Pubdate: Tue, 10 Apr 2001
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2001 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Crispin Sartwell

RACISM DISGUISES ITSELF AS THE NATURAL ORDER

White racism is elusive: a complicated set of half-formed ideas, pervasive 
moods, involuntary visceral responses. Yet in each era of American history, 
racism has taken on an institutional embodiment that both demonstrated its 
continued vitality and provided a flash point for anti-racist action.

Until the Civil War, the flash point was slavery. And from the late 19th 
century until the civil rights movement, it was legal segregation.

In our era, the flash point is law enforcement. Racial profiling and police 
brutality are central to the experience of minorities in this country. 
Perhaps the scariest and most revealing statistics bearing on race 
relations in the U.S. concern incarceration rates.

According to a report released recently by the Justice Department, 791,600 
of the 1,242,962 people in American state prisons in June 2000 were African 
American men; 79% of state drug offenders came from racial minorities.

I wonder whether anyone believes that 79% of the people who use or traffic 
in drugs in this country come from racial minorities. We've created a 
gulag, or system of concentration camps, into which we lob African American 
men.

Slavery and segregation appeared to many white people to be the natural 
order of things rather than evil practices in which they themselves were 
implicated. And so it remains with white people today: We believe that if 
one out of eight African American men between the ages of 20 and 34 are in 
prison, it's because, for whatever reason, African American men are far 
more likely than anyone else to be criminals.

The truth is, we have no way at all to assess that claim and thus no good 
reason to believe that it's accurate. The U.S. criminal justice system 
manufactures its own ersatz confirmation. That most people who are arrested 
or incarcerated are African American is taken to prove that most criminals 
are African American.

Indeed, if someone says that they were mugged or that their house was 
robbed, most white people instantly picture an African American man as the 
criminal. When an African American man approaches us on the street, we 
cower. More than being a realistic assessment of risk, this is an index of 
our involuntary and largely unconscious racism.

Police officers and judges share this attitude and are far more likely to 
see a criminal on the highway or in the courtroom when they see an African 
American man. No concerted policy of racial profiling is necessary in order 
to achieve the continual harassment of African American men: White people 
have all the racial profiling we need in our own little heads.

It's not necessary to believe that you are a racist in order to believe 
that African American culture is a drug-addled, criminal culture, just as 
you didn't have to believe yourself to be a racist in order to support 
slavery or segregation. All you have to believe is that you're in touch 
with reality. But then the reality you're in touch with has been 
manufactured by a pervasively racist social structure.

The function of drug laws in this country is not, by and large, to prevent 
drug abuse or to reduce costs in public health; it is to provide the 
occasion for making criminals out of people who are primarily concerned 
with a momentary alteration of consciousness.

That someone is a "criminal" is not a natural fact; it is a category 
created by the laws themselves and their enforcement. And too often being a 
criminal in this country means only that one is an African American man.

That is not to say that there is no hope. As the movements against slavery 
and segregation showed, even white people can eventually be made to see the 
truth.

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Crispin Sartwell Is the Author of "Act Like You Know: African-american 
Autobiography and White Identity" (University of Chicago Press, 1998)
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens