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The lie that invented racism

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    What is up with us white people?
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    (Laughter)
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    I've been thinking about that a lot
    the last few years,
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    and I know I have company.
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    Look, I get it, people of color
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    have been asking
    that question for centuries,
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    but I think a growing number
    of white folks are too,
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    given what's been going on out there
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    in our country.
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    And notice I said,
    "What's up with us white people?"
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    because right now I'm not talking
    about those white people,
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    the ones with the swastikas
    and the hoods and the tiki torches.
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    They are a problem, and a threat.
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    They perpetrate most of
    the terrorism in our country,
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    as you all in Charlottesville
    know better than most.
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    But I'm talking about something bigger,
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    more pervasive.
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    I'm talking about all of us,
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    white folks writ large.
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    And maybe, especially,
    people sort of like me,
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    self-described progressive,
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    don't want to be racist,
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    "good" white people.
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    (Laughter)
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    Any good white people in the room?
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    (Laughter)
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    I was raised to be that sort of person.
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    I was a little kid in the '60s and '70s,
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    and to give you some sense of my parents,
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    actual public opinion polls at the time
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    showed that only a small minority,
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    about 20 percent of white Americans,
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    approved and supported
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    Martin Luther King and his work
    with the Civil Rights Movement
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    while Dr. King was still alive.
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    I'm proud to say my parents
    were in that group.
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    Race got talked about in our house,
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    and when the shows that dealt
    with race would come on the television,
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    they would sit us kids down,
    make sure we watch:
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    the Sidney Poitier movies, "Roots."
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    The message was loud and clear,
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    and I got it.
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    Racism is wrong. Racists are bad people.
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    At the same time,
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    we lived in a very
    white place in Minnesota,
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    and I'll just speak for myself,
    I think that allowed me to believe
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    that those white racists on the TV screen
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    were being beamed in
    from some other place.
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    It wasn't about us, really.
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    I did not feel implicated.
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    Now, I would say I'm still in recovery
    from that early impression.
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    I got into journalism
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    in part because I cared about things
    like equality and justice.
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    For a long time, racism was just
    such a puzzle to me.
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    Why is it still with us
    when it's so clearly wrong?
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    Why such a persistent force?
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    Maybe I was puzzled because
    I wasn't yet looking in the right place
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    or asking the right questions.
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    Have you noticed
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    that when people in our mostly white media
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    report on what they consider
    to be racial issues,
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    what we consider to be racial issues,
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    what that usually means
    is that we're pointing our cameras
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    and our microphones and our gaze
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    at people of color, asking questions like,
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    "How are Black folks or Native Americans,
    Latino, or Asian Americans,
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    how are they doing?"
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    In a given community,
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    or with respect to some issue:
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    the economy, education.
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    I've done my share
    of that kind of journalism
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    over many years.
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    But then George Zimmerman
    killed Trayvon Martin,
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    followed by this unending string
    of high-profile police shootings
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    of unarmed Black people, the rise
    of the Black Lives Matter movement,
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    Dylann Roof and the Charleston Massacre,
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    #OscarsSoWhite,
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    all the incidents from the day to day
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    of American life,
    these overtly racist incidents
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    that we now get to see
    because they're captured on smartphones
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    and sent across the internet.
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    And beneath those visible events,
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    the stubborn data,
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    the studies showing systemic racism
    in every institution we have:
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    housing segregation, job discrimination,
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    the deeply racialized inequities in
    our schools and criminal justice system.
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    And what really did it for me,
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    and I know I'm not alone in this either,
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    the rise of Donald Trump
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    and the discovery that
    a solid majority of white Americans
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    would embrace or at least accept
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    such a raw, bitter kind
    of white identity politics.
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    This was all disturbing to me
    as a human being.
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    As a journalist, I found myself
    turning the lens around,
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    thinking,
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    wow, white folks are the story.
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    Whiteness is a story.
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    And also thinking,
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    can I do that?
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    What would a podcast series
    about whiteness sound like?
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    And oh, by the way,
    this could get uncomfortable.
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    I had seen almost no journalism
    that looked deeply at whiteness,
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    but of course people of color
    and especially Black intellectuals
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    have made sharp critiques of
    white supremacist culture for centuries,
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    and I knew that in the last
    two or three decades,
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    scholars had done interesting work
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    looking at race through
    the frame of whiteness,
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    what it is, how we got it,
    how it works in the world.
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    I started reading,
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    and I reached out to some leading experts
    on race and the history of race.
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    One of the first questions I asked was,
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    where did this idea
    of being a white person
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    come from in the first place?
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    Science is clear.
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    We are one human race.
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    We're all related,
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    all descended from
    a common ancestor in Africa.
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    Some people walked out of Africa
    into colder, darker places
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    and lost a lot of their melanin,
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    some of us more than others.
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    But genetically we are all
    99.9 percent the same.
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    There's more genetic diversity
    within what we call racial groups
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    than there is between racial groups.
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    There's no gene for whiteness
    or blackness or Asian-ness
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    or what half you.
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    So how did this happen?
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    How did we get this thing?
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    How did racism start?
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    I think if you had asked me
    to speculate on that,
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    in my ignorance, some years ago,
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    I probably would have said,
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    well, I guess somewhere
    back in deep history,
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    people encountered one another,
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    and they found each other strange,
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    your skin is a different color,
    your hair is different,
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    you dress funny.
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    I guess I'll just go ahead
    and jump to the conclusion
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    that since you're different
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    that you're somehow less than me,
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    and maybe that makes it OK
    for me to mistreat you.
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    Right?
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    Is that something like
    what we imagine or assume?
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    And under that kind of scenario,
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    it's all a big tragic misunderstanding.
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    But it seems that's wrong.
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    First of all, race is a recent invention.
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    It's just a few hundred years old.
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    Before that, yes,
    people divided themselves
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    by religion, tribal group,
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    language, things like that,
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    but for most of human history,
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    people had no notion of race.
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    In Ancient Greece, for example,
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    and I learned this from
    the historian Nell Irvin Painter,
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    the Greeks thought they were better
    than the other people they knew about,
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    but not because of some idea
    that they were innately superior.
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    They just thought that they'd developed
    the most advanced culture.
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    So they looked around at the Ethiopians,
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    but also the Persians and the Celts,
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    and they said, "They're all
    kind of barbaric compared to us.
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    Culturally, they're
    just not Greek, right?"
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    And yes, in the ancient world,
    there was lots of slavery,
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    but people enslaved people
    who didn't look like them
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    and they often enslaved people who did.
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    Did you know that the English word "slave"
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    is derived from the word "Slav"?
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    Because Slavic people were enslaved
    by all kinds of folks,
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    including Western Europeans,
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    for centuries.
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    Slavery wasn't about race,
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    either because no one
    had thought up race yet.
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    So who did?
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    I put that question
    to another leading historian,
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    Ibram Kendi.
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    I didn't expect he would answer
    the question in the form
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    of one person's name and a date,
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    as if we were talking
    about the light bulb.
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    (Laughter)
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    But he did.
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    (Laughter)
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    He said, in his exhaustive research
    he found what he believed to be
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    the first articulation of racist ideas,
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    and he named the culprit.
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    This guy should be more famous,
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    or infamous.
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    His name is Gomes de Zurara.
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    Portuguese man.
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    Wrote a book in the 1450s
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    in which he did something
    that no one had ever done before,
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    according to Dr. Kendi.
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    He lumped together
    all the people of Africa,
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    a vast, diverse continent,
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    and he described them as a distinct group,
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    inferior and beastly.
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    Never mind that in that precolonial time
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    some of the most sophisticated cultures
    in the world were in Africa.
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    Why would this guy make this claim?
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    Turns out, it helps to follow the money.
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    First of all, Zurara was hired
    to write that book
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    by the Portuguese king,
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    and just a few years before,
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    slave traders,
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    here we go,
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    slave traders tied to the Portuguese crown
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    had effectively pioneered
    the Atlantic slave trade.
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    They were the first Europeans
    to sail directly to sub-Saharan Africa
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    to kidnap and enslave African people.
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    So it was suddenly really helpful
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    to have a story about the inferiority
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    of African people
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    to justify this new trade
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    to other people, to the church,
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    to themselves.
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    And with the stroke of a pen,
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    Zurara invented both
    blackness and whiteness,
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    because he basically created
    the notion of blackness
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    through this description of Africans,
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    and as Dr. Kendi says,
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    blackness has no meaning
    without whiteness.
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    Other European countries followed
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    the Portuguese lead
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    in looking to Africa for human property
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    and free labor
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    and in adopting this fiction
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    about the inferiority of African people.
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    I found this clarifying.
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    Racism didn't start
    with a misunderstanding,
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    it started with a lie.
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    Meanwhile, over here in colonial America,
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    the people now calling themselves white
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    got busy taking these racist ideas
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    and turning them into law,
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    laws that stripped all human rights
    from the people they were calling Black
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    and locking them into our particularly
    vicious brand of child slavery,
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    and laws that gave even
    the poorest white people benefits,
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    not big benefits in material terms
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    but the right to not be enslaved for life,
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    the right to not have your loved ones
    torn from your arms and sold,
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    and sometimes real goodies.
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    The handouts of free land
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    to white places like Virginia
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    to white people only
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    started long before
    the American Revolution
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    and continued long after.
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    Now I can imagine
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    there would be people listening to me,
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    if they're still listening,
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    who might be thinking,
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    "C'mon, this is all ancient history,
    why does this matter.
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    Things have changed.
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    Can't we just get over it and move on?"
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    But I would argue,
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    for me certainly,
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    learning this history has brought
    a real shift in the way
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    that I understand racism today.
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    To review, two quick takeaways
    from what I've said so far.
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    One: race is not a thing biologically,
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    it's a story some people decided to tell.
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    And two: people told that story
    to justify the brutal exploitation
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    of other human beings for profit.
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    I didn't learn those two facts in school.
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    I suspect most of us didn't.
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    If you did, you had a special teacher.
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    Right?
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    But once they sink in,
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    for one thing, it becomes clear
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    that racism is not mainly
    a problem of attitudes,
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    of individual bigotry.
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    No, it's a tool.
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    It's a tool to divide us
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    and to prop up systems,
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    economic, political and social systems
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    that advantage some people
    and disadvantage others.
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    And it's a tool to convince
    a lot of white folks
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    who may or may not be getting a great deal
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    out of our highly stratified society
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    to support the status quo.
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    "Could be worse. At least I'm white."
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    Once I grasped the origins of racism,
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    I stopped being mystified by the fact
    that it's still with us.
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    I guess looking back
    I thought about racism
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    as being sort of like the flat Earth,
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    just bad, outdated thinking
    that would fade away on its own
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    before long.
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    But no, this tool of whiteness
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    is still doing the job
    it was invented to do.
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    Powerful people go to work every day,
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    leveraging and reinforcing
    this old weapon,
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    in the halls of power,
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    in some broadcast studios
    we could mention,
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    and we don't need to fuss
    over whether these people
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    believe what they're saying,
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    whether they're really racist.
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    That's not what it's about.
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    It's about pocketbooks and power.
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    Finally, I think
    the biggest lesson of all,
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    and let me talk in particular
    to the white folks for a minute,
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    once we understand that people
    who look like us
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    invented the very notion of race
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    in order to advantage themselves and us,
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    isn't it easier to see that
    it's our problem to solve?
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    It's a white people problem.
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    I'm embarrassed to say that
    for a long time I thought of racism
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    as being mainly a struggle
    for people of color to fight,
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    sort of like the people
    on the TV screen when I was a kid.
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    Or, as if I was on the sidelines
    at a sports contest,
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    on one side people of color,
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    on the other those real racists,
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    the Southern sheriff,
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    the people in hoods.
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    And I was sincerely rooting
    for people of color to win the struggle.
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    But no.
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    There are no sidelines.
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    We're all in it.
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    We are implicated.
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    And if I'm not joining the struggle
    to dismantle the system
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    that advantages me,
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    I am complicit.
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    This isn't about shame or guilt.
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    White guilt doesn't get anything done,
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    and honestly I don't feel a lot of guilt.
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    History isn't my fault or yours.
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    What I do feel is a stronger sense
    of responsibility to do something.
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    All this has altered the way
    that I think about and approach my work
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    as a documentary storyteller
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    and as a teacher,
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    but beyond that, besides that,
    what does it mean,
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    what does it mean for any of us?
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    Does it mean that we support leaders
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    who want to push ahead with
    a conversation about reparations?
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    In our communities, are we finding
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    people who are working to transform
    unjust institutions
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    and supporting that work?
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    At my job, am I the white person
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    who shows up grudgingly
    for the diversity and equity meeting
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    or am I trying to figure
    out how to be a real accomplice
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    to my colleagues of color?
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    Seems to me wherever we show up
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    we need to show up with humility
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    and vulnerability
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    and a willingness to put down
    this power that we did not earn.
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    I believe we also stand to benefit
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    if we could create a society
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    that's not built on the exploitation
    or oppression of anyone.
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    But in the end we should do this,
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    we should show up,
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    figure out how to take action,
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    because it's right.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The lie that invented racism
Speaker:
John Biewen
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
18:21
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