Former President George W. Bush has caught some flak for stating that being called a racist by rapper Kanye West was an "all-time low" and "the worst moment" in his presidency. Why do you suppose he felt that way? Do you think his feeling might have been justified, or that he took the criticism far too seriously?
(To help mull this over: Edward Gilbreath has
some interesting thoughts on his blog from back in July on why the "racist" slur can hit us so hard.)
Comments:
But isn't what Elizabeth R. is saying along the lines of "you're a [something]ist if you're not an [other]"? Isn't that a truism then and completely pointless? For example, am I a sexist chauvinist because I'm not a woman? Am I a spellist because I spell it 'privilege'? Unless the point is simply "try to understand someone else". Fine, but why label everyone something? Labeling seems to segregate by its nature, which seems kind of counter-anti-racist, rather than provide a holistic vision of humanity. On the other hand, "mosaic" is a huge word up in Canada right now.
Meh, I like both Kanye and Bush for various reasons.
Yes, horrible things have been done that were very blatantly racist. But there's also a subtler racism that I think you all are missing. I encourage any white people on this blog to read "White Priviledge: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack" by Peggy McIntosh: http://www.nymbp.org/reference/WhitePrivilege.pdf
What I am getting at is that calling someone "racist" is not (though it might be perceived as) necessarily saying a person is evil, just that they need to come to a better understanding of persons of different races.
And just to clarify, the people who hold those opinions are of many races themselves.
Unfortunately there are large segments of the American population that consider George W Bush to be racist, and particularly racist because of how Katrina was handled. It's not fair , but true.
1. G.W. Bush, like the rest of us, doesn't like to be maligned.
2. He knows his own heart and knows that he is being falsely accused.
3. He's seen racists and despises racism, and it hurts to be put in the same category by someone who doesn't know him at all.
4. He knows that once the accusation of racism is made, it sticks regardless of the truth and regardless of any efforts to counter it.