Historical Racism is not Simply “History” When It’s Continually Repeated
<p>When it comes to talking about race, racism, and racialized violence in America, far too often I have heard comments like: “<em>get over it,” “it happened 400 years ago”, “that’s in the past,” </em>or the classic — <em>“we had a Black president.” </em>All of these statements imply that racism is a thing of the past and no longer needs to be talked about, addressed, or confronted.</p>
<p>Rather than writing an essay providing a plethora of statistics that illustrate how America is far from being a “post-racial” society (<em>whatever “post-racial” is supposed to mean</em>), I simply want to illustrate for a few minutes how and why the “past” for many African Americans is not simply the past. The so-called “past” is a present reality that many Black people live with daily.</p>
<h1>The past continues to exist in the present.</h1>
<p>The recent <a href="https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/27/us/jacksonville-florida-shooting-sunday/index.html" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">racist-motivated shooting</a> in Jacksonville, FL, has an interesting connection with the past that helps illustrate how and why the past continues to exist in the present for many Black people. On August 26, 2023, a white gunman wearing a tactical vest barged into a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, FL, and fatally shot three Black people. Manifestos left by the gunman, who killed himself after the attack, indicate that the attack was racially motivated.</p>
<p>The gunman had earlier been spotted on the campus of Edward Waters University, a historically Black college about half a mile from the Dollar General. When the gunman refused to identify himself to an on-campus security officer, he was asked to leave the university.</p>
<p><a href="https://momentum.medium.com/historical-violence-is-not-simply-history-when-its-continually-repeated-f8e015a7bd97"><strong>Website</strong></a></p>