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Ask Amy: Prospective parents worry about racist relatives

By Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Amy: My brother’s wife has been posting a lot of racist content and wild conspiracy theories to her social media accounts.

My husband and I have asked her to reconsider her positions, but she has doubled down (more than once) and asserted her right “as a white Christian” to say these things. My niece (16) said, “Eew. I’d never be friends with a black person.”

My brother told me that they would never apologize for their beliefs.

My husband and I are beginning the journey of becoming foster parents. In our area, 62 percent of children in foster care are children of color. We've told my parents that we need to cut contact with my brother's family. My mother is pushing me to let them "set the record straight.”

I’m not comfortable forcing children of color to interact with them, knowing the kind of hate they hold in their hearts. I’m not comfortable with them around white children we might foster, either. My parents refuse to accept this, and so we are currently not speaking to them, either.

Do I owe my brother’s family yet another chance to explain themselves? Even if they promise to stop publicly stating these racist things, how can I trust them to be kind to children of color in my care? How can I have a relationship with my parents, even if I can’t have one with my brother?

 

— Trying to Do the Right Thing

Dear Trying: Like any prospective parents, you want to “childproof” your surroundings to protect your child from physical or psychic harm.

Just as your brother and his wife are describing their world to their daughter, you will honestly describe your world to your child.

There seems little point in trying to force these people to renounce their racist ideology. They are showing you who they are. Believe them.

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