Thursday, February 28, 2013

THE GOP’S SEARCH FOR ANSWERS: HISTORY ANYONE?


by M. Irene Daniel 

            Ever since the election results of 2012 revealed a gaping disconnect between the Republican party and people of non-caucasian ethnicity, we have heard a great deal of discussion about GOP soul-searching and trying to figure out what went wrong. Republicans seem to be absolutely baffled at the poor performance among, essentially, all demographics except for white men and old white people. The answers that continue to elude them seem glaringly obvious to someone like me, a 2nd generation Mexican-American women, who is a product of LBJ’s Great Society. While the views expressed here are my own, I know my perspective on this issue is shared by many of us who, until recent decades, were on the outside looking in for so long. So, as CPAC convenes this week-end, here are my reflections on their current state.

            Before I go any further, I want to establish that I do not hate Republicans or conservatives. I do not hate white people. I am married to a white man whose only vote ever cast was for Ronald Reagan. The father of my only child has a strawberry-blonde complexion, and our son was born with a fuzzy red head. I know that this won’t stop the accusations of racism or liberal bias from my conservative friends and readers, but I offer these facts in an effort to demonstrate an open-mindedness that I find very liberating. For while I may be unable to understand a particular viewpoint, I acknowledge that it makes sense to somebody for whatever reasons that are beyond my grasp. People just do what makes sense to them.

            Moreover, this social blindness is not unique to the Republican party. Many groups that have been traditionally dominated by the white male establishment, country-club crowd, are experiencing a similar lack of diversity; and, consequently, a decline in membership and membership dues. Such was my experience as a Rotarian for several years. What I found most puzzling was how such educated, intelligent and community minded, good and decent people possessed little or no understanding of basic demographics, and how best to use them in order to maximize the group’s potential. Hence its membership rolls would continue to drop, as there were not enough younger, darker and more female faces to replace those who were, literally, dying off.

            What I find even more puzzling is how tone-deaf conservative Caucasians are when it comes to humor; or even non-conservative ones, as Oscar host Seth MacFarlane’s tasteless jokes reveal. Even Newt Gringrich commented after the election that there seemed to be something that he and his fellow Republicans were not seeing. So what we can all agree on is that there seems to be something very much amiss in GOP efforts to reach out to ethnic-American voters.

            As an avid history buff and occasional activist, I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that Caucasians don’t know the American history of the Indigenous, most of whose ancestry predates European presence on this continent. I remember being taught in school about Kitt Carson and John C. Fremont, and how many Indians they killed; but not until I was much older, and largely as a result of my own curiosity rather than any curricular requirements, did I learn about how these frontiersmen are viewed from the perspective of the Native American.

            We learned about slavery and lived through the Civil Rights Movement, and were told that we are all equal now. And yet, my dark-skinned brother was advised to enlist in the army in 1969, instead of thinking about college, even though he was 3rd in his class in high school. We learned to tolerate the insensitive humor of the Caucasians because we needed the jobs, college admissions, scholarships and all the other opportunities from which we had been previously, and often brutally, excluded. So we put up with it all, and learned about our own, and each other’s ethnic American pasts, almost of all of which was filled with brutality and betrayal. We began to reach out to one another and support each other’s efforts and causes.

When I was in law school at UCLA, there were very few of the wealthy white crowd in our midst when, every spring, we protested the abandonment of real diversity as we had once known it on our Westwood campus. And every year, Black, Latino and Asian alums would come and talk to us, and support us and inspire us to continue our demands for equal opportunity. It was at one such demonstration that I heard words that I will never forget. They were spoken by an African-American alum whose name I do not recall and who I have never seen again; but his words resonate with me still. “None of us have made it, until all of us have made it,” was what he said. That sentence said it all to me. For even though I have been told that I could “pass” for white if I wanted to, and leave other victims of discrimination to fend for themselves; I had to speak out or else I would just be as bad as those who do the discriminating because I know better. I know what it feels like. And I think this is what Caucasians don’t understand about us. They don’t know us. They don’t know our history. And they don’t want to know.

I say this because I have witnessed countless examples of white persons who are successful and advanced in their fields that know little or nothing about race relations or any American history that is not something of the Manifest Destiny variety. For example, I have a very dear friend who is also UCLA Law School grad, and who went on to clerk for a U.S. Supreme Court Justice; as well as serving as an officer in the U.S. Navy. He is white and conservative and we disagree on many things, including the movie, ‘The Help.’ I found it woefully lacking in truth and reality, in its omission of crucial facts regarding the daily torture, murder and brutality of the ever-present white-on-black terrorism of the KKK that dominated Jackson, Mississippi in 1963, and for decades previous and subsequent to that time.

I found this deficiency disgraceful. However, my friend revealed to me that, until he saw this movie, he never realized how prevalent and all-encompassing the racism in the south really was at that time. What? I was absolutely incredulous. For how could someone with an outstanding professional education, at a “liberal” school no less, and who had served as a Naval officer; and especially who had clerked for a U.S. Supreme Court Justice, and therefore had to have read Civil Rights cases of the greatest import, be in such a state of unknowing about one of the pivotal issues in our entire national history?

So you see, white people don’t have to know anything about us, and they can do just fine. But we have to know even more about white people than they know about themselves, much less about us, to be truly competitive in what is still to this day, a very white man’s world. Look at who has been empowered from the beginning – white men with property. Those of us who do not fall into that historically empowered group, have to work harder and be more resourceful in order to compete because we can’t take anything for granted.

So, if Republicans really want to understand the real lesson of the election of 2012, perhaps they should learn more about us, and about the causes of, what appears to be, an inherent mistrust of one another. We’ve read all your white history; now why don’t you read some of ours?

Here is a suggested reading list to get started on the enlightenment of the white tribe:

1.      Coming of Age in Mississippi, by Ann Moody;

2.      The Devil’s Highway, by Luis Alberto Urrea;

3.      Anything by Howard Zinn;

4.      Bless Me, Ultima, by Rudolfo Anaya.

That should be good for starters, and these are just suggestions. The point is, if you want to see what we see when we see you, perhaps you should learn a little bit about what our lives have been like when only white people are in charge. It’s not pretty and we don’t hate you, Republicans. But we don’t trust you either, and there is plenty of reason for that. There is also plenty of opportunity to change perspectives, but not if we continue to be invisible to you.

After all, we’re all only human.

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