Racial reconciliation will only be complete when Jesse Jackson and his ilk are gone from the national scene.
In the 1960s, there were many people, a majority, who wanted an end to the Jim Crow environment kept alive in such Democratic strongholds as the Deep South and the industrialized cities in the north–Boston, Chicago, Detroit. Look at old films of Dr. King’s marches and rallies and within the sea of dark faces you will see many white ones. I was too young to get involved in such things myself. And, to be honest, there was never anything like that in my neighborhood anyway. Relationships between whites and blacks in most places were probably better then than they are now.
Martin’s death–murder–was a shock. It affected me even more than the murder of either of the Kennedy boys. I couldn’t grasp how anyone could be filled with that kind of hatred.
In King’s place, we saw the rise of people without his vision, and it is a loss we still feel today. Those new “leaders” had a different agenda, and it had little to do with equality.
But who are their followers? Those are the ones restricting any kind of reconciliation. Those who believe the doom and gloom, those who see racism at every turn. Even when it isn’t there. I sincerely know nobody who is a racist. There may be someone who keeps it hidden, or it is simply latent. But nobody I know, of any skin color, views someone of any other skin color as something less.
I know many demanding people. Those who expect a certain standard can be accused of anything convenient if it suits a person found lacking in ability to meet those standards. But that isn’t racism. It involves setting a standard and living up to it—striving to exceed it. Some are simply too lazy. As a boss, I’ve been accused of racism on occasion, but I’ve always had another subordinate who knew me well and was the same race as the accuser. That accusation didn’t last long. So I understand how some feel they can turn their own failings into a perceived failing of someone else.
And that is what needs to change. That is the attitude projected by the Jesse Jacksons of the world. And it is something preached to young people. If you fail, it isn’t your fault. That isn’t simply a race issue. It is a cultural issue telling our kids they should do well, but if they fail it isn’t their fault. Must not make them feel bad about themselves. In the case of race, Jackson and others simply give one group another excuse.
Racism is not a group problem. It, like most other cultural issues, is based in individuals. There will always be individuals with a distorted sense of values. They will be racist. But that does not make the population in general racist. And it is not something that can be legislated. When all people look at others individually rather than as a member of some group, there will be no reconciliation required.
Individuals. Individuals. We are all Individuals! Quit looking at someone else as a member of some group.