Sorry, Everyone, America Isn’t That Racist

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Greg Jones:

It’s called “proof by example,” and it happens all the time. We take one event and point to it as evidence of a trend or, even worse, a universal fact—a dog attacked my child, therefore all dogs are vicious and should be put down. Despite its popularity, particularly in political debate, proof by example is a logical fallacy. But logic is officially an endangered species in today’s hyperpartisan political environment.

Recent events nationwide, particularly the cold-blooded murder of nine black churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina, at the hands of a revoltingly racist white supremacist, have propelled this faulty reasoning to new heights. Dangerous ones, in fact: the conversation surrounding race in America has rapidly evolved into a hyperbolic echo chamber into which today’s pundits, politicians, and professors repeatedly shout their false narrative.

OMGs, Guys, We’re So Racist!

The Washington Post’s Eugene Robinsondeclared, “America will only end racism when it stops being racist.” If anyone is guilty of proof by example, it’s Robinson: “The gunman who so coldly killed those innocent worshipers at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church did not exist in a vacuum. He inhaled deeply of the race hatred that constantly bubbles up like foul gas from a sewer.”

Things are so bad that The New York Times’s Timothy Egan proposed that Barack Obama apologize on behalf of his country for slavery. You read that correctly. The president didn’t do that, but he did remind us that “racism remains a blight that we have to combat together.”

The most serious accusation, however, was lobbed from what has become the most ridiculously reactionary arena in all of American cultural and political life: academia. In response to the Charleston slayings, Occidental College Professor Caroline Heldmanlabeled America a “white supremacist society.” You hear that? Constant racism; America is a sewer; we are all white supremacists. Apparently the America of 2015 is identical to the America of 1860.

The Data Contradicts These Spurious Claims of Mass Racism

News to me, and if I had to guess to 99 percent of the other 300-plus million Americans that peacefully coexist with members of all races day in and day out. Unless, of course, I am so lucky as to “exist in a vacuum” of peace and tranquility light years beyond what most Americans experience. Judging from my neighborhood, and a few commonly ignored statistics, I highly doubt it.

Consider, for example, that in 1958 a mere 4 percent of Americans approved of interracial marriage. By 2013, that number had grown to 87 percent. In 2012 these once-taboo unions hit an all-time high.

Ku Klux Klan membership has shrunk drastically from millions a century ago to fewer than 5,000 today. The Black Panthers are essentially extinct. While plenty of other hate groups have attempted to fill the void, they have always operated on the margins of society. Black politicians are now common—President Obama’s percentage of the white vote was almost perfectly in line with that received by other recent Democrats, all of whom were white.

Granted, these statistics offer but a snapshot of American society, but the more one looks, the more a trend emerges. America is a lot of things; racist isn’t one of them. In fact, just a little more than two years ago The Washington Post, the same paper that featured Robinson’s editorial, found that America was in fact among the least-racist nations in the world.

But two years is an eternity in America’s collective consciousness, and the optimism of yesteryear has given way to today’s illusion of apartheid. The public laps up the false conflict and spits it right back out, fueling the very fire that the pundits, professors, and president claim to want to quell. Any country, particularly one of this size, will always contain dangerous outliers and instances of racism will almost certainly surface from time to time. People gonna people—that’s simple statistics, not systemic injustice.

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It’s called “proof by example,” and it happens all the time. We take one event and point to it as evidence of a trend or, even worse, a universal fact—a dog attacked my child, therefore all dogs are vicious and should be put down. Despite its popularity, particularly in political debate, proof by example is a logical fallacy.

Yes.
It is really called, ”Hasty Generalization.”

Are we ”as bad” as we were in 1860?
Hmmm……
The Underground Railroad was a network of secret routes and safe houses used by 19th-century enslaved people of African descent in the United States in efforts to escape to free states and Canada with the aid of white abolitionists and allies who were sympathetic to their cause.
The Underground Railroad was formed in the early 19th century, and reached its height between 1850 and 1860.
One estimate suggests that by 1850, 100,000 slaves had escaped via the “Railroad”.
I guess we were ALL white ”racists” even then.

Under the original Fugitive Slave Law of 1793, officials from slave-holding states were responsible for the recovery of runaway slaves, but citizens and governments of many free states ignored the law, and the Underground Railroad thrived.
Sounds kind of like those ”Sanctuary states and cities,” of today where the law is ignored.

Church clergy and congregations often played a large role in these underground railways, especially the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), Congregationalists, Wesleyans, and Reformed Presbyterians as well as sects of mainstream denominations such as the Methodist church and American Baptists. Many underground railway ”stations” where runaway slaves could rest during the day were underneath church floors.
Many were also in private people’s barns and other farm buildings.

Racism, as an inbred, visceral impulse, has been declining and disappearing. Racism as a political tool has been sharply increasing since Obama took office and his promise-everything-to-everyone agenda has been on the fail (since 2009).

@Bill #2:

“Racism, as an inbred, visceral impulse, has been declining and disappearing.”

I’m not challenging that, but I DO wonder what you think might be the cause of such a decline. If racism is indeed inbred, what could make it disappear?
I agree with you that racism is instinctive. I think that such instincts take geologic spans of time to change, changes that would certainly not be detectable over the course of a single lifespan. Societal pressures can change rapidly (take the so-called “sea-change” in American attitudes toward same-sex marriage, for example) but such social influences don’t make the bias disappear, they just force it out of public view.

I think that the “disappearance” of racism is more a matter of it having been pressured to go underground than the actual end of its existence.

I think that the use of racism as a political tool is really just a cover for racial bias that would otherwise be “politically incorrect” to express.

@George Wells:

I’m not challenging that, but I DO wonder what you think might be the cause of such a decline. If racism is indeed inbred, what could make it disappear?

I made that clear in another post. Sorry you missed it. Seems you could have profited from it.

Personally, I think a person like Roof was more inspired by the incessant media promotion of how racist every action and opinion is unless it comports with what the left is promoting. As I said in the statement you missed (or ignored), the left is currently acting exactly as practicing racists have prejudged those they hate to act and think. The things Sharpton, the New Black Panthers, Obama, Holder and others have been encouraging and justifying only throws fuel on the fire of racists and racist support. They provide them with a great big “I told you so”.

@Bill: Roof said he wanted to kill Blacks—he SAID it .He is a racist.
Those wonderful people in that Charleston Church took him into their prayer group. Their surviving families asked for calm and prayer .Could you have done that?

The dead and their families are the heros in this tragedy. The ONLY person responsible for this is ROOF. To blame ANYBODY else is playing bullshit politics.

@rich wheeler: Do you only see the things you want to see? I don’t deny Roof is a racist; I define the actions of the left that MAY have driven him to the point of mass murder. Those elements certainly drove Ismaaiyl Abdullah Brinsley to murder.

To blame ANYBODY else is playing bullshit politics.

Is that how you feel about the White House, Pelosi, the blatering mouths on The View and most of the left blaming Trump and the Republicans for Steinle’s death? No, I don’t think it is. However, actions have consequences and the ongoing racist inciting of violence by the left has already caused death and destruction.

@Bill: How the hell could anyone blame Trump for Steinle’s death–is that true?
You talk about “may” I talk in certitudes. That’s the simple difference.

@rich wheeler: How, indeed. Yet, you leftists somehow manage to make that preposterous leap.

http://www.truthrevolt.org/news/views-raven-symone-thinks-trump-behind-steinle-murder

You leftists cannot stand the fact that Stienle’s murder only has liberal finger prints on it. Even the gun is directly linked to the federal government.

@Bill: You say “most of the left blaming Trump” and all you come up with is some dizzy goofball that no one’s ever heard of. Is that the best you can do Bill? C’mon..

@rich wheeler: Well, I can’t help but notice that it is still on the air. Now, what demographic would you imagine is supporting it? Potential Trump voters?

I can’t help the fact that your ideology has some of the most despicable character in the country involved, but denying it doesn’t make them go away.