Ben Shapiro
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Ilustração: Erin K. Robinson |
On Saturday, The New
York Times ran yet another execrable op-ed, this time from Professor
Ekow Yankah of the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University.
This op-ed argued that black children should not be friends with white
children, and that their parents ought to warn them off of such relationships.
This assuredly makes things awkward at Yeshiva University, a Jewish school.
The piece begins with Yankah’s
oldest son, who is 4, talking about his friends:
My oldest son, wrestling with
a 4-year-old’s happy struggles, is trying to clarify how many people can be his
best friend. “My best friends are you and Mama and my brother and …” But even a
child’s joy is not immune to this ominous political period. This summer’s
images of violence in Charlottesville, Va., prompted an array of questions.
“Some people hate others because they are different,” I offer, lamely. A
childish but distinct panic enters his voice. “But I’m not different.” It is
impossible to convey the mixture of heartbreak and fear I feel for him. Donald
Trump’s election has made it clear that I will teach my boys the lesson
generations old, one that I for the most part nearly escaped. I will teach them
to be cautious, I will teach them suspicion, and I will teach them distrust.
Much sooner than I thought I would, I will have to discuss with my boys whether
they can truly be friends with white people.
This is insanity. Because
Donald Trump was elected, all white people are suspect? Because there were
1,000 evil people marching for an evil cause in Charlottesville, some 200
million white people across America are suspect? This is racism of the highest
order. And teaching your children not to be friends with people based on their
race is the essence of racism.
But Yankah continues:
Meaningful friendship is not
just a feeling. It is not simply being able to share a beer. Real friendship is
impossible without the ability to trust others, without knowing that your
well-being is important to them. The desire to create, maintain or wield power
over others destroys the possibility of friendship. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr.’s famous dream of black and white children holding hands was a dream
precisely because he realized that in Alabama, conditions of dominance made
real friendship between white and black people impossible.
Well, no. MLK’s dream was a
dream because he wanted to see it fulfilled and believed that it could be. If
he didn’t, he would have gone home and joined Malcolm X. But he should have,
says Yankah, since “History has provided little reason for people of color to
trust white people in this way, and these recent months have put in the
starkest relief the contempt with which the country measures the value of
racial minorities.”
The piece continues in this
vein, citing differential treatment of the opioid epidemic (largely white) vs.
the crack cocaine epidemic (largely black), and ignoring the income levels of
those affected by the epidemics, which is a serious confound; black
underemployment, which Yankah attributes to “robust evidence of continuing
racism,” without showing any evidence; policing, which has not been shown to be
systemically racist by statistics. Yankah’s conclusion:
As against our gauzy national
hopes, I will teach my boys to have profound doubts that friendship with white
people is possible. When they ask, I will teach my sons that their beautiful
hue is a fault line. Spare me platitudes of how we are all the same on the
inside. I first have to keep my boys safe, and so I will teach them before the
world shows them this particular brand of rending, violent, often fatal
betrayal.
So we are not all the same on
the inside. Which is an idea that John C. Calhoun or Richard Spencer might be
comfortable with. But Yankah couches his vitriol in the guise of safety
preparations for his children:
Of course, the rise of this
president has broken bonds on all sides. But for people of color the stakes are
different. Imagining we can now be friends across this political line is asking
us to ignore our safety and that of our children, to abandon personal regard and
self-worth. Only white people can cordon off Mr. Trump’s political meaning,
ignore the “unpleasantness” from a position of safety. His election and the
year that has followed have fixed the awful thought in my mind too familiar to
black Americans: “You can’t trust these people.”…I do not write this with
liberal condescension or glee. My heart is unbearably heavy when I assure you
we cannot be friends.
The condescension is real, and
the glee is palpable. To teach your children not to hope for a day when black
and white can be friends – in fact, to teach your children now that
such a day isn’t here – is asinine. And to pretend that every Trump voter is
replete with hatred is just as asinine. But racism and bigotry are fine so long
as they come from the Left, apparently.
Ben Shapiro, The Daily Wire, 13-11-2017
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