Posted by
Dr. Brian Melton on Saturday, September 03, 2005 2:37:00 PM
“I couldn't tell if
the streaker was a man or a woman because it had a bag on it's head.”
Yogi Berra
I’m a busy man, and that fact means that I’ve rather fallen
off the op-ed horse recently. But every
so often I come across something so incredibly over the top I simply have to
respond. I’m referring to “civil” rights
activist Randall
Robinson’s blog, featured on both the Drudge Report and Worldnetdaily. Robinson claims that a: black hurricane victims have been reduced to
eating each other to survive, that b: it is somehow the fault of America as a
whole, and that c: the result is a watershed
for American race relations. Like Yogi,
Robinson is blind to the obvious.
Let’s take these points one at a time, shall we?
First, the suggestion that people have been forced to eat
one another after only four days is plainly asinine. People can and do go for much longer periods
of time with no food, and do not resort to cannibalism. Were we talking about weeks, I could possibly
believe that part of his rant, but mere days?
It’s ridiculous. If it’s
happening (which I doubt), then it is for other reasons than starvation. Perhaps it’s due to hallucinations because of
dehydration. Perhaps animals are eating
the corpses, and some people are jumping to conclusions. There are obviously some very hungry people
there, but there is no reason for anyone to be eating people after only four
days in order to “survive.”
If anything, it is a testament to how well off most
Americans are if they think they’re “starving” after such a short time. Anyone who knows so little about real hunger
as Mr. Robinson has, in my mind, disqualified himself from being taken
seriously on the subject in the future.
Second, to say that it is somehow the fault of America in
general is equally fallacious. Is it the
national government’s responsibility to make sure that nothing bad could ever
happen in America? That’s an impossible goal. One might as well argue that America is a farce because it hasn’t earthquake
proofed California and still allows tornadoes
in Kansas. Why not ask why the New Orleans government allowed so many people
to go unwarned with a category 4 hurricane bearing down on them? Why not blame the state government for not
organizing transportation for those who could not get out? Why not blame some of the people themselves
for choosing to stay, if they could have left?
Now, I agree that there are things the government should
have done, and there’s plenty of stupidity to be mad at in Washington and elsewhere, but selectively
pointing fingers doesn’t in any way make the entire country a “monstrous fraud.”
Thirdly, this is a disaster, this is a horrible, hurtful
loss of human life, but it is only a “watershed” in racial affairs for people
who are looking for a convenient one to exploit. The simple fact is that the main reason so
many African Americans were affected is that hundreds of thousands happened to
live in affected area, and quite a few of them made the decision to stay. No one forced their hand. No one bussed them in just before Katrina
hit. (Whether people are “looting” or “scavenging”
is beside the point, and it’s something that people need to take up with the
liberal media, not a semi-conservative administration.) To suggest that Bush hates African Americans
because of Katrina is to suggest that he somehow intended for this to
happen. Until someone shows he had the
ability to somehow steer the hurricane into New Orleans or that he was just waiting for
the levee’s to break, I see no reason to listen.
The real racial watershed came years ago, when the civil
rights movement, led by people like Robinson, Al Sharpton, and Jesse Jackson,
transformed itself from a righteous crusade for equal rights and opportunity
into an industry of exploitation that judges people not as individuals, as
humans, but rather as nameless factors in a racial equation. People are reduced from thinking, active,
powerful moral agents into nothing more than the sum total of their politicized
skin color. “Whites” think thus and so
because they’re white. “African-Americans”
believe x, y, and z because they’re black.
“Latinos” all want the same thing because they’re Latinos. In the case of Robinson’s accusations, whites
are guilty because they are white and African-Americans are victims because
they are black. The fact that there
might be some of each on both sides doesn’t seem to have occurred to him.
Judging people and determining their motivations, guilt or
innocence, based on the amount of melanin in their skin; it is the very essence
of racism. It is the antithesis of the
color-blind life.
I for one am sick and tired of racists hiding behind their
skin color and getting away with it.
Perhaps Robinson, in a powerful reaction to a very emotional situation,
simply made a mistake, and his comments don’t reflect his true spirit and mind.
If that is so, it is time for him to come out, repudiate them, and apologize.
We won’t make any real progress towards
eliminating racism whilst we tolerate wolves in sheep’s clothing, especially
when the wolves are so ready to take advantage of human misery on this scale.