I agree that there are instances of black prejudice in individual black people. I also believe that many black people have adopted a kind of identity politics that allows them to internalize a victim role far beyond whatever particular instances of racist discrimination they might have experienced.
Yes we agree.
I also believe that the particular instances of prejudiced acts that may have been committed by black people have not had the effect of substantially shifting the balance of power to such a degree that black prejudice against white folk can properly be described as racist in the narrow sense. (Racism is a system of maintaining a power structure favoring one race to the detriment of others.)
I agree with this as well, except your definition of racism is not the one I use. Maybe I'm misunderstanding but I think your definition implies only something broad-based, "a system maintaining a power structure," whereas when I refer to racism I mean the definition to include single individuals believing in racial superiority/inferiority in a wide range of ways, which is part of what I believe complicates and keeps racism alive in America to this day. But I agree with the point you make and that's the reason I worded my point as I did, saying that black prejudice against whites feeds the monster of racism rather than saying blacks are racist against whites.
I think this is what palemale was getting at when he says that black prejudice against white people does not exist, and if that is correct, it is this that I agree with him about.
I think that is not what he was getting at, I think he was speaking directly about black prejudice against whites, as I was, and whether or not it "feeds the monster of racism," as I put it. And, re-reading his posts now, though I never said anything about blacks being racist but rather about black prejudice against whites, it seems clear he was disagreeing with me.
My point in naming black prejudice against whites "feeding the monster of racism" was that we have dirty little secrets that complicate the issue of racism in America, which are not openly discussed or generally acknowledged and that that's part of the reason why American racism is so difficult for some in other countries to understand -- and indeed difficult for some Americans to understand.
While you and palemale share much of this analysis, there are some parts at which you may disagree (and perhaps even disagree with me). Nevertheless, I think there is enough commonality that the differences can be reconciled.
I don't see that palemale and I agree about any of it but maybe I'm missing something. Which elements, specifically, do you think we share commonality? Do you think we agree that blacks being prejudiced against whites is part of what nourishes racism, part of what keeps it from withering on the vine so to speak?
Certainly the Sherrod video is an example of a particular instance of black prejudice. She was wrong. The NAACP denounced her actions in the incident which she reported, and they denounced the positive response she received about that incident from some of the audience. Thus we see that at least one of the organizations often criticized as contributing to so-called black racism in fact rejects that attitude.
Yes.
Now, let me continue by stressing that ours is a racist society. We are all embedded in that society, and all of us have internalized to one degree or another the racism in it which resists change. Change has occurred within our society. The expressions of its racism have changed. New strategies for changing the racist power-relation have developed, and some of the old ones have been set aside or rejected. Likewise, people have developed different approaches for correcting for and to some degree expunging the racism they had internalized from their upbringing.
Well said. And I certainly agree. But, to reiterate my point, I think it's important to note that the change you refer to has not been simply in the direction of diminishing racism. The dirty little secrets I refer to, which number more than I've listed, are a continual infusion of fuel to racism. Up to and including the past 20 years, 10 years, 5 years, and the past year. My point was/is that problems like black prejudice against whites, which is ingrained in many blacks over generations and understandable as a response to generations of racism from whites, is part of the reason racism remains such a big problem in America rather than having withered on the vine.