The following is the latest in a new series of articles on AlterNet called Fear in America that launched this March. Read the introduction to the series.
When
black people wake up and begin the day, we have a wide range of issues
we have to think about before leaving our homes. Will a police officer
kill us today? Or, will some George Zimmerman vigilante see us as a
threat in our own neighborhoods and kill us? We brace ourselves for
those white colleagues who are pissed Barack Obama won both elections
and take out their racist rage on us. When we drive our cars, we have to
wonder if we’ll be pulled over because our cars look too expensive for a
black person to be driving. If we’re poor and sick, we wonder if we’ll
be able to be treated for our illness. We have a lot on our minds, and
sometimes it’s overwhelming.
Here are a few examples of things we have to be afraid of that white people don’t (or not nearly as much).
1. Getting fired because we don’t fit into white cultural norms. Rhonda
Lee, an African American meteorologist who worked at a Louisiana TV
station wore her hair in a natural hairstyle one viewer found offensive.
“The black lady that does the news is a very nice lady. The only thing
is she needs to wear a wig or grow some more hair. I’m not sure if she
is a cancer patient. But still it’s not something myself that I think
looks good on TV,” the viewer wrote on the station’s Facebook page.
After Lee posted a respectful reply to the man’s insulting remark, she was fired for
violating the station’s social media policy, even though she wasn’t
made aware there was one. It took her nearly two years to find a new job. She has filed a discrimination lawsuit against the station that is still pending.
Another example: In 2013, Melphine Evans, a British Petroleum executive, was fired from
the company’s La Palma, Calif. location because, she says, she wore a
dashiki and her hair in braids. She sued for racial discrimination. In
her 24-page lawsuit, Evans claims her supervisor told her that, “You
intimidate and make your colleagues uncomfortable by wearing ethnic
clothing and ethnic hairstyles.”
“If you are going to wear ethnic
clothing, you should alert people in advance that you will be wearing
something ethnic,” Evans says she was told, according to the lawsuit.
These
are just two examples of ways black people are treated if they don’t
perm their hair, dress in a way white bosses deem “professional,” or
conduct themselves in a way that is “non-threatening” to their white
colleagues.
2. Encountering a police officer who may kill us. ProPublica reports that black males stand a 21 times greater chance of being killed by cops than their white counterparts. What’s more, a 2005 study reveals that police officers are more likely to shoot an unarmed black person than an armed white suspect.Madame Noire created a
list of at least 10 armed white men who aggressively brandished weapons
or even shot at police yet were taken into custody alive. Black women
aren’t treated any better, as this list by Gawker demonstrates.
There
is a reason black people bristle when a white person says,
“#AllLivesMatter” during a #BlackLivesMatter discussion. In the eyes of
many police, clearly all lives don’t matter.
3. Not being able to get a job. The black unemployment rate has been twice the rate of unemployment for whites, basically forever. According to a study conducted
by the Pew Research Center in 2013, the unemployment rate for black
Americans has been about double that of whites since 1954.
The current unemployment rate is 5.7 percent overall. For white people, it’s 4.9 percent; the percentage is 10.3 for AfricanAmericans, a little more than double.
Not much has changed for us since the ’50s, has it?
4. Our daughters being expelled from school because of “zero tolerance policies.” According to a 2015 report titled
“Black Girls Matter: Pushed Out, Overpoliced and Underprotected,” that
analyzed Department of Education data from the New York City and Boston
school districts, 12 percent of black girls were subjected to
exclusionary suspensions compared to just 2 percent of white girls. In
New York City, during the 2011-2012 school year, 90 percent of all girls
subject to expulsion were black. No white girls were suspended that
year.
Let that marinate for a minute. Before you do, data from
the Department of Education reports that “black children make up just
18 percent of preschool enrollment, but 48 percent of preschool children
suspended more than once.”
The black kids aren’t being suspended simply because they aren’t as well-behaved as the white children.
5. We are much more likely to be harassed by police than by white residents in NYC.Though
the NYPD has legally put an end to its racist stop-and-frisk policy,
the department’s “Broken Windows” policy is in full effect. What the
policy does is arrest people for smoking small amounts of pot, peeing on
the streets, riding a bike on a sidewalk, selling cigarettes on the
corner and other minor offenses. Between 2001 and 2013, roughly 81
percent of the summonses issued have been to African Americans and
Latinos, according to
the New York Daily News. Most of the arrests were made in black and
Latino neighborhoods, as if white people never pee on the sidewalk or
smoke pot on their stoops.
NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton swears by
the policy, saying it keeps the city safe. Eric Garner, who was
apprehended for allegedly selling loose cigarettes, likely wouldn’t
agree. He died after an officer on the scene put him in a chokehold.
Every
black person walking the streets of New York City knows he or she could
be the next Eric Garner. That’s not just a fear, it’s our reality.
6. Being bullied at work. Fifty-four percent of African Americans claim to be victims of workplace bullying compared to 44 percent of white respondents,according to the 2014 Workplace Bullying Survey.
A recent example of
workplace bullying comes from Portland, Oregon, where two current and
two former black employees of Daimler Trucks North America are suing the
company for $9.4 million. Joseph Hall, 64, says half a dozen white
employees threatened him with violence, wrote graffiti showing
“hangman’s nooses” at his job, and placed chicken bones in his black
co-worker’s locker. There’s much more ugly racism alleged in the case, if you have the stomach to read it.
Black people who just want to earn an honest buck sometimes have to put up with crap like this.
7. Being pulled over by the police. Black drivers are 31 percent more likely to be pulled over than white drivers, according to
the Washington Post. We fear this pretty much every time we enter our
vehicles. Sure, we sometimes violate traffic traffic laws. But we get
stopped even when we don’t.
8. Being accused of shoplifting when we’re shopping. Shopping while black can be pretty stressful. Just this week, a black NYPD officer filed a lawsuit alleging
that employees at PC Richards & Son store, in Lawrence, N.J.,
harassed him for “shopping while black.” Sammari Malcolm, 40, of
Brooklyn, says employees accused him of using a stolen credit card when
he purchased $4,150.23 worth of electronics, even after showing his ID.
Malcolm also claims store employees frisked him and detained him for two
hours. He is seeking $5.75 million in damages. Sound familiar?
Perhaps you heard about the incident at
Macy’s flagship Herald Square store, in Manhattan, where “Treme” actor
Rob Brown was handcuffed and accused of using a fake credit card to buy
his mother a $1,300 watch in June 2013. He filed a lawsuit against the
store and the city of New York over the incident, which was settled in
July 2014. In August, Macy’s paid $650,000
to settle a state probe into racial profiling allegations at the store.
The store profiled and detained minorities at far higher rates than
whites, according to the state’s investigation.
Money and success
doesn’t shield us from racism. Even black celebrities are far from
immune. Academy Award-winner Forest Whitaker was racially profiled in
February 2013, when he was falsely accused of
stealing an item from a deli. An employee frisked him in front of other
shoppers. The Academy Award winner didn’t sue, but he wasn’t happy
about it.
9. Getting sick and not having access to health care. While
African Americans have gained better access to healthcare since the
passage of the Affordable Care Act, black people have less access to
medical care than whites in core measures, according to data from
the Agency for Healthcare and Research Quality. When we do gain access
to care, it’s far worse than whites in 40 percent of core measures.
Much of this is tied to poverty, which disproportionately plagues African Americans.
10. Having white people say we’re exaggerating these issues. This
isn’t so much a fear as a chronic and sometimes debilitating annoyance.
It seems that no matter how much we can statistically demonstrate that
racism is pervasive and damages us on many levels, there are white
people who fight us tooth and nail with arguments that life is not as
challenging for us as we say it is.
I’ve given up convincing white
people about the harsh realities of my life as a black man. I’ll devote
that energy to fighting for my black liberation in our very racist
society.
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