The Humming Cloud, 60th Day of Spring, 526 M.E. (Aldebaran): For the second night in a row, I was awakened by the sound of thunder and rain. I'm glad to have sacrificed some sleep to get some much-needed precip. An inch fell yesterday, on what you would call the 29th of April, bringing the month-to-date rainfall up to to 1¾ inches. That's well below the 3⅔-inch norm for April, but we'll take whatever we can get. We're still six inches below normal for the year.
The Supreme Court's decision yesterday eviscerating what's left of the Voting Rights Act has many people asking if the United States is a racist country. That's a difficult question. Is every citizen a racist? No, of course not. Are the majority of citizens racist? Harder to answer, but I like to believe "no."
Let's apply Ibram X. Kendi's test to determine the nation's racism. Setting aside the question of personal values and intentions, are the outcomes of the United States' actions and policies disproportionately harmful to racial minorities or other ethnic groups?
The so-called "Kavanaugh rule," a recent Supreme Court decision that says police and immigration agents can use skin color to identify suspects for deportation and other actions, is inherently and irreducibly racist. The rule is now the law of the land, and I think most members of the Latino and Hispanic communities would say they frequently experience some form or another of racism, while the immigrant portion of that community lives with fear and anxiety almost beyond comprehension.
The African-American community regularly experiences discrimination, suffers economic inequality more acutely, and are disproportionately subject to police harassment and intimidation. Although Justice Alito and other members of the Court apparently believe that racism is a thing of the past, it's the lived experience of a great many Black Americans.
Internationally, the whole world experiences the effects of discriminatory polices of the United States. The dismantling of USAID affects African countries far more than any others. Although the Stable Genius has threatened to take Greenland away from Denmark "by any means necessary" and has spoken disparagingly about NATO, the actual counties he's used the military against include Venezuela (Hispanic), Nigeria (Black), and Iran (Islamic). I can't think of any military action we've taken yet this century against a country with a predominantly White population.
The United States is a country founded on the twin pillars of enslavement of Africans and the genocide of its indigenous population. For 250 years, it has legislated and enshrined a long series of policies that serve the interests of the majority white (and male) population over those of others and often at the expense of those others. Any countermeasures intended to level the playing field have been called "socialism" (as if that were a bad thing) or worse, and are being systematically removed by a conspicuously Caucasian Executive Branch and judiciary.
So even if all or even most of its citizens aren't motivated by racism, it's hard to deny that the outcomes of its laws, policies, and actions are skewed against certain racial groups, and by the measure, yes, the USA is a racist nation.



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