The election of Barack Obama, America’s first black president, was supposed to be a sign of our national maturity, a chance to transform the charged, stilted “national conversation” about race into a smarter and more authentic dialogue, led by a president who was also one of the nation's subtlest thinkers and writers on the topic.We don't need to "transform the national conversation about race", we need to end the national conversation about race because the more we talk about it the more polarizing it becomes. A colorblind society wouldn't waste their time on conversations about race. A society the met the ideals of Martin Luther King Jr. where people are judged not by the color of their skin by the content of their character wouldn't waste time with conversations about race.
Instead, the conversation just got dumber.
The America of 2010 is dominated by racial images out of farce and parody, caricatures not seen since the glory days of Shaft. Fox News often stars a leather-clad New Black Panther, while MSNBC scours the tea party movement for racist elements, which one could probably find in any mass organization in America. Obama’s own, sole foray into the issue of race involved calling a police officer “stupid,” and regretting his own words. Conservative leaders and the NAACP, the venerable civil-rights group, recently engaged in a round of bitter name-calling that left both groups wounded and crying foul. Political correctness continues to reign in parts of the left, and now has a match in the belligerent grievance of conservatives demanding that hair-trigger allegations of racism be proven.
“I thought we were going to move beyond this,” said Abigail Thernstrom, a conservative historian of race and a Bush appointee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, who called the current racial climate “a catastrophe.”
“There’s a kind of heightened racial consciousness that’s very worrisome. It’s not good for us, it’s not good for the very fabric of American society,” she said, objecting in particular to the claims of racism against the tea party movement.
Quick talking and just start doing.




1 comment:
I don't expect that Breitbart ... will do any such thing. This is unfortunate, but also ironic, particularly since Breitbart had no problem demanding that Max Blumenthal "[c]orrect, retract, and apologize to James O’Keefe for your slanderous attempt to ruin his life."
We'll see if he's decent enough to do the same to Shirley Sherrod.
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