Originally posted by The Feral Slasher
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One of the things Kendi notes is that all of us are susceptible to racism, sexism, homophobia, etc, and that even if we could be "non racist", "non sexist", etc, it wouldn't be enough anyway. We need to be antiracist. And antiracist is active. It's not who you are. It's what you affirmatively do.
Within that context, a racist is someone who promotes or advances racist policies and ideas, and an anti-racist is someone who promotes or advances anti-racist policies and ideas. Under this conception, however, "racist" and "antiracist" aren't fixed things that a person is. They are variable things that a person does. Which means that past racism neither fixes an individual as a racist forever nor precludes that person from promoting or advancing antiracist policies and ideas.
For example, Joe Biden sponsored crime laws in the 1990s that disproportionately and materially harmed Black people. That was racist. He made comments about Barack Obama that promoted the racist idea that being "clean and articulate" was somehow exceptional for a Black person. That was racist. He also affirmatively and consistently leveraged his white privilege to assuage white voters and citizens explicit or implicit fears or concerns about a Black President and to promote broad acceptance and celebration of that Black President. That was antiracist. In this campaign he has put out a plan for criminal justice reform that is focused on antiracism. That is antiracist. You can run the same analysis for Mike Bloomberg or Pete Buttigieg or Amy Klobuchar. So yes, evaluate and hold them to account for past actions that advanced racist policies and ideas. And evaluate and credit them for past and current actions that advance antiracist policies and ideas.
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