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Kathleen Wells, J.D.

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Prof. Robert Jensen Discusses Racism, White Supremacy and White Privilege (Part 1)

Posted: 01/16/2013 12:10 pm

Robert Jensen is a professor in the School of Journalism at the University of Texas at Austin. In addition to teaching and research, Jensen writes for popular media, both alternative and mainstream. His opinion and analytic pieces on such subjects as foreign policy, politics, and race have appeared in papers and on websites around the world.

His latest book, 'Arguing for Our Lives: Critical Thinking in Crisis Times' (City Lights, 2013), draws on more than two decades of classroom experience and community organizing, and shares strategies on how to challenge "conventional wisdom" in order to courageously confront the crises of our times, and offers a framework for channeling our fears and frustrations into productive analysis that can inform constructive action.

Kathleen Wells: Define racism. People use the word a lot, however, I think they use it inappropriately. Everyone has their own definition. So, let me ask you, what is the definition of racism?

Prof. Robert Jensen: Well, first of all let's talk about, perhaps, what isn't a very good definition of racism. In its simplest form, or I would say, perhaps, most simplistic form, people want to define racism as any time somebody doesn't like somebody else because of some group characteristic. The problem with that definition, of course, is it misses history, it misses economics and it misses politics.

Racism isn't just about disliking people because of the color of their skin or a religious affiliation or an ethnic affiliation or something like that. When we talk about racism we have to talk about its roots in white supremacy. We wouldn't be talking about racism today if it weren't for a white supremacist system. That is a system that defines white as superior, as better, as more deserving.

So racism, that distinct, modern form of racism, flows from what we would call a white supremacist system. Now throughout human history, people have always had a sense of in-group and out-group. In other words, people have always had a sense that they are a member of a clan, a tribe, some sort of grouping and that others are different. That ability for human beings to identify as part of a group is not the same thing as modern racism.

Racism of the last, let's say 500 years, flowing out of Europe, is based on an assertion of white supremacy, white superiority and the right of white people to a disproportionate share of the world's resources. When we talk about race today, we always have to keep that white supremacist system in mind. Otherwise, race just becomes a kind of free-floating term to mean somebody doesn't like somebody, and that's really not what we're talking about.

Kathleen Wells: Yes. When I've had discussions about racism, you will always hear someone say, "Well, you know, I was treated poorly at the restaurant. They just didn't like me, you know." And that's not sufficient when you're using that word, "racism".

Prof. Robert Jensen: Absolutely. And of course, in a system like we live today -- a very racialized system -- even white people can experience, in particular moments, bad treatment from other people because of their race.

So, I'm white: Let's say I go into a predominantly Black or a predominantly Latino part of town in a store in which most of the patrons and the owners are Black or Latino, and I might be treated badly. Now, that's unfortunate. It would be a nice world if everybody was nice to everybody all the time. But that treatment I'm receiving, while unpleasant, maybe even dangerous -- who knows -- is not, I think, adequately described as racism. It's a product of a racist system. It's a result of white supremacy, that sometimes even those of us who are white are treated badly.

But it's not the same thing as the systemic day after day, mistreatment, discrimination, and hatred that is visited upon, not white people but, people with color. And so, I don't want to make light of that because, of course, if you're the person, or even if you're the white person, who's on the receiving end of that negative treatment -- of that impolite, rude, even physically threatening treatment, it doesn't feel very good.

But that's not what we really need to focus on. We need to focus on the nature of the system and then, therefore, the systemic nature of the discrimination that flows from that. And that's really, I think, where white people are quick to want to move the subject away from white supremacy, away from a white supremacist system and talk only about personal experience. Because that's where we white people can really flip the trap and, therefore, avoid the responsibility we have of being in a privileged position in a white supremacist system.

Kathleen Wells: They want to flip the script, they want to talk about their personal experiences as a reflection of, "Oh well, I've experienced racism." And this is some form of denial as to the reality of things.

Prof. Robert Jensen: I think that's very true. Now, let's take the flip side of that: That's white people saying that they've experienced racism. The other way I think white people avoid an honest account in discussion of racism is when we reduce racism only to overtly prejudiced or racist kinds of intentions. Most white people I know, and I'm not just talking about, you know, radicals or liberals or whatever, but most white people in the United States today do not go into situations with the intention of being overtly racist. And therefore, people say, white people often say, "Well, if there was a problem it wasn't my fault because I didn't intend to be a racist in the way that Bull Connor or George Wallace -- pick your favorite overtly white supremacist, Southern bigot from the 1950s acted.

But racism, again, just is not about simply people being treated badly. It's not simply about intentions. One can act in a way that reinforces a white-supremacist system, even though one doesn't have the intention of being a racist.

So, just to make it very personal, I like to think that I do not have the intention of reinforcing white supremacy -- I don't have racist sentiments. I don't go into situations hoping to act in a racist way. But I also know that I do have a position of privilege, I do act in a system based on white supremacy, and there are ways that I contribute to that. Some ways are unconscious, ways I can't see clearly because of my own limitation.

Others are ways I feel trapped because it's just the nature of the institution that I work in, such as a major university, for instance. All of this is complex. None of it can be reduced to simple assertions that one is or isn't racist or one has or does not have racist intentions. It's all about power, systems of power -- it's about economics and economic systems, and how they distribute wealth. Now that's all complicated -- it's messy, and there's no simple answers to it, but the last time I checked there's not a single question in human society that has a simple answer to it.

Kathleen Wells: So it's a sophisticated discussion that we must have. It's not some silly thing the way people just toss around the word racism - they are not fully understanding it.

So in your piece titled, "We Are the Result Of What We Want And What Society Allows", you talk about white privilege. So elaborate on white privilege. And, in fact, in that piece you give two stories, to exemplify white privilege. Can you speak on that?

Prof. Robert Jensen: White privilege is a term that's become fairly common, at least in education and in corporate diversity circles.

White privilege is just a word to recognize that those of us who are white, or frankly, anyone who holds a position of honor and power and privilege in a system, has to take account and be responsible for that. So if in fact we live in a white supremacist system, again, not an overtly racist, Jim Crow, apartheid system, but in a system where the distribution of wealth and power is still very much racialized -- that is, on average, white people are doing better. That institutions, educational institutions, economic institutions, government institutions are still dominated by, not only white people, but white cultural norms. And, that in a system like that, those of us who are white have certain privileges -- we are taken to be the norm. We are taken to be authoritative. We have a certain sort of status. That's all we're talking about when we talk about white privilege.

Again, it takes us out of the realm of looking at an individual and saying is or is not this person a racist, but asking what position does this person hold in society and how should one then make decisions based on that. So, I think that white privilege is an important concept, but only if we recognize that, it makes sense by understanding the white supremacist nature of the larger society.

Now, to understand how white privilege operates, we can look at both the ways it clearly benefits me, but also a way it clearly lead or takes me out of dangerous and threatening situations. So, white privilege has benefits for me both in the positive and in the negative. It gets me things and it keeps me out of trouble in certain ways, and we can talk more about this because I think that the details are very important.

Kathleen Wells: So give me some of the details.

Prof. Robert Jensen: Well, let's just take the latter, the way that white privilege can keep one out of trouble. And the example I want to use is also going to go into class privilege because, of course, we aren't simply racialized human beings. We also occupy a certain place in the distribution of wealth -- we have a class. We are gendered; we have male and female status...

There's all these other things that can play into any particular situation, but let's just take an easy example: I'm white and I live in what we would generally call the middle class. Now, imagine I have a child, (I actually do, but let's keep it hypothetical) and my kid in his high school years is a little wild and ends up going out and getting in trouble, maybe drinking too much, maybe having a little marijuana on him, maybe running a stop sign, maybe getting stopped by the police.

What's going to happen to that kid as he goes into this interaction with law enforcement: white and middle class, driving a certain kind of car, looking a certain way, certain kinds of expectations about that kid.

Well, maybe, the kid is going to get in trouble when that police officer stops him, but maybe the cops are going to cut him a break, maybe they are going to call his parents and give him a break. I've actually seen this play out all sorts of times. White, middle-class parents know there are certain ways they can protect their children, even when their children really mess up.

Alright, let's imagine another situation: An African-American parent living in a lower-class, working-class, poor part of town. That parent's child is stopped. Same situation, very different identity, very different class and racial identity, but what's gonna happen. Is it gonna play out exactly the same with that police officer, is that police officer going to give that young black kid a break? Are they going to call the parents and let the parents take the kid instead?

No, everybody knows that it would likely play out very, very differently. Well, that's white privilege, that means that my kid, going into that situation is going to be spared some of the pain and suffering that comes with making a mistake -- might be given a second chance, might be cut a break. I mean it's such a common example that every listener to this show right now, who is not white, is probably nodding his or her head saying "Yeah, well, of course, that's the way it works," but the privilege comes that white people are often not aware of this. There might be white people listening saying, "Well, that doesn't happen." Well, it does happen. It happens all the time. And that's an example of white privilege.

Kathleen Wells: And the most recent example of this scenario is Trayvon Martin.

Prof. Robert Jensen: Sure.

And even if we don't know all of the details about the Trayvon Martin case, (maybe the facts are still in dispute) that basic pattern is not in dispute. And every young black man, every black parent knows the reality of that situation.

Kathleen Wells: Stats indicate that 70 percent of mass murders are committed by white men. Do you think this has any correlation/connection with white privilege?

Prof. Robert Jensen: Let's start with the "men" part. It is hardly surprising that mass murders are all men, given the way that in contemporary culture the conventional ideals of masculinity are about control, domination, and conquest. That is an ideology of violence, and we see manifestations of it all around us. Why are the men who commit mass murder disproportionately white? My guess is that has something to do with the sense of entitlement that most white people feel. So, when the world doesn't deliver what those men feel they deserve, violence is seen as a reasonable response. Beyond that, I think it's important to recognize just how toxic contemporary culture is, which is reflected in the excessively violent and sexually exploitative mass media. All of this is playing out in an incredibly unhealthy culture.

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tomteboda
04:36 PM on 02/15/2013
Not to point out the obvious or anything, but white Americans make up 73.1% of the population according to the 2010 US census. This is not terribly far off from the statistic of 70% of the mass murderers being white men (because nearly all murders of scale are committed by men).
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
gladys46
Know Your Interests, Vote
10:50 AM on 01/20/2013
stderr
26 Fans Become a fan
11 hours ago (10:07 PM)
> they were just "not ready" for a black POTUS!
>
Oh bull, show me those supposed polls.

> when reporters panned this nation asking that
> very question of whites
>

"You are making this all up. Cite to something, anything. Put that right here ------>."

"Slightly 'more people' show signs of racial prejudice than in 2008, an AP poll found in comments from Facebook." Try doing that research ... don't be lazeeee!

and ...

"In a study, a majority of white eligible voters showed a pattern labeled “automatic white preference” on a widely used measure of unconscious race bias. Previous studies indicate that close to 75 percent of white Americans show this implicit bias."

"The study, led by psychologists at the University of Washington, shows that between January and April 2012 eligible voters who favored whites over blacks – either consciously or unconsciously – also favored Republican candidates relative to Barack Obama."

"A study done just prior to the 2008 presidential election, found that race attitudes played a role in predicting votes for the Republican candidate John McCain."

"The 2012 data, collected from nearly 15,000 voters, show that race was again a significant factor in candidate preferences."

These are quotes taken from "credible" sources ... do the work before you attempt forcing your feeble "opinions" ... aah, stderr!!
01:12 AM on 01/19/2013
The following is from the article, read it again. The speaker is actually claiming that if you are some poor white guy and a black guy beats you up, it's not the black guy being racist, it's because of white people. White people get beat up by black people because of white people. If you are white and you get beat up, it's your own fault. Does absolving any group of violence help us move forward as a country? I don't think it does.

> So, I'm white: Let's say I go into a predominantly Black or a predominantly
> Latino part of town in a store in which most of the patrons and the owners
> are Black or Latino, and I might be treated badly. Now, that's unfortunate.
> It would be a nice world if everybody was nice to everybody all the time.
> But that treatment I'm receiving, while unpleasant, maybe even dangerous
> -- who knows -- is not, I think, adequately described as racism. It's a product
> f a racist system. t's a result of white supremacy, that sometimes even those
> of us who are white are treated badly.
>
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
gladys46
Know Your Interests, Vote
08:55 AM on 01/19/2013
"If you are white and you get beat up, it's your own fault."

It's your own sever inhuman desires to have historically been and remain being superior ... therefore abusive to your perceived subjects ... some of those "subjects" just may beat you up because of it!!

Teach your off-spring well ... not superiority from the breakfast tables!
12:38 PM on 01/19/2013
> It's your own sever inhuman desires to have
> historically been and remain being superior ...
>
Don't you understand that attributing this to some specific person based only on their "race" is exactly what racism is? You have no evidence that any specific white victim of violence by black people has any such notions at all.

> Teach your off-spring well ... not superiority
> from the breakfast tables!
>
This is difficult for me as a white person to take even remotely seriously. If this is how black people in general view the world, perhaps this is part of what the problem is.
01:56 AM on 01/24/2013
What if they weren't a white supremacist?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedomscap
10:43 AM on 01/19/2013
It's called reading comprehension -- something you lack. Don't burden us.
12:23 AM on 01/19/2013
> When we talk about racism we have to talk about its
> roots in white supremacy.
>
This is part of the theory that you have to be top dog or think you are entitled to be top dog to be racist. Of course this is nonsense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedomscap
10:41 AM on 01/19/2013
You can't comprehend what you read -- that's not our burden.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stillstandingkickingbutt
Please, I have the floor
07:10 PM on 01/18/2013
If one wants to see racism in action listen to the GOP and its supporters ie Palin, Hannity, Limbaugh, Romney. Ryan. Bachman, Trump and the birther movement..

Now the right is attacking the POTUS children while failing to help change the gun laws and help prevent more deaths..Threats to make Michelle a widow murder the POTUS, rape his children etc etc..The band plays on..I speak out on it and i am called a racist OH well!
12:24 AM on 01/19/2013
> and the birther movement..
>
Does the Birther movement think that Obama is from Kenya because they don't like that Obama is black?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stillstandingkickingbutt
Please, I have the floor
04:09 AM on 01/19/2013
He could be white and be Kenyan  NEXT?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stillstandingkickingbutt
Please, I have the floor
07:05 PM on 01/18/2013
Wyatt T Walkers words never made him a racist it made him human and a MAN

http://whospeaks.library.vanderbilt.edu/interview/wyatt-tee-walker

http://crdl.usg.edu/export/html/ugabma/wsbn/crdl_ugabma_wsbn_41688.html?Welcome
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stillstandingkickingbutt
Please, I have the floor
07:01 PM on 01/18/2013
FACT! and to add to this are the words of MLK

http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/life-and-words-martin-luther-king-jr-part-1-2

Martin Luther King Jr., was born in January 15, 1929, in Atlanta, Georgia. His father was the pastor of a Baptist church there. King Sr., hated the South's segregation laws. These laws kept white and black people separated. African Americans were kept out of "white" schools, parks, theaters, hotels, and eating places. They had to sit in separate sections in trains and buses.
"I don't care how long I have to live with this system," King Sr., said. "I will never accept it." He was a fighter and his son, Martin, took after him.
One day, Martin was riding with his father in the family car. Mr. King drove past a "Stop" sign by accident. A policeman told him to pull over. Then he said, "All right, boy, let me see your license."
No man likes to be called a "boy." This was a way of insulting African-Americans in the South. Mr. King got very angry. He pointed to his son and said to the policeman:
"This is a boy. I'm a man. Until you call me one, I will not listen to you."
American would be beaten or killed for going against the system. These things almost made Martin turn against all white people.
03:34 PM on 01/18/2013
The way Professor Jensen explains White Supremacy & White Privilige is refreshing and makes sense in a larger context.
--original blackman
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedomscap
10:36 AM on 01/18/2013
White supremacy: the mass incarceration of black and brown folks, for non violent drug offenses, when whites do drugs the same or more as black and brown folks.

Some say, everyone on Staten Island does drugs, but the only reason why they get drug treatment, instead of incarceration is because they are white.
12:25 AM on 01/19/2013
> the mass incarceration of black and brown folks,
> for non violent drug offenses,
>
I'm skeptical. The higher sentences for crack were because crack was so violent that people demanded that something be done. I don't think that most blacks in prison are there because they didn't commit actual crimes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedomscap
10:45 AM on 01/19/2013
Well, then -- you write a comment, without knowing the facts/data. What is that called:
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedomscap
10:34 AM on 01/18/2013
White privilege: why Lance Armstrong isn't in prison.
12:26 AM on 01/19/2013
> White privilege: why Lance Armstrong isn't in prison.
>
Why should he be in prison? Cheating in sport isn't or at least wasn't a crime.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
gladys46
Know Your Interests, Vote
08:45 AM on 01/19/2013
So, why are whites cheating in sports, caught and determined not to have committed a crime? I'm talking crimes directly related to the sport.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedomscap
10:46 AM on 01/19/2013
He committed fraud -- why do you think there was a federal investigation. Don't be dense.
07:02 AM on 03/11/2013
Marion Jones was Black and in prison for PERJURY, not steroids.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freedomscap
10:30 AM on 01/18/2013
White supremacy: all the white folks on TV, pretending to be experts of everyone.

White supremacy: talking about black hair on TV.
07:02 AM on 03/11/2013
Haven't you watched a Denzel Washingon or Morgan Freeman movie?
10:15 PM on 01/17/2013
If you believe in race, you give life to a lie.
If you avoid the subject your in denial.
If you think you aren't affected by it, you are affecting everyone else.
If you think it will just go away, your insane.
If you are just scared of something that massive, you are human.
12:27 AM on 01/19/2013
> If you believe in race, you give life to a lie.
>
The only meaning of 'race' in humans is whatever we humans decide it is. There is no valid biological basis for race in humans.
11:48 AM on 01/17/2013
My only criticism is: Where's part 2? I can't seem to find a link to it.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
gladys46
Know Your Interests, Vote
11:47 AM on 01/17/2013
What takes me to my greatest sense of pissivity is white people "explaining" to African Americans our own lives, our own experiences living in America!! What's more aggravating is the fact that many white people do not know that ALL of the racist verbiage they speak is somehow not understood by African Americans ... when African Americas have decoded their "coded" racist languages eons ago! I'm often embarrassed for them ... whites who do that that is!
06:55 PM on 01/17/2013
True.
12:28 AM on 01/19/2013
> white people "explaining" to African Americans our own lives,
> our own experiences living in America!!
>
How about black people insisting that white people are "racist" even as white people voted in Obama as president twice.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
gladys46
Know Your Interests, Vote
08:36 AM on 01/19/2013
How about our president would never have become POTUS without black and Hispanic voters ... enmasse!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
waasi
Ooooo you don't know what u talkin bout!
09:00 AM on 01/17/2013
Prejudice and racism are completely different. You can have prejudice without racism, but there is no racism without prejudice. IN comparison, there is no White without Black in ANY color dynamic, but there is Black without White. That's what makes it so funny when those White purists talk about their purity. With white denial being the biggest cancer in the world, its no wonder these issues are slow to get rectified.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
gladys46
Know Your Interests, Vote
12:11 PM on 01/17/2013
This is the real fear white men suffer ... the ability of black men to produce people of color!!!
07:49 PM on 01/18/2013
What are you talking about? The concept of both white and black is contingent on the other, otherwise a totality of each, would render the definition of white or black pointless. There is no racial purity for blacks, because nearly all in america have white ancestors, but there can be racial purity for whites if ancestry is exclusively european, but that's only if one goes by a traditional definition of "white".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
waasi
Ooooo you don't know what u talkin bout!
08:14 PM on 01/18/2013
No. What are you talking about? No one said anything about Black purity. Stop read and learn. Human LIFE started in Africa. There were no whites there.Without Black, there is NO white. That high horse you are on is kinda thirsty and weak. Pay attention.