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Politics

Yes Virginia, there is institutional racism

Some of us have heard the story of the article in the New York Sun newspaper by Francis P. Church, one of its editors, in 1897 entitled “Is There is a Santa Claus?”

The article was a response to a letter from a young girl, Virginia O’Hanlon, who asked her father if Santa Claus existed.  He told her to write to the Sun and trust that “if you see it in the Sun, its so.” 

Church wrote a column that telling her that Santa Claus was real and that her friends who denied the existence of Santa were “affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see.”

Church then wrote these famous words: “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest joy.”

Categories
Politics Religion/Spirituality

Was Jesus a Republican or a Democrat?

(This column originally appeared in the Murray Ledger and Times on December 4, 2019. As our 2020 election campaign ramps up, it seems worth repeating)

This is an odd title for a column.  But it got your attention, right?  The short answer is, of course, that Jesus was would not have supported either party.

However, the point here is a broader one, suggested by a book written by evangelical preacher Jim Wallace during the Bush administration in 2005: “God’s Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get It.”  

Wallis noted that the conservative, liberal and libertarian political options are not what American Christians — liberal or conservative – really should want.

Categories
Politics

The Irony of Antiracism

As a high school student, I learned that racism or, as we called it then, racial discrimination, was a bad thing, in the eyes of God, our church, and all fair-minded people.  It was described as considering ourselves superior to Negroes or black people and denying them equality with us. 

As I grew older, I also learned that the list of people we were not to discriminate against included women (if we were men), those of other faiths, and foreign emigrants. Today’s list is longer, including LGBTQ, “people of color,” those in poverty, the disabled, and others deemed “different” from normal, healthy, white-skinned Americans, especially males. But in 1961 when I entered high school, racism was a term used to describe white people’s attitudes toward American Negroes. We were told to ignore skin color when judging people.

Categories
General Politics

Aging Thoughts: Seeking Truth

Growing up, I felt caught between two political forces. My parents, although working class people, were staunch Republicans. As a child, I remember my mother snarling when President Truman came on the radio.  I also remember her saying, when I was older, that FDR didn’t really die of a stroke in Warm Springs, Georgia.

“He killed himself because he knew what a mess he had made of things,” she proclaimed!

Categories
Personal Politics

Daughters in Decisionville, Coronaland

We have two daughters, born fifteen months apart. They each live away from their parents and each other, although we all live in Kentucky.  They love each other and their parents (most of the time), and both are entering their mature years (fifty-somethings). They have very nice families.

I have counseled both of them to begin thinking seriously about preparing financially for retirement now, especially given the current disarray in the old USA. And like good daughters everywhere, they always pay close attention to advice from their father (wink, wink, nudge).

Categories
Politics Religion/Spirituality

Religion and Politics: Substance not Slogans

It is an old adage that religion and politics shouldn’t mix and must be avoided in conversations, especially in churches and at family gatherings.

Clearly, we humans can be very emotional about our religious and political views. I remember being startled when two people stormed out of our church when our pastor criticized Donald Trump by name for contradicting a preacher who spoke of loving our neighbor at a national prayer breakfast. 

I also know of one family gathering where, following a political “discussion,” between two persons of markedly different views, one of them left in an angry huff and dented the new car of a family member on the way out of the driveway.  

Categories
Politics

Another Thought on White Privilege

Several friends enjoy reading John Pavlovitz’s website (johnpavlovitz.com) and I received from one of them a June 23, 2020 post from it entitled “The White Privilege of Ignoring the News.” 

I was intrigued, both because I continue to try to understand—as an old white man—how I have been affected by white privilege and because I know a number of friends who have stopped watching the TV News shows or, in one case, watching television at all.  They say it makes their life less stressful and instead rely on newspapers and public radio.

Categories
Politics

“Going South”-Biased Language?

I recently read this phrase in a newspaper article. At first I thought this might be a literal reference to Donald Trump’s political support. It wasn’t, but instead a reference to something getting worse, as in, for example, Coronavirus numbers increasing or “going south.”

Many years ago, while studying the subject of nationalism in graduate school, I came across a book that pointed out that in almost every nation-state, people in the northern part of the land tended to look down upon those in the south as less industrious, lazier, more unsophisticated…well, you get the picture.

Then I realized that, as silly as this might sound, it did seem to have the ring of truth in popular culture. It seemed to be true in the USA, both before after the Civil War, as well as in Germany and Italy. In the former, “high German” speaking (mostly Protestant) northerners look down on the Bavarian Catholics in the south even though the beer in Munich is much better than that in “Prussia,” as some of my Bavarian friends call the north. The same seems to be true in Italy, where those in Milan tend to make derogatory comments about the mobsters with names like Guido in Sicily. Darker-skinned Italians — many in the south–were sometimes referred to a “burnt pizza.”

I am not sure whether or not this is true in the southern hemisphere, and I can’t remember the name of the book in which I found this idea.

Categories
Personal Politics

White Privilege

Thoughts on White Privilege

            The term “white privilege” has appeared frequently in our streets,  news reports, and commentaries. If we are white, this term can make us feel angry or guilty—or some strange combination of the two.

            This is especially true when we are told that white privilege is not simple prejudice but rather something that is built into the social, political and economic structures of our society.

            We don’t like being called racist, since most of us white people really do not think or feel that we look down upon those of different cultures or skin colors. And we become puzzled by terms like “structural racism.”  We just do not see this as true.

            Ah, but that is just the point! 

            If I am painting my porch and wear my paint-stained, rumpled clothes to the bank to get some extra cash to buy supper, the teller might joke about my appearance but will not judge me as a lesser person nor be apprehensive or fearful.  This might not be the case if I were an African-American or a person of Latin American heritage dressed the same way.  

            Think about it!  My whiteness protects me.  I have been stopped by the police for speeding more than once, for example, but have always been spoken to calmly and I never feared that I might be shot if I reached into my pocket to get my wallet with my driver’s license.

            Many years ago, I helped a stranded African-American student with a dead car battery. We took his battery to a local battery shop (now gone) to be charged. When the student asked the proprietor for a receipt, the man turned on him angrily and accused the young man of not trusting him.  Since there were dozens of batteries scattered around the shop waiting attention, I thought the request was reasonable.

            Of course, the student was from St. Louis, where I gathered receipts in such cases were more common.  It was a tense moment.  And it was an example of structural racism; how dare this young black man suggest that he deserved a receipt! It was an affront. Would a white student have been treated with the same anger? Probably not.

            White privilege means that the structures and social norms of our society are defined by white people who can take for granted that people will not be suspicious of us because of our skin color. People of color simply cannot take that for granted.

            Protesters throughout America are asking that we recognize white privilege and try to dismantle it. This will be very difficult.

            In the first place, even though white privilege is unfair, threatens to disturb our society, and our democratic republic, it is not something that can easily be outlawed. It is not just a political problem.

Privilege is about power and those who have it never surrender without a fight. History suggests there will always be those with power and those without. 

Secondly, white privilege, like the racism or color consciousness that undergirds it, is a moral issue. As such the behavior it allows can only be addressed indirectly by our political system, with laws against police brutality, and reforms in our justice system.

 It is not, however, only a personal moral issue. In the words of my favorite spiritual guru, the Franciscan Richard Rohr, it must be seen “as a matter of justice and truth and not just a matter of me being generous and charitable.” 

That may be why we see so many protesters chanting “No Justice; No Peace.”

Rohr believes that we have to change our minds and hearts, and that only great love or great suffering allows us to do that.  Tough, but at least we have a choice.  If we don’t start loving, our children and grandchildren may face great suffering.

Within a generation, those of European descent will be a minority in the USA. At that point, human nature being what it is, white privilege may be replaced by color privilege.

If we think seriously about that, it might be a bit easier for us white folks to help create the society that today’s protesters want to see.