I Am A Racist, Sexist, Ableist, Sizist, Homophobe, Heterosexist, etc…
I love the blogosphere, particularly the lefty and feminist ones. It helped me survive the adjustment to my new (very conservative) region over the past 6 years. It gave me a sense of community when I didn’t have any in my real life and has provided me invaluable information that I used to be able to find by picking up the free anarchist newspapers at one of my local coffee shops.
But it can really grate on my nerves sometimes too – the biggest problem being, in my eyes, a sense of self-righteousness.
Because we (yes, I include myself. I would be dishonest if I didn’t) like to jump on anyone who displays a trait we don’t like, any of the litany of anti-justice traits that constitute judging someone by a condition of their selves that is inherent to that person, but we rarely – if ever – admit to an anti-justice trait ourselves.
In other words, we point out the flaws in other people but rarely examine publicly our own.
Perhaps it is because it resembles navel-gazing. Perhaps because publicizing our own flaws can be so difficult. Perhaps because it can seem like – and come across as – pride rather than humble self-examination.
But we are hurting ourselves and the causes we care about by refraining from it.
Because who recognizes a racist better than another racist? Who can call out a sizist better than another sizist? Who can get to the root of the absurd fear of a homophobe better than another homophobe? And what better method do we have to convince others that they are flawed than to admit that we ourselves are really no better? When we can stand up and say, “I am the same way as you. I think the same things that you do. I am not attacking you for it but instead trying to show you that we don’t have to be this way,” we will begin to win people over. When we take the sting out of these supposed insults (as suggested in the comments) by calling ourselves the same words, perhaps we can better bridge the gaps.
The epitome of privilege is being able to dodge these words with claims of innocent intent and ignorance – and with pointing our fingers at others rather than taking a hard look at ourselves.
So I admit it: I’m racist. Listening to an expert on the radio one day, I was amazed to learn that she was African-American and even more amazed (and distressed) to discover that I couldn’t hold the concepts of “expert” and “African-American” as two traits of one person in my mind. Plenty of my friends are from other countries and are other ethnicities but they all have pale skin in common; I become maddeningly awkward around anyone with dark skin.
I’m sexist.
I’m ableist. I’m addicted to the use of the word “retard” to describe a bad situation. I once had a conversation with a man in a wheelchair about soccer in which I obliviously went on and on about how much I liked to play it while he, after saying once that he didn’t really like it and motioning towards his legs, listened patiently.
I make jokes about bad language to friends who are not native English speakers, and mock their spelling. I find it hard to imagine myself living in one of the areas of my town with large Latina/o, black, or lower income populations, even though they are actually nice areas. I watch VH1 reality t.v. and make fun of women who strip for a living because it’s the best income they can get at their education level.
And I know I’m not the only one.
But we are often so intently vilifying someone else for their bad behavior, we don’t turn that critical eye on ourselves. Or, if we do, we don’t admit to it. Or when we do, we become so defensive that any progress is lost in a sea of clutched pearls.
Consider this my first attempt at admission.
Update: I am obviously not the first person to deal with these issues and questioning? pointed, in the comments of my cross-posting to a similar post by Thinking Girl. If anyone else has relevant links that should be added, please let me know in the comments.
This entry was posted on 22 June, 2009 at 9:08 am and is filed under ability/disability, blogposts, bodies, class, daily life, feminism, global issues, important experiences, meta, race, sex, television, thoughts, women with tags ability/disability, bisexuality, black people, blogs, class, classism, colonialism, communal activities, community, criticism, difference, feminism, friends, gender, heterosexism, homophobia, justice, liberals, morality, people of color, political correctness, privilege, proving yourself, race, responsibility, self, self-awareness, sex, sexism, sexuality, sizism, television, thoughts, trans people, women. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
22 June, 2009 at 3:17 pm
I think you first make the mistake that you seem to believe that all people think alike or think like you. Remember what I said to you at Restructure?
>Because who recognizes a racist better than another racist? Who can call out a sizist better than another sizist? Who can get to the root of the absurd fear of a homophobe better than another homophobe? And what better method do we have to convince others that they are flawed than to admit that we ourselves are really no better? When we can stand up and say, “I am the same way as you. I think the same things that you do.
and it isn’t racists who can recognize racists best, those who are affected by racism are the experts. It may be that one racist can best understand another racist because they both walk in the same shoes, but this doesn’t mean that they consider themselves, their words and actions racist.
22 June, 2009 at 4:23 pm
Hmm, I do remember what you said to me – that people descended from Europeans tend to not believe in the ability to damage another person’s soul, am I correct? – but I’m not sure if I understand how that applies. Perhaps I just need to think about it more….
That’s a very good point, jwbe. I should have phrased that differently, perhaps as a racist understanding the mind of a racist best? But of course, that only goes for the really “subtle” racisms, not the blatant ones, and only on certain aspects. I can’t claim to understand a white supremacist at all because I would never consider it appropriate to be so careless or even outright aggressive toward another human being.
Thank you for visiting and thank you for the comment.
22 June, 2009 at 5:02 pm
I refer to this comment on restructure,
>which leads to the next problem. Somebody white, who can
“talk about race all day long (and say whatever stupid things I want to say about it, too, if I feel like it”
is already somebody creating safe spaces for white(ness) and still feels comfortable within that.
Somebody with a problematic attitude/mindset doesn’t necessarily realize it. I wrote a post: http://stuffwhitepeoplesay.wordpress.com/2009/03/01/i-dont-think-about-things-like-that/
22 June, 2009 at 5:25 pm
jwbe, just so you know, I read your post but will have to read it again thanks to a husband who wouldn’t stop talking while I was reading it, but right now I have to go to work. I will be back later and hopefully be able to listen better then.
22 June, 2009 at 11:37 pm
Hmm, I’ve read and reread several times but I feel like I’m still not understanding something that I could be learning… But I’m also just as sure that it’s my own deficiency of imagination.
The only thing I am clear on is “When the little man does get the power over somebody else within a system where he has no power, he is more likely to controll the ‘easier target’ than trying to fight a system, which also exploits himself.” And again, I have to admit to a deficiency of imagination because I cannot imagine a modern world in which this system doesn’t exist; I feel like the best that I, personally, can do is put band-aids on gaping wounds and perhaps just slow the bloodletting a little, but can’t stitch up the wound nor prevent them from occurring in the first place. All of these ‘isms’ are so much bigger than you and I in time and space and the human psyche that I can’t even see where to begin. I just do my best, with the sad knowledge that my best is never going to be good enough.
23 June, 2009 at 5:40 pm
Also, I think you’ve taken my comment a little out of context or perhaps misunderstood it, since I was describing one of the elements of white privilege and our white-dominated culture which is, unfortunately, much bigger than anything I myself can control. However, I do my best to make sure such actions are not engaged in around me.
23 June, 2009 at 7:19 pm
On closer examination, I could have been more clear with my comment.
23 June, 2009 at 1:20 am
“The epitome of privilege is being able to dodge these words with claims of innocent intent and ignorance – and with pointing our fingers at others rather than taking a hard look at ourselves.”
Is this a mea culpa in the literal sense or are you just shouldering the unfortunate burden of so many people? I, too, make off-color jokes, realize at times my prejudices (as a white male), see and understand my privilege, but work to better that. So my question is, if we’re born into these circumstances, isn’t it noble enough to work against and subvert the dominant order to create an egalitarian society? One has to be vigilant.
On the other hand, we are also human, and with that, we should understand our own shortcomings. I think your entry above illustrates this perfectly. I didn’t read that you were coming down to hard on yourself, but that, perhaps, there needs to be a clarity of logic somewhere.
Pragmatically, yes, a racist understands a racist best. But what about the courage of racist standing up and pointing that out to another racist? How often do we see this?
I’m working on a story where a southern racist sees an act of violence and begins to literally and figuratively regress. He traces those important points in his childhood which shaped him. By the time he gets back home during a trip back from the hardware store he’s literally a little boy, barely able to drive the truck he gets into at the beginning of the story. From my experience, it takes this sort of regression/breaking down to make that racist see another racist. It takes extreme circumstances, otherwise, these folks will continue to uphold their own beliefs *out of weakness and fear*. Introspection and self-knowledge are painful things. One wouldn’t expect the racist or sexist to jump into this situation.
Sometimes, the only way for the realization to come is from outside, whether it be gently or otherwise.
Other times, we just need to let ourselves be…and disregard the dictates of the trends of linguistic ebb and flow and just let it ride.
“I make jokes about bad language to friends who are not native English speakers, and mock their spelling.”
Did you ever read the Bananafish issue when they interviewed the Boredoms? There was no racism or jingoism there. Just word play. Yet, some might read it as racism. Bull dada.
The overriding point to me, after my recent experience, is simply to not let ideology override your sense of humanity itself. I recommend “Rabelais and His World” by Mikhail Bakhtin. It’s a liberating, wonderful text.
And finally, I think that liberation begins with the recognition of one’s own flaws, and then the realization that we’re all flawed. You seem to intuit and explicitly express this in your post. I’m still stuck on the people who think that, somehow, they aren’t flawed, or hide the reality that they aren’t. They scare me more than anyone else.
Cheers to flaws.
23 June, 2009 at 2:56 pm
You’ve said so much, rippost, I don’t know where to begin exactly.
But I suppose I fall on the mea culpa side. I don’t think I’m picking up any burdens that don’t belong to me (us) in the first place, just recognizing them for what they are. And honestly, I’m not sure that “trying” constitutes enough anyway. If I can claim goodness just for trying, where does that leave all of the people who are still experiencing the flip side of my privilege? Too often the claim is “I didn’t mean to offend” or “I’m sorry it offended you” – shaking off the responsibility we have to stepping aside in the world so that other people can have some room too. After awhile, if a person or group of people continue to do the same thing over and over again, even if they apologize (or make the motions of apology) every time, it becomes clear that they simply don’t care enough to change. It turns the apology from an attempt at assuagement to just another string in the litany of insults, and I hope to not be one of those people.
To me, this isn’t about ideology. It’s about treating everyone with the respect they deserve as a fellow human being. It’s about the golden rule, even, treating others as I want to be treated. And I’ve been mistreated enough that I don’t want to do that to other people if I can help it.
And yes, cheers to flaws.
23 June, 2009 at 6:06 am
>Hmm, I’ve read and reread several times but I feel like I’m still not understanding something that I could be learning… But I’m also just as sure that it’s my own deficiency of imagination.
what do you think that you don’t understand?
23 June, 2009 at 2:35 pm
I don’t know. I just feel like there is a lot of good stuff in your post, but that a lot of it is above my head somehow.
23 June, 2009 at 3:16 pm
Can I ask you honestly, jwbe, do you think I have made a “safe space” for privileged people on this thread and if so, how do you think I could make it a safe space for all people and still be honest in an attempt to lay bear certain things to my fellow privileged people (if that is even possible)? Can those two conversations even occur in the same place at the same time?
23 June, 2009 at 3:10 pm
“To me, this isn’t about ideology. It’s about treating everyone with the respect they deserve as a fellow human being. It’s about the golden rule, even, treating others as I want to be treated. And I’ve been mistreated enough that I don’t want to do that to other people if I can help it.”
I’m sorry if I insinuated somehow, or even explicitly said that. I was writing this just as I was about to head off to dream land–I think it shows.
I don’t know what the answers are, trying to make up for the sins of the fathers and all that. I guess the only thing we can do is to do what you were doing above.
I remember once sitting in the backyard of an acquaintance in Lakeland and he was saying some pretty racist things without realizing it. I pointed it out to him, but also pointed out that I hold some racist assumptions. It didn’t minimize how offended he was–and his defensive posture was clue enough for me that he wasn’t going to own up to his own problem. I left it alone.
It’s just an everyday battle with a few victories along the way, but I have to say that things seem to be getting better in some areas. Other areas, we still have a long way to go.
Boy. Can I ever state the obvious.
23 June, 2009 at 3:18 pm
@thewhatifgirl:
somebody either feels comfortable within this system and culture and then s/he will act accordingliy or s/he won’t feel comfortable within this system and culture and act accordingly.
It is not about being flawless or without mistakes, it is about a point of view and attitude towards life.
23 June, 2009 at 3:29 pm
I don’t think that you or even most people beyond the rare fundamentalist believe that it is about being flawless. I do believe that a lot of people think that it is about appearing to be flawless, because one of their privileges in life is to never have to own up to being a person who makes mistakes in certain things.
Is it that clearcut, though? I feel comfortable with the system in some ways, obviously, but in other ways I have lived out my life in direct challenge to the system – and found plenty of other people in the same position. We can never challenge a system entirely, especially when it is what we were born into, raised in, and must live our lives in. To challenge in any way is to put more pressure on another area; sometimes society gives way and sometimes we ourselves must give way.
23 June, 2009 at 3:28 pm
>Can I ask you honestly, jwbe, do you think I have made a “safe space” for privileged people on this thread and if so, how do you think I could make it a safe space for all people and still be honest in an attempt to lay bear certain things to my fellow privileged people (if that is even possible)? Can those two conversations even occur in the same place at the same time?
I don’t know your blog well enough, but from the few comments on restructure I wouldn’t feel comfortable to honestly talk about my point of view, because I get the feeling that much of what I say would either face some defensiveness or would take me alot of time to explain my point of view.
For me personally a safe place to talk about racism is a place where talking about racism doesn’t become exhausting because of white denial, defensiveness etc. and where I don’t have to explain myself.
What I once hoped to find on internet was a place where white people could talk about what it means to be ‘different’ and not comfortable in a society like this. I wouldn’t mind when PoC join such conversations but I don’t know if they are interested in it.
23 June, 2009 at 3:35 pm
Fair enough. I definitely appreciate that you have said this much.
23 June, 2009 at 3:56 pm
I spoke about an attitude towards life and this is something very fundamental. This will be the basis of all your actions. This will be the way that influences you (one) how you recognize your environment, society, people etc.
I don’t know whether you know the book ‘a promise and a way of life’, there Thompson writes about an ‘anti-racist’ culture, a culture for whites who are ‘different’ and neither belong to the world of PoC nor do they feel a belonging to the ‘white world’. And this is almost never if ever addressed among white anti-racists. But I think it would be important. It would be important to question Eurocentrism, the very root for white behavior. I wrote some posts about this on swps, I don’t have the impression that this is something many whites want to hear, but I would like to have a broader exchange about this
23 June, 2009 at 5:50 pm
No, I had never heard of that book before. But it looks very interesting and I will definitely have to read it.
I agree, both that it is important to question Eurocentrism and that many white people (including myself, to be completely honest) do not want to hear that or have to engage in it. I will definitely be visiting your blog, though, since I learn so much from all of your comments on Restructure! and know that I have a long way to go myself.
20 July, 2009 at 5:39 pm
[...] Step in a Long Journey After being deservedly taken to task for my admission of some major faults, I wondered what I could possibly do [...]