Instead of working on some crochet stuff, I need to write, albeit briefly. I've just been reading the book,
Enough, by
Juan Williams. I mentioned him in an earlier post, about his comments on the Civil Rights movement at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. He's one of the few reporters whose ideology doesn't disgust me, and wherever he is reporting, he looks different. I had dismissed him a bit from some things he said on NPR, in his function as White House correspondent, but then I heard him talk about this new book and civil rights history and was intrigued. He's also a correspondent for Fox News, which is a pretty interesting stretch. The article I linked to is an interview with him about his new book, how people perceive him and his message, and ways that people can help stem the epidemic of failure in the black community. The subtitle of the book is a bit long:
The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America--And What We Can Do About It. Sums it up quite nicely though.
(I have been reading columns by Dan Rodricks in the Sun as well, and he's going to be writing about groups in the city who are trying (and succeeding) to get people out of the vicious cycle of poverty and ignorance in Baltimore. After nearly twenty murders in that many days, help is too late for them, but maybe there's something that can be done.)
I spent my day off yesterday reading about half of Williams' book, and I am amazed and outraged at what I have read. It's mostly stuff I knew or guessed, but when it's all put together it is a powerful indictment on the wasted opportunities since
Brown vs. Board of Education. Baltimore gets more than a shout-out as well, with a few pages about the disgusting, abhorrent murders of the Dawson family by a drug dealer across the street. Williams says that Baltimore has one of the worst murder rates in the country, and guess where the headquarters of the NAACP is? Right here (not for long, it seems. Everyone's leaving, aren't they?). Are they saying jack about these things? No. Not until a whole family gets murdered, and then it's only to blame the police for not protecting them. Not to say, hey! We need to stop ennabling these drug dealers, and stop dealing drugs, and covering up for them and protecting them, even if they're in our families, so that people feel safe walking down the street. No. They just talk about the disproportionate number of black people in prison.
Williams' book is a call to take responsibility, to remember our history as a country, and the sacrifices African-Americans and others made for hundreds of years to be free, to have citizenship, to have the right to vote and to get an education. That yes, there is still racism and inequality, but that people have also contributed to that negative image by leading lawless lives, being promiscuous, rapping about the thug life and glorifying prison time as a rite of passage.
Most rap music is bought by white middle-class kids, most of the video games that have black characters all support the violent, sullen stereotypes, and a lot of street fashion (baggy pants, tattoos, do rags) comes directly from prison dress codes. People in "mainstream" America are buying this stuff, dancing to it, and having a great time, but they're also internalizing the stereotypes. Williams talks about the horny white frat boy dancing to gangsta rap, who years later, is in charge of hiring at a company. Is he going to want to hire people who look like thugs? Is he going to entrust his company to people who are violent, lazy, can't read or speak proper English-- a stereotype he absorbed while listening to this crap? The poor black kids watching BET see that women are slapped around and should wear little to no clothing, men posture and knock up their women and spend all their time dogging other rappers and threatening and killing each other, and what are they supposed to get out of that? If all I saw of white people growing up on TV was Jerry Springer, I'd have some really f'd up notions of my identity and purpose for life. It's hard enough, I say, with a healthy family. It would take a miracle to turn out with any hope or ambition or security in that sort of environment.
So I say Enough as well. I'm going to get some bumper stickers printed with the logo too, like our oh-so-famous and vague, "BELIEVE" crap. Believe in what?? I believe that your bloody blue police lights flashing on top of street poles are a bad idea, I believe you've stewed in your own corruption long enough in the government and school board and justice system. I believe I am sick of the violence and the excuses. I believe I am going to do something about it too.