РефератыИностранный языкRaRacism Issue In Institutional Racism Essay Research

Racism Issue In Institutional Racism Essay Research

Racism: Issue In Institutional Racism Essay, Research Paper


Racism: Issue In Institutional Racism


The history of the United States is one of duality. In the words of the


Declaration of Independence, our nation was founded on the principles of


equality in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Yet, long before the


founders of the newly declared state met in Philadelphia to espouse the virtues


of self-determination and freedom that would dubiously provide a basis for a


secessionary war, those same virtues were trampled upon and swept away with


little regard. Beneath the shining beacon of freedom that signaled the


formation of the United States of America was a shadow of deception and


duplicity that was essential in creating the state. The HSS 280 class lexicon


defines duality as ?a social system that results from a worldview which accepts


inherent contradictions as reasonable because this is to the believer’s benefit.?


The early years of what would become the United States was characterized by a


system of duality that subjugated and exterminated peoples for the benefit of


the oppressors. This pattern of duality, interwoven into our culture, has


created an dangerously racialized society. From the first moment a colonist


landed on these shores, truths that were ?self-evident? were contingent on


subjective ?interpretation.? This discretionary application of rights and


freedoms is the foundation upon which our racially stratified system operates on.


English colonists, Africans, and Native Americans comprised the early


clash of three peoples. Essentially economic interests, and namely capitalism,


provided the impetus for the relationships that developed between the English


colonists, the Africans, and the Native Americans. The colonialization of North


American by the British was essentially an economic crusade. The emergence of


capitalism and the rise of trade throughout the 16th century provided the


British with a blueprint to expand its economic and political sphere. The


Americas provided the British with extensive natural resources, resources that


the agrarian-unfriendly British isles could not supply for its growing empire.


When Britons arrived in North America, the indigenous population posed


an economic dilemma to the colonists. The Native Americans were settled on the


land that the British colonists needed to expand their economic capacity. To


provide a justificatory framework for the expulsion of Native Americans off


their land, the English colonists created a ideology that suited their current


needs.


The attitude of Anglos toward the Native Americans began as one of


ambivalence and reliance. When the English first arrived in North America, they


needed the Indians to survive the unfamiliar land and harsh weather. Once the


English became acclimated to their surroundings and realized that the Indians


were living on valuable land, it was only a matter of time before guns and


shackles replaced treaties and handshakes.


In the name of Christianity and capitalism, the English colonists


quickly turned their backs on the short lived missionary zeal that characterized


the early colonial period. Now, the ?savage Indians? were viewed as unable to


save themselves and extermination would be a worthy enterprise in the sight of


the Lord. The idea that one possesses a God-given right to mistreat others runs


through much of Western culture and became especially acute in North America


after the emergence of capitalism.


For example, in New England many settlers rejoiced at the extraordinary


death brought upon the Native American population by the introduction of


epidemic diseases. It was viewed as a way of ?thinning out? the population. In


the world of the New Jerusalem, where a city was to be build upon a hill, such


trite concerns were of little consequence for those with divine providence.


Duality, and its means of placing the truth and its allied freedoms in


the hands of the powerful, furnishes the ?chosen ones? with wide latitude to


create theoretical arguments that justify and perpetuate systemic arrangements


of inequality. John Winthrop outlined his reasoning for the British right to


North American land in terms of natural rights versus civil rights. Natural


rights were those that men enjoyed in a state of nature (i.e. Native Americans).


When some men began to parcel land and use tilled farming, they acquired civil


rights (English colonists). Inevitably, civil rights took precedence over


natural rights. This method of thinking enabled privilege to the English and


provided a justification for the institutional and systemic extermination of the


indigenous people (Growth 83).


Before addressing the subjugation of African-Americans by the English, I


think it is important that I make an important theoretical point in my argument.


All political systems are rational, in the sense that there is a logic and a


thinking that guides those making the rules. White supremacy and its associated


beliefs (Christianity, patriarchalism, etc) provided the rationale for the


creation of a system of duality that institutionalized racism. Robert Smith


writes about the inherent contradiction of espousing the self-evident equality


of men and their God-given right to liberty while at the same time sanctioning


genocide and slavery (Smith 8). The only way this incongruity could be remedied


was to deny the fundame

ntal humanity of those being oppressed. That negation


of one group humanity by another is the crux of duality and a principle tenet of


all forms of oppression and subjugation. To objectify a group of people


provides an oppressor with a recourse for the actions one takes. In the case of


the United States, subjugated groups are often reduced to a stereotype that is


not based in fact: Native Americans were wild savages; Africans were lascivious,


lewd beings that engaged in bestiality with apes; Asians were sneaky, mysterious


and not to be trusted. What is important is the stereotype fit an institutional


definition that allows the group to be oppressed without self-reflection about


one’s perverse actions. Professor Turner mentioned in class the Sarte quote, ?To


be a stone, you must make all around you stone.? And to act as a savage, one


must make those around oneself savages.


To address the enslavement of Africans, it becomes necessary to once


again look at the economics that fueled the decision to bring slavery to the


United States. In capitalism, a driving force is to minimize costs and, as a


result, maximize profits. The labor intensive tobacco and cotton fields


presented the need for a low cost labor supply. Impelled by white supremacy,


the English began to move away from the system of indentured servitude that


characterized the early years of colonialization and towards slavery.


By definition slavery must be sanctioned by the society in which it


exists and such approval is most easily expressed in written norms and laws.


From the moment Africans set foot in North America, they faced a system that


perpetuated and encouraged their enslavement.


Throughout the 17th century, laws and regulations regarding slaves were


becoming more explicit in their dehumanization. All questions of whether these


men and women would be seen as such were erased with a number of legislations


that sough to erase any ambiguities. By 1705 the only real question remaining


was what type of property the slave was to his captor.. Ringer writes ?by 1705,


Virginia had rationalized, codified, and judicially affirmed it exclusion of


blacks from any basic concept of human rights under the law? (Ringer 67).


Intrinsic to the subjugation of Africans was an ideology that reduced


Africans to lesser beings. Reasoning behind this idea has gone from Christian


beliefs to ?scientific? evidence to current day beliefs in African-American


laziness (an idea whose roots are as old as white supremacy) and the use of IQ


tests as measures of innate intelligence. What has stayed constant is a


manipulation of the ?truth? and a myopic self-interest by those parties with an


interest in keeping privilege.


White supremacy and it dualistic vision of society became


institutionalized in colonial North America, emanating from the base and


structure of society. The Civil War Amendments to the Constitution were no more


than words on paper, with short lived legislative muscle. From the vision of


Forty Acres and a Mule, the newly freed African-Americans moved on to


sharecropping, lynchings, and segregation.


The mid to late 19th century witnessed the beginning of Chinese


migration to the United States. Immediately, they were met by various laws and


ordinances designed to restrict their economic, political, and social


advancement. This was combined with racial commentaries that echoed those


levied against Native Americans and Africans. The Chinese were heathen, morally


inferior, savage, and childlike. The Chinese were also viewed as lustful and


sensual. Often Chinese immigrants were depicted in cartoons with devil-like


features and devious expressions.


Economics also played an important role in the discrimination Chinese


faced in the United States. Chinese exclusion, a policy initiated in 1882,


banned U.S. entry to Chinese laborers. After the U.S. acquisition of California


in 1848, there arose a need for cheap labor, and Chinese flocked there to work


on the railroads. By 1867 they numbered 50,000; their number increased after the


Burlingame Treaty of 1868, which permitted Chinese immigration but not


naturalization. Anti-Asian prejudice and the competition with American workers


led to anti-Chinese riots in San Francisco in 1877, then to the Chinese


Exclusion Act of 1882, which banned Chinese immigration for 10 years. Once


again inherent contradictions were seen as reasonable because it was to the


believer’s benefit. A scarcity of employment opportunities combines with


prejudices to create a atmosphere of hatred and political blame directed toward


the Chinese immigrants (The Heathen Chinese 230-240).


Another case of dualistic application of justice towards the Asian-


American community is the case of Japanese-American internment during the Second


World War. In 1942, Lt. Gen. John L. De Witt rationalized the deportation of


Japanese nationals and Japanese-Americans with ?A Jap is a Jap?. When second-


generation Japanese-Americans in the nation’s ten concentration camps were


drafted for the war effort for cannon fodder, outraged Japanese-Americans formed


the Fair Play Committee to protest the conscription of those who were not


guaranteed the least bit of civil rights. In reply, the US government jailed


those who refused to serve, questioning their loyalty and admonishing them for


not embracing the opportunity to discharge the duties of citizenship.

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