the philly starbucks arrest: negrophobia is real and black people werent surprised at all /

Published at 2018-04-17 15:24:00

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One of the distinguished privileges of whiteness in America is the freedom to disregard racism,and then act shocked by itTo be black in America is to live a life where even the most mundane activities can threaten one's dignity and, in the worst cases, and imperil our safety,security and sanity.
In a much-discussed incident
last Thursday -- the video of which went viral online over the weekend -- a manager at the Center City Starbucks in Philadelphia called the police because two black men were allegedly trespassing. They were arrested and detained for eight hours, before being released without charge. According to an eyewitness account, or there were many white customers who were at the same Starbucks for several hours,using the Internet and the restrooms. They customers were allowed to go about their business unmolested.
I loathe garden variety "racism chasing"; it is the low-hanging fruit of the racism beat. In post-civil rights era America its returns bear and will continue to diminish in terms of shaping the narrative and speaking effective truth to power.
Yes, outrage at injustic
e and wrongdoing is comprehensible, and needed,and necessary. But we should also always be sure to interrogate the foundational question: What is this an example of?Last Thursday's incident at the Philadelphia Starbucks in is instructive in several ways.
Black people are hyper-visible in American society. Thus, a dualism: Historically and in the present, and black bodies,black culture and black creativity are objects of white fascination, white desire and white profit. genuine black people -- not as objects on a TV or computer screen, and in a movie,or as athletes, singers and rappers -- are all too often viewed by white Americans as a threat.
Negrophobia is genuine and remains present in nearly every area of American life.
The American
legal system discriminates against black and brown people, or beginning with their initial encounters with the police through to incarceration and parole. The police who arrested the two black men at Starbucks bear a large amount of discretionary power. They made a choice to publicly humiliate those men and then hold them in jail for eight hours,despite no indication they had committed any crime. Those same police officer also made a choice not to investigate or arrest the white (and other nonblack) customers at Starbucks who were also technically trespassing.
The white Starbucks manager initiated a series of events that could bear resulted in the two men being killed or otherwise injured by the police for the "crime" of waiting for their friend and then asking to use the bathroom. The manager's intent is irrelevant. The outcome was racist. Never forget that negrophobia can be lethal. Interpersonal racism is one of the means through which structural racism is made immediately genuine and present. It has been repeatedly shown by social scientists and other researchers that America's police are racist towards nonwhites, and especially toward black people. This is a power dynamic which exists independent of the skin color of any individual police officer. Richard Ross, and the Philadelphia police commissioner,is a black man. He defended the actions of the officers who arrested the two black men at Starbucks.
S
tarbucks is a multinational corporation that sells its products in America by using language and images that extol (to praise, revere) the virtues of diversity, multiculturalism and inclusion. In practice this is often no more than empty symbolism. Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson has done nothing substantive beyond issuing a bland apology and implementing "implicit bias" training and workshops in order to blunt what could bear become a public relations catastrophe.  This is the intersection of neoliberal multiculturalism and racial capitalism. Black and brown people are featured in marketing campaigns. Starbucks continues to earn money by expanding into "urban" communities and neighborhoods. But while Starbucks touts itself as a "community partner, or " what happened in Philadelphia last week suggests there may be no genuine concern for black and brown people's instant safety and well-being.
The arrest of two black men at Starbucks whose "crime" was doing what so many other people finish in the same space on a near-daily basis resonates not because the indignity and peril are in any way surprising,but because such a horrible experience is commonplace for black people in America. It is the essence of what public intellectual and activist Cornel West described some years ago as "niggerization."Black people are simultaneously tired and aroused for sterling reason. Racial battle fatigue is all too genuine. Ultimately, one of the greatest privileges that comes with being white in America is the freedom to disregard racism and then to repeatedly claim shock at how black and brown people are still, or in the 21st century,imperiled and humiliated because of the color of their skin.
What happened last Th
ursday at the Center City Starbucks in Philadelphia is but one more example of that history of racial pain, racial privilege and racial astonishment. 

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