moved into suburban school districts. Money, a "nice" home, kids going off to college are available to any skin color in balanced districts, black or white. But in small cities I am familiar with the black population still lives in a certain part of the city The young people, black and Hispanic with some "whites", are getting a high school education, most completing 12 years, but not all. It is these children who people in the community complain about having "attitude" and racial tension is often expressed in the local sports arenas. But the driving difference behind MOST racial problems is income. In the depressing economic times of today not having enough for vacations, cars...for the income earner as well as one graduating child...,or higher education are determiners of "attitudes". Volunteering for the military in some areas are not based on patriotism necessarily but on a chance for a higher education, although George Bush is certainly not any hope that that will happen. But the idea that there is some sort of bland, "nice", middle class goal for all Americans is just not there. Young people, black, Hispanic, and white, all seem to want more than just a good living, house, car, vacation, etcetera. Making it big is way too important....from this middle class point of view....but it is there and anything else is just settling.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 PM on 04/06/2008

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-ridley/forty-years-on-kerner-an_b_89261.html

The above link is to a blog posted February 29. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 04/04/2008

I'd be excited to hear the proposed discussion. You said, "America is in desperate need of such a discussion" and you helped the task by putting the facts in the foreground. It's a simple approach, and I like it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 04/04/2008

This column itself is a sad commentary on the racial situation 40-years post MLK, because it totally points to affirmative action/raced-based government (pickyour jargon) solutions to alleviate the problems in the black community when it is clear that they not only haven't worked, they have backfired in some cases. I'm a 62-year-old white guy who grew up in segregated Richmond. VA (the capital of the Confederacy) and marched for civil rights back when it was an idealistic movement about breaking down segregation and insuring equal opportunity and I'm proud I did so. At the time the segregated black community had its own businesses and though the discrimination was blatant and total, the crime/violence level was low and there was a thriving middle class. So how can we look at the past 40 years and not be amazed that despite equal opportunity and affirmative action the black underclass has grown, the violence has soared, and as the writer shows many indications show negative progress. We can not say the opression of slavery, bigotry, and segregation is greater now than it was 40 or 50 years ago when it was still the law of the land. So the problems have to be in how the black community has adapted to these seemingly positive social changes. Throwing more money into more failed programs or more affirmative action is clearly not the way to go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:48 PM on 04/04/2008

As for crime and violence, crime has dropped dramatically over the past 20-30 years, yet incarceration rates continue to increase in the black community. Why? They are policy driven. The FBI statistics and reports show that less than five percent of residents in black communities are violent, habitual criminals. That means more than 95 percent are law-abiding citizens who work hard every day to achieve a piece of the American dream. I know the media portrayal suggest otherwise, but it is called generating ratings. School shootings, infanticide, terrorism, arson serial killers are reserved for whites. They commit these violent crimes more than any other racial group. Is it there inability to adapt to their great social situation? The point is that we have to look beyond sensationalism to root causes and provide practical solutions.

Look, I respect what you did by marching with MLK, but your rosy assessment is a myth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 PM on 04/04/2008

Third, most people are indifferent to the conditions and plight of the black community, until they see the opportunity to make lots of money. They reclaim the rundown community and build schools, parks, shopping centers, banks--essentially creating jobs and a safe community that draws people back to the community. Displacing several thousand poor people is a small price. For decades, these very communities were neglected and deemed undesirable, because people of color lived there. Gentrification takes care of that small problem.

Finally, ask yourself, "Why did we need affirmative action in the first place?" Oh yeah, whites did not want to hire people of color, and men (in general) did not want to hire women. Now people of color are able to get jobs that were once off limits--but at a cost. Whites now accuse blacks of not being qualified. A black got into Yale only because of affirmative action. I suppose affirmative action took all of the tests, wrote the reports, did the presentations, passed the bar, obtained the medical license. Here is the double standard: white men do not condemn their daughters, wives, mothers and so forth. White women have benefited from affirmative action more than any other racial group. That is the best keep secret.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 PM on 04/04/2008

And don't forget george bush got into Yale through affirmative action (the oldest kind of affirmative action) and you don't hear many white folk complain about that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 PM on 04/05/2008

WillfromSF, there are problems with your assertion that "the problems have to be in how the black community has adapted to these seemingly positive social changes." First, resegregation has ensured that more schools are segregated today compared to the first two decades after integration. As a result, blacks attend schools that are no better today than they were pre-Brown v. Board of Education. They lack adequate rescources to compete with schools in wealthy suburbs. Yet, all standardized tests are based on the assumption that all students have the same curriculum and resources. Many inner city and rural school do not have basic technology courses. How are kids supposed to compete in a technological world when their schools are deficient?

Second, white flight, suburbanization led to a disinvestment in inner cities. As a result, jobs, good schools, banks and other critical infrastructure disappeared, replaced with pawnshops, gun stores, check cashers and liquor stores. The great exodus of educated blacks all but spelled the end of the thriving black community. Globalization and the disappearance of good paying blue-collar jobs continue to create more ghettos--full of hopelessness and despair.

There are also racist and discriminatory practices that (i.e., Redlining, a practice that prevents blacks from moving to certain communities) forced people of color to move to undesirable neighborhoods.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 04/04/2008

A good post to be sure. However. Would someone please explain to me why it still seems any questions or criticism of such a post by someone other than an African American is automatically considered racist. Or don't you people listen to your own words? Racism works in both directions folks. Just in case you hadn't noticed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 04/04/2008

It's pretty hard to have a "frank discussion of race" when all contrary views are deleted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 04/04/2008

Amen!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 04/04/2008


When are blacks going to hold their selves accountable for allowing drugs, and the thug life style of hip-hop culture to supersede attaining an education and hard work?
Whites can be blamed for discrimination but the a common attitude that blacks have about getting an education and speaking in an articulate manner is "acting white," blacks put more money into high priced sneakers and video games than in books and educational materials for their children.
Blacks need to look in the mirror and judge what they are doing to their selves. Racism and bigotry has not undermined the black community as much the black community has undermined its own potential.
Mr. Fauntroy why are the schools in Washington DC in such disrepair and the student's test scores so low. Washington DC spends more money per pupil than nearly every school district in this country.
Mr. Fauntroy why is the black on black crime rate so high in your city, and people won't assist law enforcement because they "don't snitch?"
Mr. Fauntroy why has the black flight into Prince Georges County Maryland turned that county into a high crime area with property values falling at astronomical rates because blacks are so over extended in credit that they are loosing their homes at a disproportional rate?
Mr. Fauntroy you and other blacks have a lot of soul searching to do before turning all the blame on whites.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 04/04/2008

King, how many black people from the hood do you think can fly a plane, navigate a ship or put up the money necessary to get tons of illegal drugs into this country? The answer is NONE. White people who pass themselves off as legitimate businesspersons are responsible for the flow of drugs into poor communities. When are white people going to accept this fact? Young black men selling drugs on the corner is the result of whites distributing large quantities of drugs throughout black communities. Let us not forget Oliver North.

Fact: more white people use drugs in American than any other race. Fact: Older white people abuse prescription drugs more than any other group. Fact: more whites commit mass murder in the U.S. (school and public shootings) than any other group.

The point is that law enforcement targets one group and not the other. The same problems in the hood occur in suburbia.

Blacks have had full rights for 42 years while whites have always had full rights that included the right to terrorize blacks for nothing more than their skin color. I am referring to 100 years post slavery and all of the elaborate methods used to oppress blacks.

And you want to know why blacks have not caught up. I mean, isn't 42 years longer enough to catch up to several hundreds years of prosperity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 PM on 04/04/2008

I was very moved by Obama's speech about race in America. One of the points he made very well is that both sides of fence have legitimacy and finger pointing will not help. Personally I find the taxonomic classification of "race" within phyla to be problematic in that it displays an ideology of superiority which does not exist in reality. We all need to get on board with the fact that we are all humans and of the same exact family tree.
Perhaps it should also be noted that classism and the seperation of classes in society today is large problem that is not being addressed. I will not disagree that a disproportionate amount of young black men are sent to prison, or that laws made are often harder on the street dealer than the guy who has the money to buy justice. However, if we do not begin to embrace the tenet that a society is only as strong as its weakest and most disenfranchised citizen then all the discussion in the world is not going to help us out if that discussion devolves into fingerpointing and blame. The problems in America today are more closely related to the corporatization of this country than any systemic ethnocentricism. Yes we need to help the disenfranchised, yes we need to accept the anger and pain of our brothers and sisters, but we will never reach that until we recogize we are all brothers and sisters.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 PM on 04/05/2008

Wish I'd said that! Spot on, Chambers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 04/05/2008

"When are blacks going to hold their selves accountable for allowing drugs, and the thug life style of hip-hop culture to supersede attaining an education and hard work?"

The answer is this: When this country (1) re-adopts the policy of favoring an emerging middle-class by re-raising trade barriers so that goods are manufactured here and more jobs are available and (2) re-adopts the policy of favoring American workers over those who are invading this country across the Southern border.

I am not young, I'm not Black, and I'm not unemployed, but I can certainly see and understand the results of the economic policies that have been adopted. And no, I do not favor hip-hop (which I find damn annoying), nor drug usage, nor the thug life-style.

Do you want to make a difference? Get politically active. Push your politicians to bring prosperity back to the middle class and it will reduce the drug, thug, hip-hop style that annoys so many of us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 04/04/2008

The FHA (federal agency) in the 1930's denied housing loans to American blacks and mixed communities, while helping to build the suburbs of this country for American whites while blacks were stuck in the cities. Millions of white men were hired to build the country"s interstate highway system (one of the biggest government social programs in its history) while most American blacks were mainly left unemployed. The federal government paid a lot of money through defense spending bills to Detroit auto companies which benefited their employees " healthcare insurance, good paying jobs, pensions, etc, which excluded blacks from these jobs for too many years. When carpenter, electrician, police, firemen, steelworkers, and other unions became a way for many white Americans to achieve the American dream and move into the middle class while American blacks were basically excluded.

The point I am making is that blacks have to do their part but it does not help when the powerful in this country continuously have put up hurdles. Many black Americans view their history in this country as a pattern by many white Americans to keep black Americans from achieving the American dream and allowing one"s hard work instead of skin color to determine the policies, actions, and allocation of tax dollars to their communities. We also see this pattern as giving white Americans a big head start in the race of life that has created many of the racial disparities (education, housing wealth, family income, unemployment, life expectancy, etc) today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 04/04/2008

"Many black Americans view their history in this country as a pattern by many white Americans to keep black Americans from achieving the American dream ..."

No doubt what you say reflects your views and the views of a great many others.

When you say "Many black Americans," do you include all those "black" Americans who have the blood of the white-racist slave-owners in their veins -- and who now claim to be the victims of the white descendants of those white ancestors whose anti-slavery beliefs were so strong that they were willing to fight to free black slaves?

Sure you do.

Do you want to see the descendants of the white racists, just look around. If racism runs in the blood, then they have it in theirs.

So you see a "pattern by many white Americans to keep black Americans from achieving the American dream?"

It is in your imagination. Quite frankly, many white Americans don't think about blacks at all. They don't want to keep anyone from achieving the American dream. That's just too much effort, and they are thinking about other things.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 04/04/2008

"It is in your imagination. Quite frankly, many white Americans don't think about blacks. That's just too much effort, and they are thinking about other things."

You did not respond to the facts layed out in my post such as the Federal agency FHA not providing housing loans to areas where blacks lived. The other Federal housing agency HOLC did a study showing that all areas paid back there loans at the time at the same rate.

Please respond to why non white Americans and black Americans are almost almost always likely to represent lower numbers in a city's union or companies when compared to their percentage of residents living in a city versus white American men. This is true for firemen, policemen, teachers, electricians, carpenters, etc.

It is the institutional discrimination that has been at the forefront of many of the disparities between white America and non-white America (education, unemployment, health, income, housing wealth, etc). Of course we have to exclude the educated coming to the U.S. from places like Asia because they are going to do better than the average white and non-White American.

The average joe like yourself does not have to think about blacks, but many in power in America over the years have made sure to put up hurdles. For example, when social security was first proposed, Southern Senators made sure to exclude agricultural and housekeeper employees and this is where most black Americans and women worked at the time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:39 PM on 04/04/2008

That's the sort of attitude that will keep racism going! Why do blacks...? When will blacks...? Blacks have the attitude... Get a grip, Pioneer, listen to what you are saying!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 04/04/2008

if it's not the truth then you explain the drop out rate and incarciration rates.
Malcom and Martin were right it's just that blacks only want to focus on one aspect of racisim

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:56 PM on 04/04/2008

There is no simple answer. How can someone pull themseoves up by their bootstraps if you take away their bootstraps? How can someone trust you if you stab them in the back every time they turn around? How can someone break a stereotype of themself if the majority of other people are intent on maintaining that stereotype for their own profit? Pioneer,have you ever been to a country where systemic racism is not the norm? (And, yes, here in America it is systemic). Where nobody looks twice at an interracial couple? Where nobody cares what color the president is? Thank you, by the way, for proving my point in your response to my comment... obviously you are still not listening to what you are saying.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 04/05/2008

Dear Dr. Fauntroy,

Thanks for another eloquent essay/post. I must say that I agree with ya. Agape.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 04/04/2008

What I'd like to see in this "frank race discussion" is acknowledgement that millions of whites have been supportive of equal rights since before the Civil War. That 300,00 northerners gave their lives to perserve the Union. That millions of whites have not tried to impede African Americans from advancing. That white America is not responsible for black crime or black drug use. It seems as if blacks always want to point out supposed deficiencies where white America isn't doing a good enough job in enabling blacks to reach the level of success they feel they are entitled to.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 04/04/2008

It was more like 600,000 ResidentChimp. Including 82% of the 1st Minnesota at a little place called Gettysburg. Say buddy. WHERE you been? Good to see you back.

P.S. I live in the town where they left for the war. The FIRST troops to answer Lincoln's call to arms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 04/04/2008

it all seemed pretty meaningless to me. i have lived my whole life in a integrated envirment. it is without a doubt that most black and most whites have a whole lot more in commen then not. they want a decent job a loving spouse and kids that have it better then they did. most whites are not racist but way to many allow the racist members of their race to be the most vocal. most blacks are not racists but they allow excuses for criminality in their neighborhoods and somehow glorify bad behavior as somehow being caused by a rebelist spirit the is trying to free itself after so many years of racism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 04/04/2008

A good post spaceman. One in which I concur. I have no use what so ever for such morons. Didn't Rodney King say it pretty well with "Can't we all get along?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 04/04/2008

Yes, your article hits on very key points. Problem is, after we get our education we have to face racism in getting a job. Years ago, Black men who got a college degree were only hired at the post office., and the "p.o". became the job of last resort, the Black man's job.. Now in applying for jobs we face the problem of "too many Blacks". It's urgent that we have a forum on race so we can understand each other's history, especially Blacks. Prop. 209 in California was primarily aimed at keeping Blacks out. The effect of this legislation is now there is a dearth of Black applicants to the University of California campuses. Wonder why? The point is why attend a school in which you receive no positive reinforcement in your studies.; no encouragement; unequal grading, etc. We have a long way to go in race relations. The late Dr. Ralph J. Bunche, the first person of color who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1950, championed the principle of equal rights for everyone, regardless of race or creed. He believed in "the essential goodness of all people, and that no problem in human relations is insoluble". Sadly, in spite of his work in mediating for peace in the Middlle East, he was not immune from racism, his son was denied membership in a tennis club in Forest Hill,s New York.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 04/04/2008

Where do you get your facts on unequal grading? Most of your comment was on the mark; when I grew up it was the railroad that was the job of last resort.
Some of your stated wrongs could be answered by something other than racism. Being from the Caribbean, I have a slightly different slant or viewpoint; so I'm truly interested in your comment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 04/04/2008

My facts on unequal grading come from my own experience as a graduate student at the University of California at Berkeley. I did a group paper with 4 other students. All of them got an A, and I got the B+ (Black plus). It took me back to high school in New York City when I scored 90 on my four-year French Regents. All the students in my accelerated French class received an honor at graduation except moi. Yes, my grandfather and many other Black fathers and grandfathers were Pullman porters.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 04/04/2008

"The reality is that there has been a scant reduction in income disparities between Whites and Blacks. African Americans, on a per capita basis, earn less than 60 percent of what Whites earn. Even with inflation-adjusted Black income increasing by 150 percent during the last 40 years, "African Americans have closed the gap with whites by only 3 cents on the dollar over the course of nearly four decades." At that rate, it will take more than five centuries to reach income parity."

I appreciated the article and felt it put forth some very salient points. I agree that America has a long 'row to hoe' in order to mitigate the disparities caused by years of discrimination due to race. The above quote does more damage than good. The real statistics are damning enough. You cannot compare apples to oranges unless your desire is to manipulate the outcome to prop up a point. The real comparison would be a like job to like job ratio,not per capita. Per capita can be skewed by too many outside influences such as population growth, etc.
What about 'mixed' race individuals; how did the study count them?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 AM on 04/04/2008

All large companies have quotas to hire blacks regardless of their qualifications. I have seen whites fired so the Company could hire a black and meet their federally mandated quotas. Every year companies have to file a minority report that shows they are complying to the quotas the Government sets. It's also absurd to think that blacks are being paid less for jobs requiring a degree.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 04/04/2008

All large companies are not required by law to hire a specific number or non-whites or black Americans. Please inform everyone where this information comes from because it is not factual in the U.S.A.

Since the U.S. collects and analyzes all kinds of data, companies do report on employees and racial and ethnicities, but it is not a minority report as you call it.

Yes, white men earn more for the same positions than white women, black Americans, and every other non-white in this country whether they have degrees or not. As a matter fact, white men together earn on average more than college educated black men.

    Favorite