Gardenlady, you rock!
Italicized by me.
Wow. How stereotypical is that? "Oh, we're doing the blacks a favor, really. They don't want to listen to 'our' music, or eat 'our' food or hang out with old people (who happen to be the same age as us)."
Are you kidding me? Chances are, the alumni going to that reunion liked the same music and like the same food. Are we seriously categorizing people here on websleuths based on their skin color? And that's okay?
Let me tell you something. Both my brothers were in the army. They both told me that guys from the same region, including regions that are thought of us having more racism than others, like places in the south, were most likely to bond together and be fast friends, regardless of skin color, precisely because they had more in common than people from different regions.
So please tell me a different story than that people from the same state, from the same city, who went to the same high school together, are the same age and graduated in the same class, would not enjoy spending time together years later, solely because of the color of their skin. because that sounds very prejudiced to me.
That is 100% correct. The ruling group in our nation is made up of white people. These black and other minority groups formed because minorities were denied entrance to many colleges, were burnt out of their businesses, were denied voting rights, denied the right to marry outside their race, were denied participation in the political process, were denied the right to live in certain areas, etc.
Until blacks (and others) are not denied jobs because of the sound of their names
http://papers.nber.org/papers/w9873, or pulled over solely because of the color of their skin
http://academic.udayton.edu/race/03justice/dwb01.htm, or given an unequal shot at justice due to their race,
http://www.letsgetfreethebook.com/jurorsforjustice/unequaljustice.html, or prevented from being part of the political process via nonsensical voting laws passed solely to keep poor minorities from the polls
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/06/amelia-boynton-robinson-dnc_n_1863273.html, etc., etc., then these groups are necessary.
These groups were created to help support a people who were marginalized and treated as less-than by the majority in ways that affected their ability to succeed and sometimes even survive. They were not created to separate minority groups from the majority or to promote ideals that state certain groups are better than others. They were created to foster a sense of unity and pride and a dedication to justice, while they try to bridge the gap and become a more included part of the larger society. Clearly, despite the fact that we have a black president, that has yet to happen.
I think our collective outrage over things like this - stories about lingering pockets of serious, almost par for the course racism - can help bridge that gap. But as long as we still have many people defending this kind of conduct or justifying it or trying to rationalize it as no different from what minorities do to whites, or really not so bad, or a "set-up" or whatever, minorities will continue to get the short end of the stick.
Racism, sadly, is natural. We have limited resources - jobs, housing, education oil, water - and too many people such that everyone can have what they actually need. So, we tend to form groups, first family groups, then larger groups, to fight for a piece of the pie and to justify why we deserve something more than they do. We start to tell ourselves how we are more worthy and how they are not as worthy (they are inherently criminal, they are greedy, they want to kill us, they follow a false religion, they are sinners, whatever separation we can create). And ultimately, we develop a distrust and hate big enough that we feel justified in taking what they also need or what used to be theirs, via war, treaty, even via guards on a bridge keeping the desperate from being rescued from a storm.
So yeah, I understand racism. I just hoped that we had evolved enough, that we had become educated enough in this country to recognize it for what it is, re-examine our motivations and change our behavior. Perhaps not.