I kind of wanted this to be longer, but I think I'll try to truncate it to facilitate discussion.
Prior to 2013, the idea of police brutality as an issue in America wasn't at the forefront of the white liberal mind. Searching for anything from known progressives magazines like the Huffington Post and DailyKos in this time period pertaining to systemic violence against minorities by our police bears little fruit. We know, however, that the brutality of recent years isn't an anomaly.
The Black Panthers began their organization as a group of black men and women who were tired of the racism and brutality brazenly practiced by Oakland police officers. How did America respond to this? They treated them as a terrorist group, infiltrating their numbers with agent provocateurs and planning complicated and often deadly raids on their meeting places and homes. Now, we have a movement called Black Lives Matter that has organized around the brazen racism and brutality of police in America that's being demonized by the political right, the center, and sometimes even liberal defenders of popular progressive figureheads.
"But wait!" you might be saying "this is 2015, we took the flag down, we voted Obama as President, and we're more aware than ever of racial injustice!" And I'd agree with you, but the uncomfortability of white liberals in discussions of their own racism and systemic injustice has hampered progress to the point where schools are desegregating, housing discrimination is ignored, and it took 9 black people getting slaughtered in church by a self-avowed white supremacist to pull a symbol of racism off store shelves.
The image above shows google trends for four search terms. The blue line is "black on black crime" the red line is "racial inequality" the yellow line is "black racism" and the green line is "police brutality".
As you can see, we've lost control of the narrative. Yes, police brutality has spiked in recent years, but it's falling now, and racial inequality has remained relatively unsearched for compared to the two terms I chose out for being "racist" search terms. (Terms a racist would pop into google). As of September 2015, search terms for "police brutality" are below their levels in 2013. Google trends doesn't tell us who is searching, just the volume of searches. (I tried to choose very specific terms used by conservatives and liberals online to defend and/or attack racial narratives.)
What the graph makes clear is that the baseline interest in racial inequality is laughably low compared to the "flavor of the week" for liberal defenders of justice.
Generally, liberals are very interested in helping minorities remove the shackles of racial and sexual discrimination. It's been a staple of the democratic platform since shortly after The New Deal. But when it comes down to talking about the specifics of race and who holds up the pillars of systemic injustice, we liberals clam up rather quickly. We give aphorisms of patience and forgiveness. How change takes time and how black people should forget the injustices of the past so we can work together toward a bright future.
David Palumbo-Liu put it best in July of this year:
Let me put this bluntly: The obdurate insistence on the part of white liberal race-deniers that things are ultimately for the best, that all it takes is time and patience and a wider appreciation of what makes America great, no matter what mountains of evidence to the contrary you lay before them, has all the aspects of cult behavior. I have the same sense in addressing people who hold these beliefs as I do when I answer my door only to have some literature or another thrust at me that will supposedly save my soul or make me happy.
Here on GAF it's different, for the most part, but race deniers still exist. It was popular a few years ago to claim to "not see race" as if being blind to one's skin color somehow removed any shred of racism. It doesn't, mostly because 100% of the people who "don't see race" are actually acutely aware of it but uncomfortable talking about it. Even people who aren't race-deniers though seem to get defensive when the subject is brought up.
Take, for instance, the row between Taylor Swift and Nicki Minaj. Nicki makes an interesting remark on twitter about racism and feminism in the entertainment industry without targeting anyone specific. Swift immediately responded in a defensive way about how Nicki shouldn't be dividing their efforts and how they need to work together. Why? Because she didn't want to be seen as racist. I don't think Swift is racist, but she shut down discussion on the issue, made it 100% about her, and the white media obliged by demonizing Nicki and making it about a feud between two pop stars, instead of making it about the necessary discussions we all need to have about overt and inherent racism alive and well in America and especially in Liberals.
We all know that conservatives, loud ones on TV especially, tend to have archaic views on race and racism. It's easy to stand up to the Rush Limbaugh's and Sean Hannity's of the world. But to stand up to Jon Stewart? Beyond the pale for some, beyond even discussion. Can Jon Stewart be racist? Of fucking course he can. He'd probably be the first one to admit it. The internet though found the very idea distasteful.
David Palumbo-Liu continued in his piece:
We should remain alert to the fact that even self-professed “progressives” can exhibit some of the same behaviors. For example, the disgraceful performances of Mike O’Malley and Bernie Sanders at last week’s Netroots Nation (#NN15) event in Phoenix:
"Black Alliance for Just Immigration national coordinator Tia Oso, and Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors each briefly occupied the stage to draw attention to critical issues related to structural racism in America. Cullors acknowledged that while she took no pleasure in shutting down the discussion between Vargas and O’Malley, she felt compelled to, because she contended:
We are in a state of emergency. If you do not feel that emergency, then you are not human. I want to hear concrete action plans."
O’Malley’s response was “of course” black lives matter, followed by “all lives matter,” effectively erasing the specific ways black lives in particular are targeted by both structural and informal racist violence in all shapes and forms. Sanders scolded the demonstrators, brusquely made reference to his legacy of civil rights work, and threatened to leave the stage, and then plowed ahead with his prepared remarks.
Sanders is as progressive as they come and yet in July of 2015 he was unprepared and ineloquent when speaking on racial issues in America. If the leaders of our collective movement we call liberalism and progressivism cannot talk about this stuff then we HAVE TO. It's necessary for not only the future of our country (as baby-boomers retire, white population declines) but for the morality of our country.
We're all susceptible to inherent bias (or "emotional racism") and we all need to get better at discussions which may paint us in a negative light. If we as liberals continue to shut down discussions on racism past a certain point (the point where we feel comfortable) then the festering inequality in America is only going to get worse.
Was it racist or important when Nicki Minaj called out the VMAs? We'll never fucking know because white people swooped in very quickly to make the discussion about them. Let's stop doing that.
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Sorry for the ramble. Again I wanted to make it longer but that'd be terrible for everyone I think. Here's some reading though that touches on this subject that I suggest everyone checks out:
"Segregation Now" in The Atlantic
How White Liberals Shut Down Conversations About Racism by Nancy Letourneau
10 Ways White Liberals Perpetuate Racism by George Sachs
"The cult of white liberal race-deniers: David Brooks, Sandra Bland and race denying at its worst" by David Palumbo-Liu
TL;DR - White Liberals shut down conversations about race whenever it extends beyond the easy gotcha moments or the conservative racial bias.