by Daniel Cano
Books over Ignorance |
As I listened to Florida’s governor Ron DeSantis and his acolytes rant against the teaching of ethnic and African American studies in Florida schools, and their demonization of the “woke” crowd, I couldn’t help but think of the hypocrisy, many, like DeSantis, educated at the best “woke” institutions of higher education in the country, Harvard and Yale. Yet, they choose to censure books and areas of study they consider too divisive for today’s students. So, I recycled a past essay I submitted to La Bloga. It seems appropriate now, sadly, since DeSantis does not only attack ethnic studies but American history, as well as education, itself.
In the
1990s, I heard a lecture by UC Berkeley historian Ron Takaki, an early
proponent of university ethnic studies classes. I remember, Takaki, stopping his speech and running his fingertips
across his arm, rubbing his skin, as if to make a point. “White?” he asked the
audience, rhetorically. “What is white? I don’t know what that is. There’s no
such thing as white.”
Of course,
what Dr. Takaki meant was that no person is literally or culturally “white”,
just like no person or culture is black, red, brown, or yellow. Those are
impersonal designations meant to dehumanize people, like assigning them a
number, as the Nazis did to Jews in the concentration camps and southern
plantation owners to African slaves before Emancipation.
Just like there is no such thing as “white”,
there is also no such thing as “race,” biologically. If all students learn about ethnicity in school, they will understand how we, as Americans, and as a people,
are much more united than we are divided.
Europeans
and their descendants are considered Caucasian, racially, a more serious term for “white”,
I guess, but then aren’t folks from South and West Asia, the entire Middle
East, India, and portions of Africa considered Caucasian, I mean, if you’re
looking strictly at “race”?
Does this
mean Neo Nazis or white supremacists will open their arms to Arabs, Mexicans, Persians,
East Indians, or others who fall under the Caucasian designation? Of course not,
since racists believe Caucasians descend from the European continent, primarily northern Europe, factually incorrect.
Even the word Aryan, and the notorious swastika, are not German, nor are they
European, but have their origins in Persia and India, in the Sanskrit language.
Germany, as a country, didn’t even exist before 1850.
If the
Neo-Nazi or White Supremacist definition of “white” or Aryan means “pure blood”,
that knocks out most Americans because few Yanks can claim a 100% pure
bloodline, not even Donald Trump. In fact, Trump’s kids are of German and
Russian heritage, since their mothers (minus one, Marla Maples) were products
of the old Soviet Union, a splattering of many ethnic groups and religions.
As hard as
our nation’s secret service agencies worked to keep Russian infiltrators and sympathizers
out of high-level U.S. government positions, we recently had a family of them
in the White House. Looks like they slipped through the cracks or are they as
American as the rest of us, a smorgasbord of ethnicities and bloodlines.
A while
back, I watched Mexican television journalist, a very light skin, blue-eyed,
Jorge Ramos, interview an older, olive-skin, self-proclaimed white supremacist,
who donned a suit and tie for legitimacy, I suppose. During their exchanges,
Ramos kept using the word “White” to denote race. It sounded absurd to me
because Ramos was lighter than the white supremacist he was interviewing. Does
that mean when Ramos used the term “white” he was referring to himself, as
well?
According
to the accepted racial designations, Latin-Americans, including Mexicans, are
“white,” or Caucasian. If Chicanos, for example, use the words “White people” aren’t
they talking about themselves, that is, unless they can prove 100% indigenous
bloodline, which is possible if the person hails from Southern Mexico or
Central America, places like Oaxaca, Chiapas, Honduras, Guatemala, and carries pure
indigenous blood?
Throughout
Mexican and U.S. history, the largest numbers of Mexicans who migrated north
came from Central Mexico, the regions of Jalisco, Michoacan, Sinaloa,
Chihuahua, and, later, the border areas. With nearly 500 years of European mixing, from the Spanish conquest to the migration of Mexicans north, the
number of pure-blooded Indians in the U.S. is low. It did receive a bump
during the migration of Mayans, Mixtecas, and Zopotecas from southern Mexico in
the 1980s.
Often, I
hear Neo-Nazis and White Supremacists claim Western Civilization as their
heritage, which means Greece, Rome, and parts of the Byzantine empire, including
Egypt and other parts of Africa. The thing is, Greece and Rome did not divide
their citizens by race, like some in the U.S., though, most historians consider U.S.
a society of immigrants, except for the various indigenous groups.
Rome considered
itself a society of slaves. Why? A common Roman practice, for decades, was to
free slaves and admit them into Roman society with all the rights afforded any
other Roman citizen. No doubt, there were Africans and Jews among the freed
slaves. One catch was that the freed slave had to accept Roman politics and
religion.
So, if
American Neo-Nazis and White Supremacists hail Greek and Roman civilizations as
their heritage, then they must also accept the inclusion of blacks, Jews, and
other people of mixed blood in their heritage. Since Constantin also declared
Rome a Christian Catholic state, Neo-Nazis and White Supremacists should also be
willing to kiss the pope’s ring. And any Irish, Scot, Italian or Polish
Catholics out there marching with Neo-Nazis had better realize their heads
might also be on the chopping block, when their friends, eventually, turn on
Catholics, and believe me, they will. Evangelical Protestantism runs deep among
racists.
According
to research by many sociologists, like educator Joy DeGruy, race didn’t become
an issue for any society until the late 16th and 17th
centuries, when Europeans had to justify African slavery to the world by
proving Africans weren’t human. That’s when European, so-called scientists, with
little scientific training, began measuring skulls to see if European skulls
had different shapes than African or Mongolian skulls. In theory, a skull of
certain proportions meant one race was more intelligent than another. Then, the
so-called researchers began measuring the skulls of parents and children of the
same race. When they found that many Europeans had different shaped skulls, this
debunked the theory.
Even the
tern Caucasian had a suspicious evolution. In the 1700s, a pseudo-scientist, a
man who received his doctorate after writing a fifteen-page paper, without ever
attending a university, coined the word Caucasian. Why? He argued the most
beautiful people in the world hailed from the Caucasus region of Europe.
Now, we all
know that beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so scientifically, the word
Caucasian has no scientific merit. He just used the personal library of a friend
who oversaw his thesis. He then continued his theory, creating the various races,
like Negro Africanus and Asiatic, offering his opinions of their beauty, intelligence, and behaviors, of course, placing them on the lowest levels of intelligence and culture.
Today, with
DNA and a myriad of tools at their disposal, scientists have proven that all
human beings share 99.9% of the same biological composition, regardless of skin color. Our physical differences are not biological but geographical.
That’s why parents from one region of the world where food is abundant and
living conditions healthy might be tall and strong. If they emigrate to
another region where the food is scarce and living conditions unhealthy, after
a few generations, their descendants will most likely be short and scrawny. Check
out surfers who stay out under the sun and in the water every day, year after year, the damaged skin, changes in pigmentation, and hair color.
Imagine, their descendants, after generations of the same behavior. Forgive the weak example, but I think it makes the point.
Scientists,
today, agree “race” is a myth. It doesn’t exist. It is a social construct, invented
by the powerful to exploit the weak, or anyone who does not agree with them. Like fairy tales, passed down from
generation to generation, they are dependent on those who interpret and apply them
to everyday life.
Neo-Nazis, White
Supremacists, and the great “un-woke” still believe one race is superior to
another based on skin color. It isn’t. We’re all one. Racial superiority is manufactured, like so many of today’s cheaply manufactured goods. One race is no better or no worse
than any other.
If
anything, racial hatred of the “other” is harmful to us and our descendants. Consider
the eighteen-year-old who drove 200 miles to kill as many African American as
he could on a Saturday afternoon before police stopped him. He murdered ten
people. Radicalized on-line by hate groups and listening to Fox Television host
Tucker Carlson, he said he wanted to kill Black people and Jews, or the El Paso
shooter who drove ten-hours and killed twenty-three people, as he looked for Mexicans
at a Wall Mart.
Instead of
attacking domestic terrorists, and the great "un-woke," some, like DeSantis push the narrative that
studying each other’s ethnic history is evil and
causes division. Thomas Jefferson, at sixteen years of age, believed, “Ignorance
was not only a disgrace but a handicap,” in all people; and yes, he considered African slaves "people," though he inherited many, even as he fought for the abolition of slavery.
Unlike many
politicians, today, seeking a political edge, any way they can, they defend
“ignorance,” over enlightenment. They crucify the “woke,” and uphold those who “sleep.”
They ignore the fact that many of the U.S. founding fathers argued for
“Enlightenment.”
As Thomas Jefferson
wrote, “I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of society but the
people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise
their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from
them, but to inform their discretion with education,” nothing about banning books, or knowledge.
2 comments:
Love this. Thank you.
Gracias por estos comentarios!!
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