Something Was Wrong - S19 E7: Data Points: Racism (Featuring LeRon Barton)
Episode Date: February 12, 2024Sources: https://www.dictionary.com/browse/RacismThe ‘Father of Modern Gynecology’ Performed Shocking Experiments on Enslaved Women | HISTORYUCLA professor’s film documents forced ster...ilization of Mexican women in late ’60s and early ’70s L.A. | UCLAImprisonment rate of black Americans fell by a third from 2006 to 2018 | Pew Research Center5 eye-opening statistics about minorities in tech | TechRepublicUS Laws and Policies That Have Kept Black Americans From Owning Homes (businessinsider.com)Racial Bias in Healthcare: How Disparities Affect Communities of Color (healthline.com)Why Do Black People’s Mental Illnesses Get Misdiagnosed? (healthline.com)The National Registry of Exonerations - Exoneration Registry (umich.edu)Race_and_Wrongful_Convictions.pdf (umich.edu)The Black-White Test Score Gap: Why It Persists and What Can Be Done | BrookingsIgnoring Racism in Schools Actually Increases Prejudice (Opinion) (edweek.org)Follow and support LeRon Barton and check out some of his incredible work:On IG: www.instagram.com/leronlbarton(2023) I Lost White Friends When I Finally Spoke Out: https://www.newsweek.com/lost-white-friends-racism-black-lives-matter-us-1815477 (2021) What It's Like to be a Black Man in Tech: https://hbr.org/2021/03/what-its-like-to-be-a-black-man-in-tech (2018) My Reality: 10 Truths About Being Black in America: https://goodmenproject.com/ethics-values/my-reality-10-truths-about-being-black-in-america-gmp/ See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hi friends, it's Laurent Barton.
I'm guest hosting this episode of Broken Cycle Media's new series of educational episodes,
Data Points.
These special episodes will include educational information, statistics, and support on different
topics that are important to our community.
Thank you so much for listening.
Dictionary.com defines racism as a belief or doctrine that inherent differences among
the various human racial groups, determining cultural or individual achievement, usually
involving the idea that one's own race is superior and has the right to dominate others
or that a particular racial
group is inferior to others.
While this definition is of general use, I also like Dr. Tommy J. Curry's take on the
subject.
The author of The Man Not Expands on the definition by saying, while racism certainly originates
with erroneous ideas of one race's superiority over other races. Racism more accurately refers to the utilization of dehumanization and violence by a dominant
racial group evidenced by the policies of institutions and behaviors of individuals.
Curry further says,
Consequently, racism functions to increase the economic resources, numerical majority, political power,
and life chances of the dominant racial groups' progeny over those of supposed inferiors.
Bias defined by psychology today is a tendency, inclination, or prejudice towards or against
something or someone.
Some biases are positive and helpful, like seeing away from someone who has knowingly caused harm.
But biases are often based on stereotypes
rather than the actual knowledge
of an individual or circumstance.
Whether positive or negative,
such cognitive shortcuts can result in prejudgements
that lead to rash decisions or discriminatory practices.
Prevalence and statistics.
Racism impacts every facet of life.
As a black man in America,
there is not one area of my being that is shielded from it.
Some examples include housing discrimination.
Historically, African Americans were denied home loans
from banks and the ability to purchase a house
in a predominantly white neighborhood. They were redlined or pushed to specific areas in a city or town.
Specific laws such as property tax assessments which determine the value of your home.
In the color of law, author Richard Rothstein details how houses in white neighborhoods
appreciate faster, but due to racism, these
homes have outdated assessed values that are below the rising market value of their homes,
which results in lower property taxes.
African Americans have historically paid higher property taxes, which sometimes resulted in
property tax payment going into default, which then allowed speculators to pay the default
to taxes and seize the homes. Also, deeds on some homes had specifically prohibiting resale to non-caucasians written in,
which kept African Americans and other racialized groups from purchasing property in those areas,
and as a result, continued segregation.
Healthcare is an industry that has mistreated and misdiagnosed black men and women for centuries.
Enslaved African women were often operated on to further scientific research.
In the late 1960s and early 70s, Mexican women who immigrated to America were sterilized
without their consent.
Today, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention reports that black women are three
times more likely to die from pregnancy complications than white women.
Racial misdiagnosis or not properly identifying health problems has also been a major issue
between the healthcare industry and African Americans.
Black men's emotions are often seen as psychotic and have been misdiagnosed with schizophrenia.
Finally, black teenagers are 50% more unlikely to show signs of bulimia but are underdiagnosed with schizophrenia. Finally, black teenagers are 50% more
unlikely to show signs of bulimia but are underdiagnosed and do not receive treatment.
The criminal justice system has also historically targeted African Americans with the highest
arrest, conviction, and incarceration rates. According to the United States Sentencing Commission, an independent agency of the judicial branch
of the US government, reported between 2017 and 2021, Black men received prison sentences
averaging 13.4% longer and Latino men received 11.2% longer than their white counterparts
for the same crime.
Black men are also incarcerated more than any group in America. The Pew Research
Center found that for every 100,000 people locked up, around 2,272 are African American
males compared to 392 incarcerated men per white male. Black people also represent the
largest population of wrongly convicted in America. The National Registry of Exonerations, a group that collects and analyzes data about all
known exonerations of innocent criminal defendants in the United States, published a report in
March of 2017 that states 47% of all exonerations were African Americans.
African American Latinos face employment barriers in the United States that prevent them from
entering certain workforces such as technology and finance.
They're often not selected for these jobs due to cultural fit.
In the tech industry, African Americans make up 7.4% and Latinos 8% compared to whites who
dominate at 68.5%. Black and Latino men and women also face hiring challenges
due to ethnic sounding names and accents. Historically, schools and predominantly Black
neighborhoods are often underfunded and in poor condition. This can contribute to overpopulated
classrooms, outdated reading materials, and underperforming students, which can lead to low graduation rates.
Poor standardized testing scores
amongst African-American children
can also be attributed to a lack of resources
in predominant black schools.
These testing results can often create a barrier
to being accepted in the higher education.
Racism also affects college admission.
Best College has published a report in 2023 that found
African-American students make up about 10.6%
of undergraduate college attendees
compared to white men and women who comprise over 42.3%.
Black students have often cited cultural alienation,
racist harassment from classmates,
apathy from professors and staff,
and financial
hardships as reasons why they may drop out or elect not to attend college.
Future Implications
Not addressing racism will cause future generations to not view it as a significant issue it is.
The lack of discussion, education, and insight into how racism impacts all of us could dilute the seriousness of
it, thus not framing it as an important problem to solve.
We see this already in schools and libraries across the country that have banned books to
talk about slavery, the civil rights movement, and discredited high school and college courses
that teach about race and bias, mislabeling them as critical race theory.
A concept that was created by Dr. Derek Bell,
a legal scholar and writer who taught at Harvard Law School
and the University of Oregon,
critical race theory described the racial inequities
in the legal systems of America.
It is an analysis that is primarily taught in law schools.
However, by grouping critical race theory
with any subject that discusses racism
and the abuses that black and other people of color have experienced, this has led to right-wing
groups masquerading as parents' rights organizations, lobbying to successfully ban these classes
and classify them as anti-American.
Anything that references discrimination or anti-racism is considered woke and branded
un-American.
Because of this, teaching and discussing racism is important
and can lead to a better understanding
and frankly, better students.
In an op-ed for Education Week,
Ross Weiner, Executive Director for the Aspen Institute
and Francesca Lopez, the Waterbury Chair
in Equity Pedagogy at Pennsylvania State University argues that
educators have the moral and professional responsibility to teach and lead on racism in schools.
It's what children need.
They later state, ignoring racism in schools increases prejudice while explicitly teaching about race and racism reduces prejudice and improves student learning.
Prevention and Treatment and racism reduces prejudice and improves student learning, prevention and treatment.
The first step to stopping racism
is an understanding of racism,
viewing it not only as personal, but as systemic.
As I stated earlier, it encompasses every facet of life.
Racism is a spectrum, not just an insult
or horrible incident or a police officer
pulling over black people for nothing,
but a living organism that has changed throughout time to oppress black, Asian, Latino, Indigenous,
people of Middle Eastern descent and others who are not white or in the majority demographic.
Educating yourself about racism can start with books from authors such as Derrick Bell's,
Faces at the Bottom of the Well, James Baldwin's
If Bill Street Could Talk, and Toni Morrison's Beloved.
Volunteering with local anti-racism activist groups is also a great way to learn and unlearn
any racism and biases you may hold.
Talking with people that have and continue to experience racism can enhance and expand
your perspective.
I found these experiences to challenge my thinking and make me see life in a different vantage point.
Finally, discuss racism with your family and friends.
Call out your friends and family when they say or do racist things.
Let them know what they're doing is wrong.
Let them know why it's wrong.
We have to model the behavior we want to see.
Talk to them about the racist beliefs they hold.
Be introspective and challenge not only their biases, but yours. We have to model the behavior we want to see. Talk to them about the racist beliefs they hold.
Be introspective and challenge not only their biases, but yours. Do you cross the street
when you see a black man coming your way? Why do you immediately clutch your purse when an
African-American sits next to you? When you see someone who is Latino, do you automatically think
they're undocumented? These are tough conversations to have, but they're necessary.
Racism is everywhere. It is the way we interact with people, how we vote, how we decide where to
live, how we are treated in the medical industry, how our schools are funded, and how our laws are
created. Racism is in the fabric of America. Here are some resources and books that I recommend
for you to check out on your journey to understanding
the history of race, racism, and becoming a stronger, more aware person.
These are books that are close to my heart and organizations that are dedicated to finding
racism and harvesting unity.
The autobiography of Malcolm X. Where do we go from here by Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Just Mercy by
Brian Stevenson, The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander, Freedom is a Conscious Struggle
by Angela Davis, The Man Not by Dr. Tommy J. Curry.
Here are some organizations that I would recommend checking out.
My Block My City, Surge or Standing Up for Racial Justice, Color of Change,
Dream Defenders, and Know Your Rights. Thank you.
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