The first black president has made it harder to talk about race in AmericaPosted in Articles, Barack Obama, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, Social Science, United States on 2013-07-15 02:30Z by Steven |
The first black president has made it harder to talk about race in America
The Washington Post
2012-03-23
Reniqua Allen, Freelance Journalist and Bernard L. Schwartz Fellow
New America Foundation
A few weeks ago, I was standing outside a posh bar on the Lower East Side of Manhattan with my friends of almost two decades. I made an offhanded comment about the ratio of blonde-haired-blue-eyed chicks to brown girls like me. It seemed like a zillion to one.
My pals, who are white, didn’t get why I was bringing this up. “No one cares about race except you,” one said.
I tried to explain my frustration with having to always choose between an all-black experience or being the “only one,” whether at work, in grad school or even out for a night in New York. I waited for a nod of sympathy; instead, my best friend threw her hands up and said: “How can we all be racist? Look at who is president!”
I didn’t have a response.
Right now the nation has embarked on a massive conversation about race surrounding the tragic death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Florida. On Friday, President Obama weighed in. “I think all of us have to do some soul searching to figure out: How does something like this happen?” he said.
It’s an important conversation to have — but I fear it won’t lead anywhere…
Read the entire article here.