Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Systemic Racism, Where?

 

Systemic Racism, Where?

 Claims of racism are everywhere in our country, fueled by Marxist based theories such as “The 1619 Project”, “Wokeness”, Identity Politics, and Critical Race Theory.  What utter nonsense!  The vast numbers of everyday Americans, White, Black, Asian, East Indian, Native, naturalized, and Americans of all stripes, really don’t buy into this corrosive propaganda.  We can hardly avoid the left-wing noise that everything we touch is racist, but unless we are somehow unusually receptive to these lies about race, most Americans know that they are not “racist”.

 We have been the melting pot for immigrants from other parts of the world ever since we were formed as a nation in the eighteenth century.  Whereas at one time our ancestors named O’Grady, or Donatelli, or Rodriguez, or Yamada, or my own Slavic name of Gruszecki, may have elicited epithets from more “native” Americans, of “mick”, or “wop”, or “spic”, or “nip”, or “polack”, our last names have melded into Americana, and, after education and adoption of American culture and values, are now as American as “Smith” or “Jones” or “Brown”. (Although maybe not as easy to spell and pronounce).

 This conversion of a European/Asian immigrant base to fully cultural Americans was not rapid. It took several generations and some bigoted challenges along the way.  Historians will remember the “No Irish Need Apply” signs, and the Chinese Exclusion Act of the nineteenth century, and FDR’s Executive Order 9066 exiling and expropriating Japanese-American citizens from their homes and businesses in the 1940’s.  Other immigrant groups took some time and one or two generations to leave their ethnic ghettos on the Lower East Side of New York City or Milwaukee Avenue of Chicago, or the various “Chinatowns”, to join mainstream America.

 The reason for the references to history is that bigotry and racism followed immigrant groups to America from the start, and although most of this bigotry has dissipated, there still are remnants.  Many northern inner cities are still oriented around ethnic neighborhoods, churches, drinking establishments and entertainment.  Ethnic jokes are not uncommon.  After living in Boston, New York and other eastern cites, when I moved to Texas, I found that these ethnic differences disappeared.  All we have in Texas is “Anglos” and “Meskins”.  Texans don’t distinguish the ethnicity of  “Anglo”.

 The crux of the “racist” push in the country, is our African American brothers and sisters, most of whose ancestors did not come to America by choice.  They came as “property”, or slaves, in chains.  After being exploited as slaves for over 200 years in our young country, these dark-skinned people with African origins were freed and enfranchised as American citizens by our 14th and 15th amendments.  But this was only after our most disruptive war, the civil war, in which 618,222 men died; 360,222 from the North to free the slaves, and 258,000 from the South, to preserve slavery.

 The rancor of losing 2.5% of our 1960’s population to free the slaves and enfranchise them, really did not dissipate for 100 years.  During this time, we saw true racism and bigotry against black Americans.  KKK lynching’s, segregation, true voter suppression and withholding of basic rights were common. The civil rights movement was a struggle for social justice that took place mainly during the 1950s and 1960s for Black Americans to gain equal rights under the law. The Civil War had officially abolished slavery, but it didn’t end discrimination against Black people. They, along with many white Americans, mobilized and began an unprecedented fight for equality that spanned two decades, and effectively resulted in de facto acceptance of Black Americans as equals in American life.

 But, somewhat analogous to nineteen century ethnic bigotry amongst European and Asian groups, all bigotry and real “racism”, against black Americans has not disappeared.  It rears its ugly head in uneducated fashion throughout elements of our society.  But it is not at all as pervasive as the Marxist left would have us believe.  There are remnants of bigotry against all ethnic groups, and perhaps a bit more against black Americans because of their ancestors being slaves, and the debilitating civil war and ensuing civil rights movements fought to truly enfranchise them, but American Blacks have pretty much joined the other ethnic groups in the country, as occasional targets for opprobrium.

 Since class warfare is a difficult theme for Marxism in this wealthy country, the Marxist left has taken “race” as the divisive element to abuse and exploit, and to separate our society.  With the ridiculous bordering on the sublime, we see the left pushing “racism” everywhere.  Math is “racist”.  The National Archives Rotunda is “racist”.  Many innocuous phrases that have worked their way into our vernacular are all “racist”.  Critical Race Theory goes even further, and seeks to separate us by skin color, re-introducing a bigotry once thought stamped out in the U.S.

 The sad thing is that much of our society, economy and government, have been hijacked by Marxist entities such as Black Lives Matter and Antifa, using the unfortunate death of a sometimes violent, petty criminal and junkie in Minneapolis as the martyred symbol for social justice.  Using George Floyd’s death as the fulcrum, these Marxists have been able to institute systemic Marxism in our country.  They may call it “democrat” or “socialist” or “progressive”.  What it is, is Marxist and borderline communist.

 There is some relevant pushback at all levels of society and government against this ridiculous effort by the left to paint our country as systemically racist.  In the hearts and minds of thinking Americans, we just know it isn’t so.  We don’t deny differences in our diverse society, but we truly accept our fellow citizens of all races and backgrounds for “the content of their character, rather than the color of their skin”, as expressed by Dr. Martin Luther King, and in opposition to the tenets of Critical Race Theory.

Ray Gruszecki
June 29, 2021

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