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Bill Ong Hing

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Honor Trayvon Martin's Death: Declare War on Racism

Posted: 04/ 2/2012 7:58 am

The tragic shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin highlights the sad truth that racial profiling of African Americans and the country's racial divide continue. The juxtaposition of this incident and the winding down of our military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan provides us with an opportunity to declare another war -- a war on racism in America. With race on the front pages, the opportunity is ripe for President Obama and the GOP presidential hopefuls to declare war on bigotry and hate.

More than 150 years after the Civil War and nearly 50 years since the Civil Rights Act and the end of the national origins immigration system, racism continues in the United States. From hate speech and hate crimes to employment discrimination and forms of social preference, subtle actions and institutionalized racism continue to challenge our nation. A decade ago when Trent Lott was sharply criticized for racist sentiment at Strom Thurmond's retirement party, we saw Democrats and Republicans alike agree that racism is wholly and completely unacceptable. But after Lott stepped aside, addressing racism was pushed to the back burner again, allowed to eat away at our nation's character.

Four years ago, candidate Barack Obama gave a stirring speech on our nation's racial divide. Then three years ago the president sat down to discuss profiling with Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. and his arresting Boston police officer. But after that, nothing further gets discussed nor acted upon publicly. Any talk of improving race relations remains hushed and polite when it occurs at all.

The problem with polite talk on these issues is that it lets the vast majority of the nation off the hook. The nation ends up treating overt incidents as the exception, regarding those instances as rare. In fact, the prime target should be the foundation of institutionalized racism that has created an environment that enables subtle and unconscious racism, emboldens perpetrators of racist speech, and licenses acts of hate.

We need more than polite talk. We need a sense of outrage and indignation. We need massive mobilization over the issue. We need a declaration of war. The declaration of war on the evils of hate and racism must be loud and constant. Just as we have poured millions of dollars into campaigns against drugs and smoking, into efforts to address recycling and other environmental concerns, we need attention-grabbing strategies to begin now, in the midst of current recognition that improving race relations matters. We need a clear vision statement on these issues to serve as the basis for this moral declaration. We must be driven, not politely, because we are beyond politeness on the evils of hate and prejudice that our leaders acknowledge are not American values. Let's put our heads together on this national priority. Be creative and imaginative in approaches. Set an example. Call for new laws, enforcement of existing regulations, smart coalition-building, civility, respect and approaches to addressing private attitudes and actions. Make that call loud and clear and remind us over and over. Make it part of the national psyche, not just part of the national agenda.

The public face of American pluralism -- dominated by politicians, professionals and community leaders -- is mostly positive. The problem is with the private off-camera face of America that fails to teach our children and challenge our neighbors to be respectful of others. We all share to varying degrees the blame for a culture that gives rise to hate speech and ethnic animosity. Every time we engage in even subtle racism or the fostering of stereotypes, we perpetuate that culture. As much as each of us shares the blame, each of us can be part of the solution. Every time we reach out to others whom we have been conditioned to distrust, fear, or subordinate because of culture, race or class, we begin to chip away at the wicked culture that gives rise to irrational hatred, animosity, and violence.

In the aftermath of 9/11, President Bush spoke out against hate crimes directed at Americans of South Asian, Pakistani, Arab, and Muslim descent. He urged "Americans not to use this as an opportunity to pick on somebody that doesn't look like you, or doesn't share your religion." But then, he and other leaders did little to demonstrate sophisticated knowledge about the racialized structures of our society that continue to keep down underprivileged blacks, Latinos, Native Americans, and many Asian Americans. President Obama has called for an investigation of Trayvon Martin's death. But he has to do more. He should lead the country on the war path against racism. It's time to roll up our sleeves and get serious about racism as a nation and as individuals.

 

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dbrett480
08:47 PM on 04/04/2012
The author suggests calling for new laws to combat racism (a thought). What type of laws does he suggest that would criminalize an idea or thought? Or has he forgotten the 1st Amendment?
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03:18 PM on 04/04/2012
So long as people are identified by their racial heritage this type of profiling and racism will continue. When the press begins to finally call people Americans, instead of Asian-Americans, African-Anericans, Italian-Americans, Jewish-Americans, more of the dirty issue we face everyday. We are just Americans; light skinned, or dark, curly hair or straight, it does not matter. In other countries, like Brazil, where many who are descended form Africans live, they are just Brazilians. America needs to get past this ancestry recognition to get past racism.
06:49 PM on 04/02/2012
The biggest problem with the continuance of institutional racism in this country is that there are many who simply refuse to acknowledge that such a thing even exists, who contend that all playing fields are level, and that the very invocation of the existence of racism is, in itself, racist. They are called conservatives.
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crisdel
10:28 PM on 04/02/2012
very well said
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crisdel
06:42 PM on 04/02/2012
Please stop declaring war on everything. That's just adding hate to hate, and all you get from it is more hate. Racism IS a form of war. Racism is a symptom of the class system in which we are trapped - a system which classifies, sorts, and labels human beings according to how useful they are to the system - and heaven forbid you should forget your 'place' within in. It is a system of superiority and inferiority, a system of competition and WAR. Racism will always exist for as long as we accept this ridiculous 'human race' we're all running! We are not the human race. We are humanity.
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tigereon
02:18 PM on 04/02/2012
“WE ARE GEORGE ZIMMERMAN!”

Depending on which side of the political spectrum you are on that statement is likely to make you feel a certain way.

But the truth is in today’s America the statement “We are Trayvon” is much more of a wish, a hope, an idealist fantasy that we live in a country that we all unite against injustice.

“We are George Zimmerman” is much more reflective of where America is today….

http://thetop10.squarespace.com/hoodies-for-trayvon/?SSScrollPosition=518
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Robert SF
12:49 PM on 04/02/2012
Racism has become acceptable in the past few years. Politicians like Gingrich and Santorum openly stoke racial resentments, and more and more, ordinary people are not denying they're racists, but doubling down and saying their racism is JUSTIFIED by the behavior of those they target.
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fabuloush2s
EverGreen
11:58 AM on 04/02/2012
Speaking out of both sides of the mouth is what most politicans do. People are tired of them gaming the system with double talk and no action. Take congress today, the most embarassing group of leadership and lawmakers ever! The message is clear to those coming up into the realm...."lie and don't get caught." What kind of message is being sent? Meanspirited and hate. The POTUS experiences hate filled speeches, emails, tweets and behavior in the senate and congress...everyday!

Would there is a war going on right here? One must better believe there is... we are having a domestic type of terrorism... racial profiling is leading the warmongers... groups and activists. It;s time to stop calling on the POTUS to do something or more, it's time to collectively recogize the issues, problems and do something as Americans to send better people to represent Americans dilemmas and surreal issues regarding the Justice System... this is why Newt could never become President... or others!!
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kidphaco
Living life more liberally everyday!
09:51 AM on 04/02/2012
It is my guarantee, that much of the commentary on this issue today will be pointing fingers rather than insightful solutions. Therein lies the problems. If education is the problem offer a solution. If employment is the problem, why not offer a solution. If housing and community securities are the problem, offer a solution. Otherwise, you are the problem.
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Robert SF
12:55 PM on 04/02/2012
The problem is racism, not education. Zimmerman was hardly an ignorant git. His father is a judge.
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kidphaco
Living life more liberally everyday!
09:36 AM on 04/02/2012
Professor Hing is right! We as a nation should roll up our sleeves and really work to remove racism from the American experience! Good Americans should never accept or endorse it in any form. And for those that practice it, they should become pariahs!
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uvymopka
The voice of truth, in a sea of Loons
08:58 AM on 04/02/2012
What about all the other young black murder victims? Nationally, nearly half of all murder victims are black. And the overwhelming majority of those black people are killed by other black people. Where is the march for them? Where is the march against the drug dealers who prey on young black people? Where is the march against bad schools, with their 50% dropout rate for black teenaged boys? Those failed schools are certainly guilty of creating the shameful 40% unemployment rate for black teens. Hing needs to look at who is really racial profiling of African Americans he may find a shocking answer.
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kidphaco
Living life more liberally everyday!
09:39 AM on 04/02/2012
What does this comment have to do with solving the problem? This is exactly what is wrong with the debate. You just added racism to the discussion. You are showing your bias. You fail to point out why unemployment is so high. Moreover, you shamelessly offer no solutions. You sir are why we need this debate!
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uvymopka
The voice of truth, in a sea of Loons
10:13 AM on 04/02/2012
You need to stop your debate and try to do something to change the problem at hand. The nation has moved on and you need to move with it...not re-live the 50's and 60's with the same old debates marches, and sit-in's.