5 Things White Activists Should Never Say


By freelark

If I’m to be a white ally, I figure I should take some of the burden off people of color to explain what’s wrong with some of the things white people say. With that in mind I’ve decided to compile a list of things that white people — specifically, white activists — should never say.

While reading this list, keep in mind that I’m drawing heavily from my own experience. There are plenty of fucked up things white people can say. However, with one exception I’ve decided to focus on blatantly racist comments that I’ve heard first hand. Also, I tend to mention anarchists a lot, because I used to be an anarchist, so I organized with other anarchists. This does not mean that white anarchists have a monopoly on racism. In many cases one could substitute the term social liberal or socialist for anarchist, and the point would still be applicable.

1. “They belong to that religion.”

I have yet to visit an activist group with religious homogeneity. That said, in my experience certain religious views are more acceptable among activists than others. If a disproportionate number of the people who hold a religious stance are European or of European descent, the stance is acceptable. So it’s okay to be an atheist, a pagan, or a Quaker. If a religious stance doesn’t meet this criterion, it tends to be viewed with suspicion.

In the US white activists reserve scorn for the Roman Catholic Church (RCC) that they have for few other religious institutions. It would be outside the scope of this piece to argue that the RCC is good or bad. But I will point out that it’s folly to treat Catholics as a monolithic, univocal group that stands opposite of everything activists believe in. Individual Catholics have differences of opinion on pretty much everything, and often membership to the church (as is the case with so many other religious institutions) has more to do with wanting to preserve family or community ties than with adhering to a certain set of doctrines. If white people don’t want to alienate people of color from their organizing, they’re going to have to learn to show more tolerance for the religions they adhere to.

2. “All nationalism is bad.”

The idea that all nationalism, including ethnic nationalism, is bad is often rooted in anarchism, an ideology that was first propounded by European men in the nineteenth century and which since then has drawn more than its fair share of white thinkers. Even if we set this aside, white people who raise the “all nationalism is bad” objection often miss the point that the essence of ethnic nationalism has nothing to do with what anarchists mean by state and everything to do with racial or ethnic identity.

It’s important to keep in mind that some people link themselves to a nation in order to express racial or ethnic identity rather than allegiance to a state. If white people can avoid doing this, this doesn’t mean that they’re all awesome anti-statists; rather it means that they have the privilege of being part of the group that is seen as the default racial or ethnic group. When white activists forget this, it’s a disaster in the making. For example, I once saw an activist remove a poster from a wall, simply because it said (when translated), “I am as Puerto Rican as the coquí.” The message, which should be obvious to anyone who claims to be anti-racist, has nothing to do with a particular state; it is that one’s ethnic identity is something to be proud of.

3. “I know what it’s like to face racist oppression; I face oppression too.”

No, unless you’ve experienced racism you do not know what it’s like to experience racism.

I used to find this response somewhat confusing. Surely, racist oppression isn’t completely disanalogous to other kinds of oppression, right? After all, don’t we use much the same vocabulary — words like privilege, oppression, and intersectionality — while discussing all kinds of oppression? And can’t someone who faces one sort of opression gain insight into another by making a comparison? I think the answer to all these questions is a very cautious yes — cautious because there’s a danger lurking just around the corner. If comparing racist oppression to your oppression helps you realize that something you said or did was racist, then it’s probably a good thing that you made the comparison. Even so, before you share your insight with the world you should run it by someone who faces both kinds of oppression, because no matter how oppressed or well-intentioned you may be, you’re still coming from a perspective of white privilege and you may be wrong about something crucial. Better yet, start reading the works of people who face multiple kinds of oppression and let them guide you into appropriate analogies.

The danger of white people’s comparisons is that often the only “insight” gained from analogy is that because the white people making it are oppressed, they can never be racist. This denies one of the central components of anti-oppression work which is that the oppressed have unique insight into their oppression by virtue of having experienced the oppression, including the ways in which it is disanalogous to other kinds of oppression. This is important, because it may be that it was just these disanalogous elements were at play when you said what you did five minutes ago and that what you said is therefore racist for reasons you don’t understand. Not incidentally, the unique knowledge that an oppressed group has is known as the epistemic privilege of the oppressed. If your goal is to eliminate inequality, you don’t want to appropriate one of the few kinds of privilege that oppressed people have, do you?

Though many examples of analogies gone wrong could be listed, I’ll give only one here — one that’s limited to activist circles. Some activists are inclined to make statements like, “I know what it’s like to be black; I’m an anarchist.” I think what often happens is that white activists identify one sort of oppression, such as state oppression, as the Big Evil. They don’t see that other oppressive forces besides the Big Evil are at work and therefore they fail to see that some people face oppression that they don’t comprehend. If you’re white and have gone to jail for political reasons, that is unfortunate, but this does not mean you know what it’s like to be a person of color. As a white person, you have the privilege of choosing whether or not to engage in political activities that may land you in jail; people of color can abstain from such activities and still end up in jail simply for being people of color. As a white person, you will probably be treated better in jail than a person of color who is your counterpart. As a white person, you don’t know what it’s like to experience the racist oppression people of color experience outside of jail. As a white person, you don’t know what it’s like to be a person of color in white activists’ space, hearing white people say that they know exactly what it’s like to experience racist oppression. In short it is incredibly myopic to think that one point of (apparent) commonality gives white people insight into what it’s like to be people of color.

4. “If we focus on this other kind of oppression, racism will disappear.”

In the previous section I noted a tendency of white people to fail to see any oppression outside of the oppression they consider the Big Evil. In a related phenomenon white people will, while perhaps acknowledging that orther kinds oppression exist, argue that without the Big Evil other forms of oppression would not exist. Therefore anyone who confronts other kinds of oppression is only treating symptoms; the only cure for society’s ills is to fight the Big Evil. The Big Evil could be statism, sexism, or any number of other things, but I’d like to focus on classism, because in my experience it’s named as the Big Evil in activist circles more than anything else.

If this piece were about the oppressions I face, you’d see I have a lot to say against classism. However, it wouldn’t be appropriate for me to focus on it here. All too often white activists derail conversations about racism by bringing up classism. The problem with white activists’ saying that racism reduces to classism is that it is an attempt to keep people of color from directly confronting their oppression so that they will instead confront an oppression that directly affects white people.

To support the claim that racism reduces to classism some white activists point out that in the US at least racist institutions were established as a part of divide-and-conquer scheme to keep the working class from rising up against the upper class. Setting aside the fact that this gives an account of only some racist insitutions (the expansion that drove Native Americans west, for example, was already well underway), the argument presupposes that if working class white people had not bought into the view that they were superior to their black counterparts, they may have succeeded in revolting against the upper class. In other words white people’s racism prevented the demise of classism. I do not mean to say that we should make a reversal and say that generally speaking classism is reducible to racism. However, I do mean to say that racism is a problem in its own right.

5. “There are no people of color in our activist group; let’s go to a meeting of people of color and invite them to join our group.”

Many white activists have the impression that they have arrived. They think they no longer have any racist bullshit they need to work on. Therefore if people of a particular racial or ethnic group don’t want to work with them, it must be because they have yet to be informed the awesomeness that is their group of white activists.

There’s a reason I’m putting this remark last. I hope that after even a small sampling of racist comments white activists make — there are many others that aren’t included here — it’s apparent just how ridiculous it is to think that the only matter keeping people of various ethnic and racial minorities out of a given activist group is a lack of information. If an organization has disproportionately few people of color as members, it’s often because people of color don’t see how it benefits them, and that is often because the organization has racist tendencies that it has yet to address.

Perhaps the bigger problem with this remark is that it’s blatantly tokenizing. The people who make it aren’t primarily interested in forming a diverse coalition to confront the problems that people of color face; if they were, they’d visit the meeting of the people of color regularly and ask them how they could help without expecting glory for themselves or their organization. Instead they want to use people of color to make their activist group more diverse. They are making one more thing — segregation itself! — the responsibility of people of color.

Via Beyond White Guilt

Share
  • Print
  • email
  • Current
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • FriendFeed
  • Global Grind
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Identi.ca
  • LinkedIn
  • Live
  • Mixx
  • MSN Reporter
  • MySpace
  • Netvibes
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • RSS
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Twitthis
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • PDF

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

  1. #1 by elise on July 10, 2010 - 5:50 am

    -there are several countries in the very LARGE CONTINENT in Africa worth living in and safe to do so, as well as having a prosperous economy.

    -Haiti became so fucked as a result of colonial and post-colonial meddeling by European nations. You only have to flip through a random page in a history book to understand what kind of pressures exists under extreme federal poverty and disheartened people (if you need a good white example, think Germany circa the 1930s). Corruption and evil if you will in political leadership does not have a color, we simply seem to see it that way. There are many “white countries” that I would be too afraid to step foot in the same way you feel about Africa and haiti. How do you explain away/or even blame on the blacks the atrocities that have happened in Armenia, Chechenya, and the current slaughtering in Kyrgyzstan? As usual, your point of view and that of many others is STEEPED in a Westernist perception. A Western perception is one that doesn’t care about the rest of the world, except those parts that help feed into its own ideology. And in this case, highlighting the plights and shortcommings of all black countries works out. Our news, media, and of course educational tools specifically and purposely construct our view of the world and how we are to view it.

    - The money sent to Haiti for the most part came in the form of private contributions to private countries. President Obama nor the federal government has no control over where that money goes. I also doubt it was anywhere near a trillion dollars.

    - While I personally am also sick of the cry for reparations, the Africans who did sell other Africans into slaver had nothing to do with the extreme mistreatment they received (and their descendants continue to receive) for hundreds of years once the y reached North America.

    –in short, Let’s really think about things before we talk and try to clear ourselves of our Westernist-only way of viewing the world in order to grasp a better understanding of things and why they work.

  2. #2 by Justin on June 17, 2010 - 9:59 am

    Everybody, especially in America has some racism in them. Mostly due to the brainwashing effects of media, societies, and the reinforcement of their brainwashed parents. An example of brainwashed for me is after seeing hundreds of Arab terrorists in movies and most likely only a few of other descents, people generally believe that an Arab is very likely to have ties to a terrorist or even be a terrorist. In reality, there have been a few dozen bombings done by a few dozen radical terrorists out of the billions of Arabs in the world. Even worse, there are many movies and shows which depicts Arab Americans as only being here to help take over America. Maybe there are a few of the sort, but media time and time again influences the way people think. Even if you go to an airport and think to yourself, I’m not racist, so I don’t think that Arab over there will blow up the plane, but the fact is still that you must go through the process of judging people FIRST by race, and second by other more important attributes like body language or something. So did you do anything wrong? Not necessarily, but your actions do harm when you multiply this by the millions of people who spend the extra minute judging someone by their skin, which may still seem harmless, but in times of fear like after 9-11, it leads to Arabs being automatically strip searched at airports. Or after World War 2, Japanese Americans were detained into internment camps, and some were even prosecuted as spies when they were ordinary Americans.
    Racism is often shown as one person hating another because he is black and so forth, but the real problem lies in the society you live in. A white kid cannot help but to be influenced by his society and develop judgments about other races, so when one decides to try and erase all of the years of learning to try and live a better, more open minded life, with the knowledge to know that we were all created equally, and that it is elitism that first tore us apart into race, why would you fight that? I understand there are fake people who think it is the cool thing to do, and don’t understand the whole concept of racism in society, not just their neighborhood and their whitewashed black friend. But when there is a white activist willing to take some sacrifice to help another group of people while he/she has no need to because of their automatic leg up in their life, I feel it is very judgmental to argue that a white activist cannot fight for what a black activist could.

  3. #3 by Mo on April 15, 2010 - 4:56 am

    Wow…wow…WOW, talk about being misinformed or, at best, knowing only a fraction of the “truth”.

    “A women in Africa is four times more likely to be raped than learn how to read, yet their leaders live in royal palaces with great food, drugs, alcohol and white whores.” – You do realize that not every country in Africa is like Sudan/Somalia right? And not every nation in Africa is ruled by a oppressive greedy drug addicted dictator, I hope you are not like many Westerners with their extremely bad habit of thinking Africa = all the same (which I lay most of the blame on the media).

    Now onward to Obama – how would the President of the U.S. help, specifically, “our people”? His job is to look out and lead ALL Americans, not to cater to a certain group because of similarity in skin color. And this country was being destroyed WAY before Obama got into office, it’s hilarious how some people seem to have forgotten all about Bush and the FACT…keyword FACT that we are in debt mainly because of him.
    And what does Haiti being a “rat hole” have to do with the fact that saving lives from a major catastrophe have anything do with what you’re trying to argue? Are you saying “it’s a rat-hole so just let them die/suffer because it is a rat-hole”? If so, that makes no sense and when people are in need, like Haiti obviously is, those with more help those in times of need. It’s not as if we were pouring trillions of dollars into Haiti prior to the earthquake so again, I don’t see the point of your argument beyond a “screw them for being a rat-hole” stance which, IF that’s the case, is wrong on SO many levels.

    Yes, Africans owned and traded other Africans as slaves…just like other continents did for THOUSANDS of years but this doesn’t mean MOST/ALL did that, as a matter of fact some refused to give slaves to Europeans (some resulted in becoming slaves themselves because of that). However – slavery in Africa was not like the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, people were not born into slavery in Africa, most cases there was a time period where people were required to serve and slaves in Africa actually had some rights and were far more humanely than those who were sent to the New World (those who made it I should say). And usually the slavery in Africa was either from victories in wars/battles or righting wrongs, it wasn’t because they were “bunch of uncivilized darkies”. Trans-Atlantic slave trade was a form of slavery that Indigenous Americans and Africans endured in the New World, most countries with slaves from Africa to Europe DID NOT use this form of servitude – for most people it was WAY too costly, inhumane, and just stupid to treat people like that.
    So please dig deeper into the issues to get the WHOLE picture and not just half-truths because this will only continue to reinforce negative stereotypes about black people from misinformation.

  4. #4 by Rasta on April 7, 2010 - 9:18 am

    “Fixer”, I hope you are a cracka in disguise, because if you are actually Black you are one of the saddest cases of a pathetic brainwashed house knee-grow I have ever, ever seen, and I’ve seen a few. I hope the loa/orixas, and your own ancestors, forgive you for your comments about the mighty people of Ayiti there, otherwise you will find your life beset with difficulty and tragedy at every turn. Be warned.
    For those who care to read it, here is an interesting article about the whole “our african brothers sold us to the whites” shit… read it, investigate for yourself and make up your own mind… Sis. Ayanna, take it away:
    http://www.rootswomen.com/ayanna/articles/10022004.html

  5. #5 by Fixer on March 21, 2010 - 11:07 pm

    Look around the world at ANY country run by Blacks. Is there one you would want to live in…..Haiti, any country in Africa, Jamaica, etc. Blacks are incapable of self-rule. A women in Africa is four times more likely to be raped than learn how to read, yet their leaders live in royal palaces with great food, drugs, alcohol and white whores.
    Here in our own country we thought having a Black president would help our people. So far he is just destroying our country from the inside by putting us into debt. Let’s go back to Haiti: So far the USA has spent about one trillion dollars to help the relief effort in Haiti. Haiti was a rat-hole before the earth quake and will be a rat-hole after the relief efforts have subsided. President Obama should have spent that money at home to help his people.
    One trillion dollars would have gone a long way spent in the USA on education, health care and crime prevention to help our people’s lives.
    While I am writing, I must address one more issue…..I hear my bothers talk about reparations: Who do you think sold us into slavery back in the day? It was our African brothers who sold us to the Whites…..we always seem to forget that.
    Peace.

(will not be published)