Wednesday, September 28, 2005

The Race for Race

While I agree that the rush to blame the disaster in New Orleans on racism was a bit premature, or a bit kneejerk, or at least not well thought out and carried out in the heat of the catastrophe, I have to say I am far more disturbed by the backlash and by the stronger racism and hatred it's conjured up in us. I'm pretty sickened by the internet trash being sent around about it, as if racist whiteys are finally able to publicly rejoice in what happened and can now let all their demons out of the closet where they've been half hidden to play in the flooded streets and spit in the eye of any who disagree.

Both these attitudes are way off base and nothing but destructive. Blacks in New Orleans were inordinately affected by the hurricane--that seems undoubtable. Beyond that, it's really hard to know anything for sure.

The tube-glued couch potatoes among us seem to think they've got it all figured out, that black people--all black people--simply ran amok with guns blazing and peckers hanging out destroying anything of their city that wasn't already destroyed, and then started crying that white folk weren't helping them enough. That's about as simpleminded as saying that the country ignored New Orleans because the only people left there were black.

There is truth in both those statements, but neither of them is the truth. There's a big difference there. And, mostly, I just wish we could disconnect ourselves from the canned and distorted reality of the idiot box and show a little common sense and sympathy. Something very bad has happened, and beyond the local politicians and Brown and Chertoff and Bush, we're not so sure who played what role in all of this.

I guess all I'm saying is let's think, not just react. Let's not assume that everything going on down there has been captured on TV. It hasn't. Or that all these malicious and racist e-mail bullshit making the rounds have any kind of wisdom in them. They don't.

Let's think for ourselves.

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