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John Metta Headshot
John Metta Become a fan
Former Park Ranger, Navy submariner, Army wartime medic. Always writing.

I, Racist

Posted: Updated:
RACISM INTELLIGENCE
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What follows is the text of a "sermon" that I gave as a "congregational reflection" to an all White audience at the Bethel Congregational United Church of Christ on Sunday, June 28th. The sermon was begun with a reading of The Good Samaritan story, and this wonderful quote from Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Americanah.
A couple weeks ago, I was debating what I was going to talk about in this sermon. I told Pastor Kelly Ryan I had great reservations talking about the one topic that I think about every single day.
Then, a terrorist massacred nine innocent people in a church that I went to, in a city that I still think of as home. At that point, I knew that despite any misgivings, I needed to talk about race.
You see, I don't talk about race with White people. To illustrate why, I'll tell a story:
It was probably about 15 years ago when a conversation took place between my aunt, who is White and lives in New York State, and my sister, who is Black and lives in North Carolina. This conversation can be distilled to a single sentence, said by my Black sister:
"The only difference between people in The North and people in The South is that down here, at least people are honest about being racist."
There was a lot more to that conversation, obviously, but I suggest that it can be distilled into that one sentence because it has been, by my White aunt. Over a decade later, this sentence is still what she talks about. It has become the single most important aspect of my aunt's relationship with my Black family. She is still hurt by the suggestion that people in New York, that she, a northerner, a liberal, a good person who has Black family members, is a racist.
This perfectly illustrates why I don't talk about race with White people. Even- or rather, especially- my own family.
I love my aunt. She's actually my favorite aunt, and believe me, I have a lot of awesome aunts to choose from. But the facts are actually quite in my sister's favor on this one.
New York State is one of the most segregated states in the country. Buffalo, New York where my aunt lives is one of the 10 most segregated school systems in the country. The racial inequality of the area she inhabits is so bad that it has been the subject of reports by the Civil Rights Action Network and the NAACP.
Those, however, are facts that my aunt does not need to know. She does not need to live with the racial segregation and oppression of her home. As a white person with upward mobility, she has continued to improve her situation. She moved out of the area I grew up in- she moved to an area with better schools. She doesn't have to experience racism, and so it is not real to her.
Nor does it dawn on her that the very fact that she moved away from an increasingly Black neighborhood to live in a White suburb might itself be a aspect of racism. She doesn't need to realize that "better schools" exclusively means "whiter schools."
I don't talk about race with White people because I have so often seen it go nowhere. When I was younger, I thought it was because all white people are racist. Recently, I've begun to understand that it's more nuanced than that.
To understand, you have to know that Black people think in terms of Black people. We don't see a shooting of an innocent Black child in another state as something separate from us because we know viscerally that it could be our child, our parent, or us, that is shot.
The shooting of Walter Scott in North Charleston resonated with me because Walter Scott was portrayed in the media as a deadbeat and a criminal- but when you look at the facts about the actual man, he was nearly indistinguishable from my own father.
Racism affects us directly because the fact that it happened at a geographically remote location or to another Black person is only a coincidence, an accident. It could just as easily happen to us- right here, right now.
Black people think in terms of we because we live in a society where the social and political structures interact with us as Black people.
White people do not think in terms of we. White people have the privilege to interact with the social and political structures of our society as individuals. You are "you," I am "one of them." Whites are often not directly affected by racial oppression even in their own community, so what does not affect them locally has little chance of affecting them regionally or nationally. They have no need, nor often any real desire, to think in terms of a group. They are supported by the system, and so are mostly unaffected by it.
What they are affected by are attacks on their own character. To my aunt, the suggestion that "people in The North are racist" is an attack on her as a racist. She is unable to differentiate her participation within a racist system (upwardly mobile, not racially profiled, able to move to White suburbs, etc.) from an accusation that she, individually, is a racist. Without being able to make that differentiation, White people in general decide to vigorously defend their own personal non-racism, or point out that it doesn't exist because they don't see it.
The result of this is an incessantly repeating argument where a Black person says "Racism still exists. It is real," and a white person argues "You're wrong, I'm not racist at all. I don't even see any racism." My aunt's immediate response is not "that is wrong, we should do better." No, her response is self-protection: "That's not my fault, I didn't do anything. You are wrong."
Racism is not slavery. As President Obama said, it's not avoiding the use of the word Nigger. Racism is not white water fountains and the back of the bus. Martin Luther King did not end racism. Racism is a cop severing the spine of an innocent man. It is a 12 year old child being shot for playing with a toy gun in a state where it is legal to openly carry firearms.
But racism is even more subtle than that. It's more nuanced. Racism is the fact that "White" means "normal" and that anything else is different. Racism is our acceptance of an all white Lord of the Rings cast because of historical accuracy, ignoring the fact that this is a world with an entirely fictionalized history.
Even when we make shit up, we want it to be white.
And racism is the fact that we all accept that it is white. Benedict Cumberbatch playing Khan in Star Trek. Khan, who is from India. Is there anyone Whiter than Benedict fucking Cumberbatch? What? They needed a "less racial" cast because they already had the Black Uhura character?
That is racism. Once you let yourself see it, it's there all the time.
Black children learn this when their parents give them "The Talk." When they are sat down at the age of five or so and told that their best friend's father is not sick, and not in a bad mood- he just doesn't want his son playing with you. Black children grow up early to life in The Matrix. We're not given a choice of the red or blue pill. Most white people, like my aunt, never have to choose. The system was made for White people, so White people don't have to think about living in it.
But we can't point this out.
Living every single day with institutionalized racism and then having to argue its very existence, is tiring, and saddening, and angering. Yet if we express any emotion while talking about it, we're tone policed, told we're being angry. In fact, a key element in any racial argument in America is the Angry Black person, and racial discussions shut down when that person speaks. The Angry Black person invalidates any arguments about racism because they are "just being overly sensitive," or "too emotional," or- playing the race card. Or even worse, we're told that we are being racist (Does any intelligent person actually believe a systematically oppressed demographic has the ability to oppress those in power?)
But here is the irony, here's the thing that all the angry Black people know, and no calmly debating White people want to admit: The entire discussion of race in America centers around the protection of White feelings.
Ask any Black person and they'll tell you the same thing. The reality of thousands of innocent people raped, shot, imprisoned, and systematically disenfranchised are less important than the suggestion that a single White person might be complicit in a racist system.
This is the country we live in. Millions of Black lives are valued less than a single White person's hurt feelings.
White people and Black people are not having a discussion about race. Black people, thinking as a group, are talking about living in a racist system. White people, thinking as individuals, refuse to talk about "I, racist" and instead protect their own individual and personal goodness. In doing so, they reject the existence of racism.
But arguing about personal non-racism is missing the point.
Despite what the Charleston Massacre makes things look like, people are dying not because individuals are racist, but because individuals are helping support a racist system by wanting to protect their own non-racist self beliefs.
People are dying because we are supporting a racist system that justifies White people killing Black people.
We see this in the way that one Muslim killer is a sign of Islamic terror; in the way one Mexican thief is a pointer to the importance of border security; in one innocent, unarmed Black man is shot in the back by a cop, then sullied in the media as a thug and criminal.
And in the way a white racist in a state that still flies the confederate flag is seen as "troubling" and "unnerving." In the way people "can't understand why he would do such a thing."
A white person smoking pot is a "Hippie" and a Black person doing it is a "criminal." It's evident in the school to prison pipeline and the fact that there are close to 20 people of color in prison for every white person.
There's a headline from The Independent that sums this up quite nicely: "Charleston shooting: Black and Muslim killers are 'terrorists' and 'thugs'. Why are white shooters called 'mentally ill'?"
I'm gonna read that again: "Black and Muslim killers are 'terrorists' and 'thugs'. Why are white shooters called 'mentally ill'?"
Did you catch that? It's beautifully subtle. This is an article talking specifically about the different way we treat people of color in this nation and even in this article's headline, the white people are "shooters" and the Black and Muslim people are "killers."
Even when we're talking about racism, we're using racist language to make people of color look dangerous and make White people come out as not so bad.
Just let that sink in for a minute, then ask yourself why Black people are angry when they talk about race.
The reality of America is that White people are fundamentally good, and so when a white person commits a crime, it is a sign that they, as an individual, are bad. Their actions as a person are not indicative of any broader social construct. Even the fact that America has a growing number of violent hate groups, populated mostly by white men, and that nearly *all* serial killers are white men can not shadow the fundamental truth of white male goodness. In fact, we like White serial killers so much, we make mini-series about them.
White people are good as a whole, and only act badly as individuals.
People of color, especially Black people (but boy we can talk about "The Mexicans" in this community), are seen as fundamentally bad. There might be a good one- and we are always quick to point them out to our friends, show them off as our Academy Award for "Best Non-Racist in a White Role"- but when we see a bad one, it's just proof that the rest are, as a rule, bad.
This, all of this, expectation, treatment, thought, the underlying social system that puts White in the position of Normal and good, and Black in the position of "other" and "bad," all of this, is racism.
And White people, every single one of you, are complicit in this racism because you benefit directly from it.
This is why I don't like the story of the good samaritan. Everyone likes to think of themselves as the person who sees someone beaten and bloodied and helps him out.
That's too easy.
If I could re-write that story, I'd rewrite it from the perspective of Black America. What if the person wasn't beaten and bloody? What if it wasn't so obvious? What if they were just systematically challenged in a thousand small ways that actually made it easier for you to succeed in life?
Would you be so quick to help then, or would you, like most White people, stay silent and let it happen.
Here's what I want to say to you: Racism is so deeply embedded in this country not because of the racist right-wing radicals who practice it openly, it exists because of the silence and hurt feelings of liberal America.
That's what I want to say, but really, I can't. I can't say that because I've spent my life not talking about race to White people. In a big way, it's my fault. Racism exists because I, as a Black person, don't challenge you to look at it.
Racism exists because I, not you, am silent.
But I'm caught in the perfect Catch 22, because when I start pointing out racism, I become the Angry Black Person, and the discussion shuts down again. So I'm stuck.
All the Black voices in the world speaking about racism all the time do not move White people to think about it- but one White John Stewart talking about Charleston has a whole lot of White people talking about it. That's the world we live in. Black people can't change it while White people are silent and deaf to our words.
White people are in a position of power in this country because of racism. The question is: Are they brave enough to use that power to speak against the system that gave it to them?
So I'm asking you to help me. Notice this. Speak up. Don't let it slide. Don't stand watching in silence. Help build a world where it never gets to the point where the Samaritan has to see someone bloodied and broken.
As for me, I will no longer be silent. I'm going to try to speak kindly, and softly, but that's gonna be hard. Because it's getting harder and harder for me to think about the protection of White people's feelings when White people don't seem to care at all about the loss of so many Black lives.
This blog was originally published on Medium.com.

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  • Ginny Potter · Top Commenter
    Thank you. I think every single day about racism. I think about the way society and media has conditioned my brain to see black people in a negative way. I think about what it would be like to have to fight the system every day. I think about what it would be like to be afraid of the police even if I'm doing nothing wrong. I think about all of these things, but I know I can never really know, because I am white in a white privilege society. All I can do is continue to be self-aware, to try to actively think about it all, and to always question my assumptions about people and about myself. I will also try to always speak up and confront racism, in others and in myself.
    • Fawsia Sheikh Ahmed · Top Commenter · Plantation, Florida
      And that is all you can do! God bless:))
      Reply · Like
      · 35 · Yesterday at 10:54am
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    • Anitra Lahiri
      I feel like THIS, what Ginny Potter has said here ... THIS is the answer. It's called empathy, and it is born of self-awareness and compassion. Kudos, my friend. How do we all get to that evolved state of mind, where we - all of us - are reflecting and empathizing?
      Reply · Like
      · 111 · Yesterday at 1:49pm
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    • Marsha Harris Thompson · Top Commenter
      Ginny Potter. You are a highly evolved person. It takes a lot of effort to NOT automatically self-defend and instead try to see things from a different perspective. Brava!! Brava!!!
      Reply · Like
      · 55 · Yesterday at 4:40pm
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  • Bob Horick · University of Chicago
    As a white person, I find this essay to be refreshingly honest, candid, and non-self-serving. I believe that the writer tells a not-entirely-obvious truth in a narrative not designed to inflame the reader, but to inform. Very well done.
     
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  • Caleb Pedersen
    Don't assume you speak for everyone. So many points in this opinion piece are simply incorrect. How about the fact that racism isn't even defined as a concious act! No, instead it's called something subconcious or subtle, so nuanced that you don't even recognize it. Basically you're a racist even if you don't know you're a racist. Well consider this: if John thinks "institutionalized racism" exists because Lord of the Rings is all white then it's obvious he's not watching professional sports. Here are a few more nuggests-

    "As a white person with upward mobility, she has continued to improve her situation."
    ---> Right, because all white people have "upward mobility" and don't have to work for what they get while black people don't stand a chance. hmm, last time I checked the President of the US was black... how's that for mobi...lity?

    "This is the country we live in. Millions of Black lives are valued less than a single White person's hurt feelings."
    ---> This is just offensive and clearly written by a bigoted, resentful individual.

    "And White people, every single one of you, are complicit in this racism because you benefit directly from it."
    ---> Can you believe how many whites-only scholarships there available? Why they're everywhere! **No**

    "Black and Muslim killers are 'terrorists' and 'thugs'. Why are white shooters called 'mentally ill'?"
    ---> You're the only one calling all white killers "mentally ill". As far as everyone is concerned, they're cold-hearted, sick people that deserve the punishment they have coming. If you prefer that title for black killers, by all means adopt it.

    ***This quote is by far the most representative in how it captures the skewed, resentful, and racially charged nature of John's opinion piece***

    "Here's what I want to say to you: Racism is so deeply embedded in this country not because of the racist right-wing radicals who practice it openly, it exists because of the silence and hurt feelings of liberal America.

    That's what I want to say, but really, I can't. I can't say that because I've spent my life not talking about race to White people. In a big way, it's my fault. Racism exists because I, as a Black person, don't challenge you to look at it."

    ---> John, racism exists because you continue to propagate it. Yes, that's right- you conviently pin "racism" as the source of your frustrations and misgivings about how things could have been, but the truth is you're only hurting yourself by not acknowledging and accepting the fact that there are so many other factors at work that cause the problems you mention. Whites are not your enemies. I consider it racist that you think that way and am offended at how you would assume that nobody values you and other blacks. Your people are not only YOUR people- they're mine too. We're all Americans that share common history, culture, and dreams and the sooner off we stop arbitrarily dividing each other the better off we'll be.

    This attempt to obfuscate the concept of racism and redefine it according to your own preference is really disturbing. The intent to call all whites racist (to varrying degrees) is downright wrong and shouldn't be tolerated. You obviously don't understand what it's like to be "non-black" and frankly it looks like you could care less. I won't deny that there are problems facing blacks, but to deny that anything comparable exists for whites, asians, mexicans, indians, etc is arrogantly presumptious.

    You've probably already judged me as another racist. Written me off as a bigoted, ignorant, privlidged white that cannot possibly understand your plight. And you know what? I don't blame you for that- you've been taught over and over that your view is the correct one. Other whites sheepishly agree and don't truly consider the truth of the matter. So who else can I blame but myself for not adqueately demonstrating to you how these opinions are misguided and false. Consider the inverse of your earlier quote:

    "Here's what I want to say to you: Racism is so deeply embedded in this country not because of the racist left-wing radicals who practice it openly, it exists because of the silence and hurt feelings of conservative America.

    That's what I want to say, but really, I can't. I can't say that because I've spent my life not talking about race to Black people. In a big way, it's my fault. Racism exists because I, as a White person, don't challenge you to look at it."

    Take a look at it- you'll be surprised at what you find.
    See More
    • Jamila D Flax · The International Culinary Center
      You just proves everything he said is correct. Your own blindness contributes to the problem. Don't you understand that if minorites see feeling this and seeing this that it is real? It may not be real to you but you are not the only person on the planet. Your feelings being hurt and you being upset doesn't make what he said any less true.
      Reply · Like
      · 663 · July 11 at 2:47pm
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    • Nancy Driscoll Stroup · Top Commenter · Palmer, Alaska
      Hear hear! This is a great response, Caleb.
      Reply · Like
      · 67 · July 11 at 4:27pm
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    • Andrew Roling · Top Commenter · Eastern Illinois University
      In other words, Caleb completely glossed over this thoughtful, written article, and has declared that racism is not real, because he has never witnessed any expressions of racism, or has not experienced it himself.
      Reply · Like
      · 318 · July 11 at 9:27pm
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  • Abram Taylor · Brock University
    If you are a white, self-styled liberal like myself then you need to keep an open-mind to race-related problems. You have to realize that violence against black people is systemic. You also have to realize that white privilege is real-the simple privilege of being able to walk down the street without being eyed suspiciously, is a good example.
    You also need to listen to black friends if and when they talk about racism and be empathetic. Don't take it as a personal attack. Or if you do, remember while your feelings are being hurt, right now there is probably a young black male being roughed up or threatened by overzealous police.*.
    I know It's very hard to be empathetic when we live in an overwhelmingly narcissistic society. But give it a try.

    *Maybe you are a cop, but you are a good cop, and maybe you think most cops are good cops. That may even be true in both cases, but there still seem to be a hell of a lot of bad cops. For every Serpico, there's a Clouseau.
     
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  • Andrew Roling · Top Commenter · Eastern Illinois University
    Very good, insightful article.

    I'm a white man, but I'm intelligent enough to differentiate between benefitting from the structural system of racism and white privilege, from being accused of being personally racist myself.

    When blacks and whites who are intelligent or educated enough talk about white privilege, and how whites complicitly benefit from racism, they are not accusing all white individuals of being racist.

    I benefit from white privilege, yet I'm anti-racist; I'm able to make this differentiation, and thus able to contribute to a more thoughtful conversation about race and racism in America.
     
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  • Helen Thomas · Top Commenter
    Racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism, racism...it's the only word some people know and the only thought in their heads.
    • Gay Dizon · Eugene, Oregon
      It's sad that after reading such a thoughtfully written sermon, this was all you could think to reply. You do realize that you basically proved his point.
      Reply · Like
      · 284 · July 10 at 4:28pm
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    • Chris Ester · UMBC
      Helen Thomas, this makes no sense and is embarrassing. If you are going to comment, then please say something thoughtfully constructed and useful or say nothing at all.
      Reply · Like
      · 153 · July 10 at 4:37pm
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    • Helen Thomas · Top Commenter
      Gay Dizon No, he proved mine.
      Reply · Like
      · 14 · July 10 at 4:47pm
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  • Robert Simpson · Auburn, Alabama
    It is a presumptious overgeneralization to assume that one can define how "Black people" think and how "White people" think. All that it takes to destroy this type of reasoning is one black person who doesn't think like he "is supposed to" and/or one white person who doesn't think like she "is supposed to." Of course we can lump people into groups based on ethnicity, socioeconomic status, intellectual capacity, geographical location or other criteria. This may be of some value for sociological studies, but the real value for solving mankind's interpersonal problems is to view each person as an individual. Groups will never solve problems. Individuals will. I cannot speak for a group nor can I make a group conduct itself in a productive, peaceful way. But I can conduct myself in a productive, peaceful way and try to influence others to choose to do the same. I believe there was a man who lived about two thousand years ago who encouraged all of us as individuals to demonstrate love and concern for the wellbeing of our fellow humans. When one looks at the problem individually, person to person, race ceases to be a factor.
    • Nathalie Eilahtan · Top Commenter
      Really?! Do we make decisions or create laws for this nation as individuals or as a collective? This post is CLEARLY about institutional oppression, which cannot be corrected on an individual level. Claiming to be "unable" to change oppressive norms, then dragging Jesus into this allows you YET AGAIN to stick your head in the sand and ignore the big picture, which is white privilege. SB: Jesus spoke about his followers acting as a individual members of one body to spread the Gospel, but what do I know? Since race and racism is an everyday factor in my life, I must not be conducting myself appropriately. ..
      Reply · Like
      · 31 · Edited · July 11 at 7:58pm
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    • Kathy Sandru · Top Commenter
      Nathalie Eilahtan Maybe we should paint ourselves White so we can get picked up by a taxi, not get followed in a department store/boutique, assure white people we won't rob them in an elevator or that we're ok to drive our cars? Perhaps we should do the same to our boys who are targets for a racist, militarized police state walking/driving/running while Black?! How dare Helen Thomas & others assume we people of color are pulling the "race card" when you people were the ones that dealt the hand in the 1st place? Take your privilege elsewhere!
      Reply · Like
      · 29 · Edited · Yesterday at 9:12am
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    • Nathalie Eilahtan · Top Commenter
      Ummm...Kathy: 1)I'm black 2) this is only part of my comment that got cut off by the site. Sooooo.....
      Reply · Like
      · 4 · Yesterday at 3:35pm
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  • Sharon A. Jean-Baptiste · Cincinnati, Ohio
    Excellent piece. Very thoughtfully written concerning such a critical topic for this country and its citizens.
       
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    • Michael Estoy · Top Commenter · Jacksonville, Florida
      Excellent points and I appreciate the perspective.

      Now, I ask, "Why are talks about racism only black-white?" I'm Filipino and I'd estimate 1-2% of anything I've read regarding racism mentions Asians.

      Ignoring our presence, when billions of Asians populate the planet and are one of the fastest growing minority segments in the US, is my definition of ultimate racism.
      • TA Gatling · Art Institute of Atlanta
        Great point to bring, however I hope that it is not taken as "being slighted". The writer did mention other minority's. ( Muslim, Mexican etc...) I'm certain Asian's are implied.
        Reply · Like
        · 7 · Yesterday at 9:04am
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      • Brittany House · Analytical Chemist at Bend Research
        I think that is just another symptom of American insitutionalized racism. I never understood as a kid why things were always so black and white. The American mentality doesn't seem to comprehend otherness or that we only a small portion of this world.
        Reply · Like
        · 5 · Yesterday at 11:36am
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      • Anitra Lahiri
        I am multiracial & I work with international students, so I spend most of my life with Asians, and I often also feel that Asians are left out altogether... the invisible races. :( That said, the conversations have to start somewhere, and maybe it's easiest for society to digest and comprehend black and white race issues because they are so obvious?

        Perhaps it's extra important for those of us who are Asian or part Asian to be vocal about race/bigotry/micro-aggressions so that we are seen and heard, but also so that people understand that, yes, Asians and non-black races, can and do also proactively speak up about white privilege and institutional racism.
        Reply · Like
        · 1 · Yesterday at 1:40pm
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    • Travis A. Morgan · Lead vocalist at Eye of Eternity
      Talking about it with us as a community does get through. The younger generation is more willing to listen. They should be your target audience. Our parents might be a lost cause, but we are not. I've had many conversations that have mentioned your points. And I was very wrong in my perspective. I was ignorant. It is hard for us to see all of it, but there are a good portion of us who are willing to listen. Sometimes that conversation needs to happen multiple times to raise awareness. It might seem futile, but the more we discuss this; the more people will open their eyes. And people like me (who are planning on actually having children) will teach our children "rights and wrongs" about topics regarding race. I love you brother; you are heard, and your voice is appreciated. Keep on truckin'
      • Angela Moore
        Love your response.. You said 'love you brother''
        Profound
        Reply · Like
        · 4 · 10 hours ago
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      • Cath Campbell
        What a breath of fresh air. Cut through the rhetoric, Travis. Appreciated.
        Reply · Like
        · 2 · about an hour ago
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