Tuesday, June 29, 2021


The Deprogramming Dilemma – 18

The Rashomon of Racism

By D-Jay

Aficionados of Japanese cinema will be quite familiar with legendary director Akira Kurosawa’s 1950 masterpiece, Rashomon. In it, a ruthless bandit rapes a young woman and murders her samurai husband…or did the woman seduce him and he then killed her husband in an honorable duel…or was the wife disgusted with both men and goaded them into an inept and unwanted fight with each other…or did the samurai kill himself out of shame with his wife’s ornate dagger after she tried to run off with the bandit?  The basic facts are all the same, but the interpretation depends entirely on the point of view and self-image of the person telling the story (or spirit speaking through a medium, in the case of the samurai) and their attempt to paint themselves in the best possible light.

Looking at reactions to the George Floyd murder trial and other police killings of black civilians, along with the crime statistics released by the FBI and the those of police killings of civilians compiled by the Washington Post, I’m more and more reminded of Kurosawa’s classic film.

The Rashomon of racism, if you will.

If you watched CNN or MSNBC in the wake of the George Floyd killing through the Chauvin trial, conviction and sentencing, or listened to the statements made by some Black Lives Matter activists, you’d probably come away with the impression that every police action taken against a person of color is proof positive that America is a racist nation and that every police department in the country is little more than an organized goon squad whose sole purpose is the subjugation of minorities.

Watch reports about the same incidents on Fox “News” or listen to any Trump supporter, however, and you’d find instead that America has bent over backwards to offer a hand up to black ingrates who are too lazy to pull themselves up by their own bootstraps and don’t appreciate the opportunities they’ve been given.  As for Chauvin and every other police officer who’s ever harmed a black person, they’re the real victims.  Heroic guardians of the peace just trying to protect their communities from the rampaging mob.   

Or consider how people view these 2019 crime statistics compiled by the FBI (the latest year available.)  A total of 6,816,975 arrests were reported by police to the FBI that year, of which 1,815,144 were attributed to blacks – 26.6%, roughly twice their 12.4 percentage of the population.  For the category of murder, the disparity is even greater.  Out of 7,964 killings, blacks were charged for 4,078 – a full 51.2% of the total.

To many black Americans these disparities constitute clear and compelling evidence that the police are unfairly targeting their community, while on the Trumpian side says that the same statistics prove exactly the opposite…just how dangerous and out-of-control our African American community can be. 

The Rashomon of racism.

Could it be that both sides are right?

And both are wrong?

Trapped in their own perspectives, do the loudest and most opinionated people on both sides completely miss the nuanced reality of a complex situation…and with it the chance to find solutions to real problems that might actually work. 

After all, it’s so much easier to blame others for the bad stuff in your life than to look long and hard at what your side might do better.  And you get the added bonus of claiming for yourself a constant sugar-high of snooty self-righteousness. 

So white folks – especially those who act as apologists for everything done by our race, let’s think for a minute.  Is America an irredeemably, 100% racist country? 

No. 

But that doesn’t mean that a very real legacy of racism doesn’t exist.

Just because lots of African Americans have been wildly successful in America, it doesn’t mean that millions more aren’t born into an intractable cycle of disadvantage and poverty.

Having for hundreds of years been largely shut out of programs and opportunities that would have allowed the development of the kind of multi-generational wealth and security enjoyed by many white families, is it any wonder that many black families are stuck in poor neighborhoods that foster high crime rates and a sense of despair?

Who are we to denigrate and disbelieve the experience of moderate, intelligent, successful black people like Eugene Robinson or James Clyburn when they basically tell us that, yes, they do encounter racism on a regular basis…and, yes, it sucks?

All this being said…and rightly so…in Rashomon, everyone was spinning what they had experienced to suit their purposes.  To paint themselves in the best possible light.  To make themselves believe that they were the blameless victim.  The only one with integrity.

So too it is with the Rashomon of racism.

Yes, racism exists in the USA, and, yes, lots should be done about it.

But to all our black brothers and sisters.  To all the oh-so-woke white folks, activists and academics who want to demonstrate their moral superiority by making the cause their own…even if they take it much further than 70% of ordinary African Americans themselves would probably like it to be taken, if a recent CBS/YouGov poll is to be believed.

To all of you I have two simple questions.

Which is more important to you…feeling that you are right and having a sense of moral superiority…or helping to see real steps taken that might actually solve the problem?

If you make your point brilliantly and everyone in your circle applauds you loudly, but we end up with Donald Trump back in the White House in 2024, his enablers back in control of Congress in 2022, highly effective voter suppression legislation in place throughout the country and any realistic chance for racial reconciliation gone for at least a generation.  Is that okay?

If not, a little bit of attitude – and message – adjustment is desperately needed. 

The hard-core 30% - the true Trump cultists and QAnon types might not be reachable…but tens of millions of others are.

Reachable by both sides, that is.

They aren’t card-carrying practicing racists like a certain orange-colored resident of Mar-a-Lago and his most fanatical followers, but they do see themselves as being patriotic lovers of America and strongly pro-police.  And they really, really, really don’t like it when people like George Washington and Thomas Jefferson are condemned 200 years after the fact and every police officer is regarded as a storm trooper.

Do they have a too narrow and one-sided view of history and how it casts its long, dark shadow even today?

Maybe so.

But they also vote.

In their millions.

And if too many of them are too turned off but what they see coming from the “progressive” community, make no mistake, the massive voter suppression effort now underway nationwide will succeed, we will lose the Congress in 2022, and the presidency in 2024.

If not to Trump himself, perhaps to someone smarter who has learned how to press the same buttons.

But don’t take my word for it.  Check out what James Carville said about our “wokeness” and anti-police rhetoric problem.

Wokeness is a problem and everyone knows it. It’s hard to talk to anybody today — and I talk to lots of people in the Democratic Party — who doesn’t say this. But they don’t want to say it out loud…Because they’ll get clobbered or canceled.

And maybe tweeting that we should abolish the police isn’t the smartest thing to do because almost fucking no one wants to do that.

The only way Democrats can hold power is to build on their coalition, and that will have to include more rural white voters from across the country. Democrats are never going to win a majority of these voters. That’s the reality. But the difference between getting beat 80 to 20 and 72 to 28 is all the difference in the world.

So they just have to lose by less — that’s all.

Not convinced?  How about James Clyburn on “defunding the police?”

We need the police.

We want the police.

They have a role to play.

I don't want us to allow sloganeering to hijack this movement & cause people of goodwill to resist making the changes we need to make.

So yes to reallocating resources & reform.

No to defunding the police.

Got it?

If we want to break out of the Rashomon of racism’s vicious cycle, we have to recognize that people on the other side might not be looking at the issue the way we are.  We don’t have to agree with them, but can’t we at least stop doing and saying things that just push them into the waiting arms of Donald Trump?


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Contributing factors to our democratic decline:

From the Right

Truth Decay – Destruction of the Ability to Distinguish Fantasy from Reality

Ever Worsening Demonization of the Media

Manufactured Distrust of Science and Expertise

The Iron Bubble of Disinformation

The Dark Money Conspiracy

Information Warfare Aimed at Us

Domestic Terrorism

Emergence of a Full-blown Cult of Personality

Ongoing Voter Suppression and Gerrymandering

Election Security

Continued Weaponization of Social Media

Toxic Right-wing Pseudo-Christianity

Racism

Sexism and a Pseudo-Macho Mentality

Putinism and the International Neo-Fascist Movement

Lack of Education in Civics and Critical Thinking Skills

Destruction of Crucial Democratic Norms

The Collapse of Good Manners and Propriety

Radicalization

Sedition

From the Left (and Sometimes the Center)

OTT PC (Over-The-Top Political Correctness)

Inept Messaging

Lack of Media Investment

Arrogance

Surrender of Rural America Without a Fight

Failure to Call Out and Counteract Toxic Right-Wing Christianity

Failure to Call Out Right-Wing Racism, Sexism and Fascism for what it is, and Counteract it in Time

Framing Too Many Issues as Being Rooted in Race Rather than Economics and Class

Failure to Recognize Just How Bad Things Can Really Get

Forever Bringing Beanbags to a Knife Fight

Failure to Protect Critical Norms

 

 




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