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diversity

by Malik Russell

Over a century ago, scholar and sage W.E.B. Dubois wrote in his groundbreaking book, The Souls of Black Folks that “The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color-line.”

Today, optimism springs eternal as a new century and new firsts for Black folks symbolize a socially utopian world only found at the end of rainbows and during one brisk night last November when for a moment everything was right with the world and potential for change unlimited. Then we woke up and realized the post-racial world we were waiting for hadn’t arrived yet-probably held up at the airport and placed on someone’s no fly list?

When the post-racial society does arrive, it may have to stand since the color line will likely refuse to give up its seat. Of course, many things have changed including the hair care products in the Whitehouse, but in many cases, this change is relative. African Americans have made progress relative to their enslaved and legally discriminated against ancestors (many still around today), yet relative to White Americans, little distance has been gained in the racial gaps of wealth, education and position. This assertion is more fact than opinion and substantiated by various studies including a recent study by the Urban Institute on the level of diversity among the leadership of Baltimore-Washington, D.C. area non-profits.

For social prophets blindly ushering in the post-racial era, the results of this study are both disappointing and surprising. For the highly educated Black professionals who make up the world’s most educated and qualified group of Africans in the Diaspora, there was little surprise-its simply something we cannot talk about-not if we want to work again.

According to the study Measuring Racial-Ethnic Diversity in the Baltimore–Washington Region’s Nonprofit Sector, from the Urban Institute, while people of color make up 49 percent of the population of the region, they only make up 22 percent of the executive directors.

http://www.urban.org/publications/412053.html

In the chocolate cities of Baltimore and Washington D.C., the discrepancies between population and power are even less post-racial as they make up only 30-34% of the executive directors but almost 70 percent of the population. In northern Virginia, people of color make up 40 percent of the population and a meager 5 percent of non-profit executive directors.

What is alarming for people of color is the fact that the non-profit, public and government sectors ostensibly represent areas full of liberalized Whites less discriminatory than the private sector and even willing to vote for a Black man for president. One might guess that the color line did not receive the memo that it was supposed to stop at the non-profit sector.

When one looks at paid staff and management staff at region non-profits, African Americans in particular make up nearly 38 percent of paid staff and almost 31 percent of management. Non-Hispanic whites make up 49 percent of all staff and 58 percent of managers. Additionally, the study points to the fact that “young people of color are not entering the ranks of executive directors as readily as their non-Hispanic white counterparts.”

Of course, the advocates of the new religion of post-racialism are now clearing their throats to mention that we do have Barack Obama as president and that in itself confirms a new era of race relations. Yet even in the Whitehouse, the color line remains.

According to a recent analysis done by the Washington Post looking at Obama appointments, people of color, particularly African Americans who as canaries in the mine are suffering the uneven brunt of the economic recession and mass unemployment-are not seeing the change promised.

http://projects.washingtonpost.com/2009/federal-appointments/

Of Obama’s 404 senior political appointments, 258 are white and the second most group is listed as racially unknown (64), while African Americans, Latinos, and Asians represent 54, 39, and 20 respectively of the President’s appointments. Therefore, despite the ever-promulgated educated-diversity of this region and the national population, whites still make up nearly 64% of the new “Black” president’s appointments. Closer to the Oval Office, among the 39 staff appointed to the Whitehouse, 25 are white, and only seven are Black.

Anyone who has worked in the non-profit arena of Washington-Baltimore region knows that African Americans in the non-profit and public sectors tend to walk on eggshells and your accomplishments tend to matter most when compared to other people of color and matter least when compared to that White candidate with half your experience and educational qualifications. Affirmative action is like that cousin you keep hearing bout’ at family reunions but ain’t never seen yet. Each time you nail the perfect interview you think you will finally be introduced to him but he never shows up. Instead, you get a glistening letter on nice paper that says the organization decided to rewrite the job description.

Or maybe that’s just for tall dark-skin men like me who choose to work in fields that revolve around social justice issues disparately impacting Black men-such as prisons or criminal justice policy. Often times you end up a a finalist for a position and instead of being named to the position, you instead get a pat on the back and an offer to do consulting with that same organization. For many of our white liberal friends working on issues that disparately impact our communities-they have no issue of guilt nor conscious after realizing that the same racism they accuse the system of is reflected in their own organizations and the organizations/foundations that fund them.

A decade ago while conducting an interview for an online radio newsmagazine started by a Black website (The Black World Today) long before other major/white media organizations got the idea, I interviewed Playthell Benjamin, noted author and former press secretary for Malcolm X (El Hajj Malik El Shabazz) and he broke down the difference between “White Supremacy,” and “racist.” According to Benjamin, while racist do not care for Black Folk nor desire to be around them, White Supremacists don’t mind having Black Folk around or working with them… “so long as they are the ones in control.”

Ironically, the only moments where I felt something akin to what Whites experience as non-stigmatized o “white privilege,” or that elusive “affirmative action,” was working as a journalist in the Black Press.

Today, Whitehouse occupant notwithstanding, Dubois’s prophetic comment still rings true, albeit one slight change. The problem of the twentieth century will be the problem of the color line-And so too, will the problem of the color line plague Black Folks in the 21st Century. Peace

 Malik Russell is an activist, educator and author and journalist..

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  • http://www.blackplanet.com/AfricanSpeech/ AfricanSpeech

    Actually, racism and white supremacy go hand in hand because white supremacy the theory while racism is the practical end of the theory…

    Racism is used to validate the theory of white supremacy, thereby justifying racism, so its a circular argument and that’s why it works so well…

    Where a racist system prevents black people from having and taking advantage of the same opportunities to succeed or fail like their white counterparts, the outcome will always more often than not be failure or inability to harness resources, thus providing a further excuse to further deny black people of any opportunities or chances…

    It’s like what happens with getting into a top, high-paying profession where you have to basically work for free or for very low wages for several years before you get to the big bucks, with support and mentoring provided to help you get there… A person from a poor family will never be given the chance because they don’t have the connections of rich folks to even get a foot in the door and even if they end up getting in purely on their talent and skill, can’t afford to go for years without money or any support from the powers that be and has to drop out, thus justifying the prejudices held by the folks in that institution about poor people… That’s how it works…

    Like Einstein said, “if the facts don’t fit the theory, you change the facts” and that is the very essence of racism and white supremacy…

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/HarlemJazz/ HarlemJazz

    Mr. Russell

    Assuming that you are a black man, one reason that the Obama administration may be reluctant to hire black folks is because of incompetent individuals like you who identify the structure at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. in D.C. as the “Whitehouse.” Do you mean the White House, as in two words.

    Second, you state in your article: “Of Obama’s 404 senior political appointments, 258 are white and the second most group is listed as racially unknown (64), while African Americans, Latinos, and Asians represent 54, 39, and 20 respectively of the President’s appointments.” The use a little elementary addition would have shown you that 258+64+54+39+20=435, and not 404.

    It is so embarrassing when I see my people trying to make a point about a race issue and get their facts wrong. Come on, the “Whitehouse,” are you freakin’ serious?

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/chevah_don/ chevah_don

    HarlemJazz

    You mangled your sentence about “using elementary addition”, so you’re hardly one to talk….lol

    Additionally, the fact that you become embarrassed when another Black person makes a mistake leads me to believe that you’ve been affected by the very White Supremacy and Euro-centric thinking that this article speaks of.

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/easy_one65/ easy_one65

    I still stand by my belief that, in order for us to sink or swim, survive or succeed, as a race of people, we have to stick together. That means Black people cutting the bullshyt, getting down to serious business and “walkin’ the walk.” The ‘colorline’ ain’t going nowhere, and is only used to “defeat” us, keep us divided and conquered, keep our minds pre-occupied on insignificant, nonsense, willy-nilly, two-bit bullshyt instead the more important issues that we are facing and are challenged with for our survival. Instead of avoiding our reality, Black people are going to have to lead the world on this issue of color. If you are an adult, know your history, know where you come from, proud of your history, love the skin you’re in, you are going to live your life with meaning, regardless of the colorline. “Diversity” existed long before the creation of the United States and will always be a part of life. So will racism, prejudice, classism, color-consciousness and the people who just ain’t going to get along with nobody regardless what color they are!…(lol!)…”Black is Beautiful”…We just need to remind ourselves of that everyday…

    “Just because I love my people doesn’t mean that I hate others.” – Mayor Harold Washington, Chicago’s 1st Black Mayor, 1983-1987

  • http://www.blackplanet.com/MR_NANASTROKER/ MR_NANASTROKER

    Dayum good qoute easy_one

    “Just because I love my people doesn’t mean that I hate others.” – Mayor Harold Washington, Chicago’s 1st Black Mayor, 1983-1987

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  • http://www.blackplanet.com/ProBlackfist/ ProBlackfist

    Great article,but being honest it’s even worse than that.
    All we have to do is look how all this dumbing down and being brainwashed
    has done on the masses of black people in this racist country.

    Since this white man,the goverment has decided to change the economic
    paradigm when it comes to black people. Our people are being left behind
    and being genocided right in our faces.
    Instead of stay safe and not becoming a threat to slavemaster,black’s needed
    to be becoming indepedent instead of being stuck in outdated slave type
    of mindset and behavior.
    It’s interesting we have a so-called black president in charge of the country while the rest of poor black america has been put back into slavery without the chains.
    So this situtation is even worse than just focusing on the color line.
    The racist’s who came up with this plan could care less about a color line.
    That is why they have taken it to a whole new level of racism,hate and
    oppression

  • http://whosemedia.com/drums/2010/08/10/the-race-we-are-set-up-to-lose/ Drums in the Global Village » Blog Archive » The Race We Are Set Up To Lose

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