Innovators often invent the future and some do so by rethinking the past. For example, innovative historical researchers not only help us understand what happened yesterday, they improve how we respond to those issues today.
Ibram Kendi is one of those researchers. In his book, Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, he uncovers the history of racist ideas in America. Winner of the 2016 National Book Award, his research reveals that racist policies fuel ignorance and hate, rather than the other way around. His findings challenge what many of us were taught to believe about racism in America today and the strategies we use to address it.
Highlights from our conversation include:
How racist ideas stem from racist policies that reinforce power structures
History shows that 200+ years of educating and persuading away racism has been less impactful than eliminating racist policies
How uplift suasion has worked against blacks by making them believe they are responsible for the racist ideas of others
Why there is a very real mutual interest in working against racism, sexism, homophobia, and poverty to eliminate one and all of these isms
How eliminating racist policies and disparities are key to eliminating racist ideas
The fact that racist ideas connote racial hierarchy while anti-racist ideas connote racial equality
How misleading statistics and unscientific approaches reinforce negative stereotypes around predominantly black neighborhoods
How the academic achievement gap is a racist idea
Three perspectives on our ongoing historical debate on race - segregationism, anti-racism, assimilation - and what they mean for blacks
How W.E.B DuBois helped us recognize that black striving for suasion and uplift maintains false notions of black inferiority
How Angela Davis taught us about the complexities of our identities in terms of gender, race, class, sex, age, etc
How scientific racism served to reinforce notions of black inferiority
How even after scientific racism was disproven by biologists and geneticists those in power wanted to fixate on any tiny percentage of difference to reinforce superiority
How the debates we are having today about race are not new and are informed by a long history of racist policies in the US that allow those in power to argue that blacks are inferior
How the US government sought to use deportation to evict freed slaves
Episode Links
@DrIbram
http://www.ibram.org/
Jefferson Davis
Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy ONeil
How the Academic Achievement Gap is a Racist Idea by Ibram Kendi
Cotton Mather
Thomas Jefferson
William Lloyd Garrison
W. E. B. DuBois
Double consciousness
Angela Davis
Intersectionality
Bill Clinton
Blindspot: Hidden Biases of Good People by Mahzarin Banaji and Anthony Greenwald
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