Whitewashing Race: The Myth of a Color-Blind Society

Whitewashing Race: The Myth of a Color-Blind Society [Michael K. Brown, Martin Carnoy, Elliott Currie, Troy Duster, David B. Oppenheimer, Marjorie M. Schultz.
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What this means is that there is no such thing as a "view from nowhere"—to use Thomas Nagel's apt phrase. People's perspectives on race reflect their experience on one side of the color line or the other. Whites routinely misperceive the reality of black lives. For example, even though blacks are about twice as likely as whites to hold low-paying jobs and are more than twice as likely to be unemployed, 50 percent of whites say the average black is about as well off as the average white person.

Blacks, on the other hand, tend to be more realistic and accurate in their perceptions of their economic status relative to whites. If white Americans make no effort to hear the viewpoints and see the experiences of others, their awareness of their own privileged racial status will disappear. They can convince themselves that life as they experience it on their side of the color line is simply the objective truth about race.

But while this allows them to take their privileged status for granted, it also distorts their understanding. This error poses serious problems for conservatives' analysis of racial inequality. Of course, individual views within racial groups vary. Not everyone who shares the same subjective perspective will draw the same conclusions about policy. But any perspective that is unreflectively locked inside its own experience is limited, and this is particularly so when that perspective reflects the dominant culture. Failure to understand that they take whites' racial location for granted leads racial realists to ignore the ways in which race loads the dice in favor of European Americans while simultaneously restricting African Americans' access to the gaming table.

White privilege, like the water that sustains fish, is invisible in their analysis. This chapter is about perspective, and how definition—the power to name—determines perception, and ultimately, prescription. It traces the difference it makes if one group's perspective pervades almost everything, from culture to law. Apostles of the new perspective on race insist that racism is primarily a thing of the past.

They come to this conclusion because they filter their evidence and their judgment through an outdated, discredited understanding of racism as intentional, obvious, and individual. These misconceptions are not unique to any particular writer or writers. Many white Americans and American institutions, including the current Supreme Court majority, hold parallel views.

Because racial conservatives ignore the variability of racial reality in America, they do not recognize that racism is lodged in the structure of society, that it permeates the workings of the economic, political, educational, and legal institutions of the United States. Without that recognition, however, we will be unable to resolve the pernicious problems of race that confront us as Americans. Conceptions of Race and Racism after the Civil Rights Revolution In the new conventional wisdom about race, white racism is regarded as a remnant from the past because most whites no longer express bigoted attitudes or racial hatred.

The Thernstroms note that despite black riots and crime in the streets in , "nowhere in the voluminous polling evidence available for these years is there any sign that whites were drifting in the direction of the virulent anti-black sentiments so prevalent in the s and s. Marianne Means flatly asserts, "We all agree that slavery was evil. But the blood of slavery does not stain modern mainstream America. But the haters have become a tiny remnant with no influence in any important sphere of American life. For example, more than half of all whites once believed that blacks were intellectually inferior.

Whitewashing Race: The Myth of a Color-Blind Society - David J. Maume,

In , however, only 13 percent of whites believed that blacks had "less in-born ability to learn" than whites. Whites also used to favor school segregation by overwhelming majorities, but now 90 percent favor school integration. In the s whites believed they should be favored in competition for jobs.


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Today, on the other hand, whites unanimously agree that "blacks and whites should have an equal chance to compete for jobs. To racial realists, this evidence means that the color line has been radically altered. Although many whites still accept one or more negative stereotypes about African Americans, a recent study by Paul Sniderman and Thomas Piazza asserts that only 2 percent of the population could be considered old-fashioned bigots who subscribe to a large number of racist stereotypes.

Whitewashing Race: The Myth of a Color-Blind Society

Consequently, it is rare today to find cases of discrimination such as the ones involving Texaco's executives calling African Americans "black jelly beans," a member of the Dallas school board referring to African Americans as "niggers," and the "raw racism" experienced by black secret service agents in a Baltimore Denny's restaurant.

The evidence cited by racial realists indicates that they, like many whites, use a particular understanding of racism. This notion assumes that racism is motivated, crude, explicitly supremacist, and typically expressed as individual bias. Racism, in short, is a form of "prejudice. After all, virulent antiblack sentiments have diminished, formal barriers based on malicious intent have in large part been dismantled, and few Americans would accept publicly sanctioned racial barriers today.

Were these its undisputed characteristics, one might be tempted to agree that racism is obsolete. The law institutionalizes the American ideal of equality, and it provides remedies for those hurt by bias. Current law embraces the concept of racism as intentional individual prejudice, and also its corollary—that whites today are often unfairly accused.

Evolving doctrine in racial discrimination cases reflects what Angela Harris has called an "essentially moralistic" view.

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In several reverse discrimination lawsuits, for example, the Supreme Court has explicitly worried that affirmative action plans impose unacceptable burdens on "innocent" third parties read whites. In equal protection cases, the Court has increasingly emphasized invidious intention as a necessary element for finding actionable discrimination. But this perspective has its critics. Twenty-five years ago, Alan Freeman documented how, after a brief period of attention to what he called a "victim perspective" in the jurisprudence of equality, the Court moved decisively to adopt a "perpetrator perspective" on issues of race.

Adopting the perpetrator perspective means looking at contested race issues from the vantage point of whites. The "perpetrator perspective" in law, like the conservatives' understanding of racism, is preoccupied with white guilt or innocence. It largely ignores whether people of color have suffered injury or loss of opportunity because of their race. Other critics have raised analogous arguments, paying attention to group subordination or disadvantage. Ignoring these analyses, the courts have extended and deepened their attachment to the perpetrator perspective as the racial law of the land.

The Supreme Court's standard for white innocence is very low. Before the modern civil rights era, the Supreme Court often insisted that analysis of motive was inappropriate in constitutional adjudication. During the past several decades, however, the Court has increasingly required that plaintiffs in equal protection discrimination cases not only may, but must, probe defendants' motives.


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To be successful, plaintiffs must prove specific and conscious bad intentions, the equivalent of the concept of racism as personal prejudice. Under the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court holds it is not enough to show that people would reasonably know the discriminatory consequences of their actions. Nor is it enough that actors foresaw the predictable effects of their actions and still proceeded in spite of them. To gain or sustain a remedy for racial injustice, litigants must meet a very high standard: Reva Siegel argues on the basis of credible evidence that the Court knew this was a level of responsibility plaintiffs would "rarely be able to prove.

The Court has sometimes said that proof of employment discrimination may be based on a demonstration that policies have a disparate impact rather than on a showing of intent—proving, for example, that African Americans or other racial groups are more likely to be disadvantaged by an employment practice than whites. Although the courts give lip service to unintentional bias in cases involving claims of discriminatory treatment, particularly in employment, most of the governing precedents require that plaintiffs prove intentional bias.

In the Supreme Court further extended that requirement. It held that under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits the discriminatory use of federal money, proving disparate impact would no longer be sufficient to win discrimination suits by private parties against federally funded contractors or institutions. The Court now requires proof of invidious intention in most cases of racial discrimination.

It does not apply this standard of intent in age discrimination cases where the relevant statutory language is identical to that in Title VII. In these cases, the courts have accepted a distinction between motive a factor in causing action and intent a specifically proven state of mind that is more favorable to plaintiffs alleging discrimination.

In other settings that address harms caused by others, such as personal injury law, courts assess liability and compensate victims not simply for intentional harms but also for injuries caused accidentally, that is, negligently. Plaintiffs do not have to prove malice or purpose unless they seek punitive damages.

Choosing to make the specific intentions of identifiable individuals the criterion of racism is neither neutral nor appropriate. It is self-aggrandizing and misguided to judge others by their actions but ourselves only by our intentions. In Supreme Court decisions and in the minds of many whites, the relevant "ourselves" are predominantly white or, in Freeman's phrase, potential "perpetrators.

If we are deciding whether to put someone in jail, then assessing his intentions may be appropriate. However, where disputes do not involve criminal charges but rather decisions about social, educational, welfare, or employment policy, questions of guilt, innocence and punishment are not the issue.

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No one goes to jail for discrimination. In discrimination litigation, the focus is on the legitimacy and fairness of the distribution of scarce opportunities and resources.

To ameliorate injustice and achieve a more desirable state of civil affairs, it is more important to examine the problems of discrimination, injuries, and unfairness than to evaluate the culpability and motives of particular perpetrators. The Court's narrow definition of discrimination, like the realists' equation of racism with prejudice, severely restricts what counts as bias or as evidence of bias. This definition tends to exonerate whites, blame blacks by default , and naturalize render unobjectionable the broad realities of race-based subordination in the United States. This definition of racism, as we have already noted, is also empirically and conceptually flawed.

It depends almost exclusively on attitudinal evidence uncovered by opinion polling. This poses two problems. First, even on its own terms, this interpretation of racism ignores significant research that shows how racist attitudes have persisted. In his recent book The Ordeal of Integration , Orlando Patterson examined a variety of evidence and concluded that "all things considered, it is reasonable to estimate that about a quarter of the Euro-American population harbors at least mildly racist feelings toward Afro-Americans and that one in five is a hard-core racist.

If Patterson is correct, the Thernstroms' "miscreants of the night" are hardly a fringe. Second, by relying on survey questions written in the s, this research ignores possible changes in the character of racism and is, therefore, incorrectly measuring modern expressions of it.

Of Fish and Water

Donald Kinder and Lynn Sanders write that "a new form of prejudice has come to prominence, one that is preoccupied with matters of moral character, informed by the virtues associated with the traditions of individualism. Today, we say, prejudice is expressed in the language of American individualism. There are also abundant survey data documenting the persistence of widespread racial prejudice forty years after the civil rights revolution.

However ,I read this book in a class where some of my fellow classmates commented on the interdisciplinary stance that these authors take. Although most were white individuals, they were highly trained in their field of study and added empirical evidence that is significant to know about communities of color. All in all, it was not emotional enough for me and sort of dry within the middle of each chapter. The numbers and stats are awesome!

I suggest not reading this book straight through. This, for me, was a reference book. Jul 22, David rated it it was amazing. Perhaps my favorite assigned collegiate textbook Phenomenal debate on the role of race in modern American society. Apr 24, Brian Elswick rated it really liked it. Really good interaction with many of the "Conservative" talking points while never being dismissive or argumentative. Perhaps a little more technical than an introductory book but for someone steeped in Conservative perspectives on race looking to understand the issues from another perspective, worth the time.

Aug 26, Alexis rated it it was ok. Nov 02, Julius rated it really liked it. Nov 16, Rebecca rated it it was ok. Apr 24, Oesa rated it it was amazing. If anyone else wants to discuss this one, I'd love to! Nov 30, Janille rated it it was amazing. A Must read for anyone debating racism in America.

Dec 20, Amanda marked it as to-read. Dec 06, Jim rated it really liked it Shelves: Excellent critique of the myth of American colorblindness in the legal system, education, health industry and other aspects of U. Jul 09, Katy rated it it was amazing. I read this book when it first came out in my introduction to sociology course, and now I recommend it almost everyone I meet. Dr Sheldon I Roach rated it really liked it Sep 19, Lauren rated it really liked it Feb 18, Amandallp rated it really liked it Jun 20, Maddie Keating rated it it was amazing Apr 17, Lisa rated it liked it Jul 25, Simone rated it it was amazing Sep 30, Henisha rated it really liked it Nov 07, Kathi rated it it was amazing Jul 24, Brad rated it really liked it Dec 24, Susan Jackson rated it it was amazing Jun 19, Alina rated it really liked it Sep 25,