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Clarence Page

Wearing The Victim Hat Is Becoming Trendy

By Leonard Pitts Jr., Tribune Media Services
Editor's Note: Leonard Pitts Jr. is filling in for Clarence Page this week.

Someone is going to think this column is racist.

That person -- he or she will be white -- will be unable to point to so much as a semicolon that suggests I believe in the native superiority of my, or any other, race. Rather, the accusation will be based in the fact that the column discusses race, period.

It's a phenomenon I've seen many times, most recently when a friend of mine told me that a friend of hers regards me as racist because I write about race. To which I gave my standard answer: if that's how it works, I'll start writing about money. Then I'll be a billionaire.

I offer the foregoing as a gesture of solidarity with an elementary school teacher in California who wrote to ask my opinion of two incidents that happened in her class.

In the first, a white boy -- we'll call him Bobby -- disagreed with a black boy. The black boy, who had been explaining something about his family to the teacher, told Bobby he would not understand because he was white. Bobby said this was racist.

In the second, Bobby complained that a classmate had called him a white boy. The classmate was a white girl. Bobby said she was racist.

For those of you playing along at home, here are two salient facts: 1) according to his teacher, Bobby frequently complains about racism against white kids; 2) 85 percent of the students at the school are white kids.

So, what do I think?

I think Bobby is troublingly eager to wear what I call the "victim hat," i.e., to be the one who gets to declare himself morally affronted, the one whose hurt feelings we are obligated to assuage, the one whose complaints we are required to listen to. In this, he is an accurate reflection of the nation in which he is coming of age. He is learning what we have taught.

The need, the abject "eagerness," of some white people to wear the victim hat is something I have noted with alarm in recent years. They are motivated, I think, by the fact that some black people make wearing the victim hat look like so much fun. Meaning that African-America has too often been caught crying "racism" reflexively, crying "wolf!" repeatedly, refusing, where perceived racial insult is concerned, to differentiate between the profound and the petty. We cry racism when the justice system is unjust or a Don Imus spews vitriol. Unfortunately, we also cry it when a Michael Jackson gets hauled up on charges of child molestation or a white bureaucrat uses the unfortunate, but inoffensive, word "niggardly."

If you are white, I suspect, you get tired of being on the receiving end, especially when much of what is called racism plainly is not. You figure two can play at this game and besides, you wouldn't mind being the one catered to for a while. So you grab the victim hat and, like Bobby, present yourself as mortally wounded by "racism" against you.

The problem with that is, if you represent 85 percent of the playground, no other group can organize to deny you access to the swings. Granted, they might call you names and I don't condone or minimize that. But there is a qualitative difference between suffering only that and suffering that plus exclusion from the swings. There is racism and there is racism, if you catch my drift.

And Bobby? I wish his black classmate had phrased his observation more tactfully, although since we're talking about kids, I understand why he did not. Still, Bobby is ultimately a "victim" only of his desire to be a victim.

I don't blame him for that. I blame us, his elders, for lacking the ability, the willingness, the vocabulary and the guts to talk about race frankly and intelligently. Some of us think talking about race equals racism, others cry "racism!" with spasmodic frequency, and yet others fight for their turn to wear the victim hat.

In short, we act like children.

Bobby, at least, has an excuse for that.

(c) 2008 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

This news arrived on: 06/22/2008
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Posted Comments:

06-27-2008 23:37
James Chantrill wrote:

Racism

I am living at the present time in Asia. Is there racism here? Of course, unfortunately it is everywhere where people want to take pride in themselves by belittling others. However, one should have to prove that an action was racist before one can use it in a court or a classroom. God bless everyone because we are all His children.



06-26-2008 21:00
Lori" wrote:

racism

I hope and think some of you definitely do "get" that most importantly that "WE ARE ALL AMERICANS" BUT, I don't think anyone "GETS" that we have more important issues to deal with!

Call me "a racist and I'm white" but if we are equal then what's up with affirmarive action?

I am from the Northeast and recently drove through states that still have the confederate flag flying and I was called a "yankee" today...is that racist, I think so.

It's stupid we are all Americans if we are LEGAL and I for one can't believe I'm even wasting my time responding to this, the author should be writing issues that matter, you just sounded like an idiot without anything better to do! Focus on what's really important for all us "Americans" you are just trying to fire things up and Obama wouldn't agree with you!



06-25-2008 09:12
Jesse wrote:

being just americans

I agree with Darlene. You guys need to stop calling yourselves "hyphenated" americans. I was watching this documentary on the post-katrina fiasco and there was a part of the documentary that highlighted when the evacuees of the hurricane were being called "refugees." They had a really p----d off guy complaining "we're americans man. how could they call us refugees. we're americans!" It was very refreshing and empowering to hear him say "we're americans" If you want to be an american of african, mexican, european ancestry then so be it - but please stop the hyphenated stuff - it makes ppl sound like a sub-class.



06-25-2008 01:35
Julie wrote:

racism

I guess you were afraid to even sign a name. I am white but even I can feel the racism you down deep feel and try to hide. How do you think the minorities felt when they were passed up for jobs? Well I guess you do feel it now. Try to understand how they felt and maybe something will change in our country.



06-24-2008 16:59
jpipkin12003 wrote:

Racism

Even in the dealing of this story has the problem shown through. Notice that the “Whites” try to smooth it over and yet again the “Blacks” try to make it racial and as the story says, play the victim yet again. It is simply too easy to blame ones own short comings on racism.




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