tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3743043435896156292.post6851661660049633725..comments2012-12-13T15:50:11.761-05:00Comments on Drift.: Today's post is about race.JDShttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16215364589711258758noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3743043435896156292.post-23009268963821958472007-10-17T14:58:00.000-04:002007-10-17T14:58:00.000-04:00I have this cousin who is perpetually fighting his...I have this cousin who is perpetually fighting his own tendancy to put his foot in his mouth. He was saying to me over lunch one day that one of his neighbors was mugged and her apartment thoroughly robbed by residents of nearby housing projects. He was sick and fed up of it and he wanted all the welfare and public housing "bullshit" to be revoked or at least reformed and for the lazy, good for nothing people sent "away." He said that he worked for a living (he is a Manhattan realtor) and there is a whole segment of the population that is lazy and criminal. Later he cited the "statistic" that 90% of the service workers in New York were Latino, and that these immigrants were ready to work and do whatever it takes to get ahead in America, where if you work hard, you can make it.<BR/><BR/>He never actually accused black people of anything explicitly, but I still claimed that his views were racist. Of course it wasn't until later that I could look up bureau of labor stats to disprove him. In the meantime, I had to argue that he was really just pissed at his lazy brother.<BR/><BR/>Later I told my black co-worker this with a bit too much pride, making myself out to be a hero of race relations, rather than an avid watcher of "The Wire" which makes up the majority of my "race relations" efforts.<BR/><BR/>If we are indeed post-racism, it seems that it is the vagaries of emotions, without an over-generalized face, that move our decisions. I acted out of angry, fearful pride; my cousin also acted out of angry fearful pride. I was fearful of appearing inconsiderate, he was fearful of appearing weak. We were both gesturing at appearances to Black people. This is perhaps why we have a war on terror, which can also be called "anger against the transference of fearful inadequacy." As far as that goes, terror may only travel one way, and that is unto the poor people and those with a "deficient" social system.<BR/><BR/>And then there are those people, of whom we secretly harbor over-generalized misconceptions. The misconceptions we can cope with we call out in post-racist humor. The rest we hide in oblique language and desperate gestures.J. Benjamin Franklinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00574773295541547210noreply@blogger.com