The White Imprint on today's Society. |
Equality in Rescue? |
After the hurricane
had struck on August 29th, 2005 New Orleans had become one big game of, “survival
of the fittest.” As citizens were
stuffed into the Super Dome and the Convention Center, evacuation efforts and
rescue missions had fully commenced. Citizens
began to stand on their roofs, waving their arms and creating S.O. S signals in
attempt to be rescued. But how did the
government decipher on who was saved first? What characterized the importance
of an individual to be saved over another?
As days passed citizens began to become aware of a constant trend in who
was being rescued. Many of individuals who
had been saved were white, and the individuals who were left behind were African
American families. One story describes a
group of residents of mixed races choosing to send the African Americans off
the roof to ensure an immediate response from the rescuers. This evidently displays clear signs of discriminatory
bias among police enforcement. As buses
began to arrive to rescue the evacuees by land, transportation was segregated
and whites were once again placed to higher importance than blacks. Whites were given the privilege to leave on
the buses first, leaving the rest to suffer and wait in line for days on end. Such “unconscious” efforts dehumanize the “refugees”
by placing worth of a human being over another.
This type of discrimination also began to occur as police enforcement
focused their efforts on African American individuals who appeared to be “looting.”
Same Scenario- Different Intentions.... |
Media
outlets began to cover and report cases of looting and property damages occurring
in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Some
were labeled as looters and criminals, while others were described as “finding
means to survive.” Placed in identical
scenarios, the intentions reported in the media were created upon assumption by
race. Many whites seem to mix negative
views of black Americans with images of white innocence portrayed in the mass
media, thereby giving specific expression to elements of a broader racial
ideology. In areas predominately
occupied by white bodies, white campuses, and white spaces, outside viewers
perceive this as “less threatening” and “harmless.” In areas with the general population being
black Americans, the area is known to be “dangerous” and “unsafe”; or even
economically unstable. This connects to
the media’s perception of blacks in today’s society. The machinery of whiteness
connects with media coverage by these mainstream outlets. We have given them the power to shape our
attitudes towards demographic groups by following the views placed in these
reports. But this doesn’t end in the
attempt to overcome a “natural” disaster.
Discriminatory biases were still evident in the rebuilding and
reconstruction of New Orleans years after Hurricane Katrina.
This
habitual prejudice does not end at the distinction between blacks and
whites. Social inequalities described in
economic classification also present bias and discrimination between each
class. Social class correlates with
theory of Social stratification. The
discrimination between classes indicates that the measure of one’s social
economic status by income, education, occupational prestige and wealth provides
some overall assessment of people’s place in the society. In the rehabilitation of New Orleans the “checker
board” was transparent. In Jordan Flaherty’s
novel, Floodlines he states that “the
inequalities in the city’s recovery were obvious. Some areas had electricity, gas and clean
streets, and some areas were untouched. .. The Washington Post reported in 2005
that although both the overwhelming white Lake View Neighborhood and Black
Ninth Ward neighborhood were devastated by flooding “it appears now that
long-standing neighborhood differences in income and opportunity are shaping the
stalled repopulation of this mostly empty city” (Flaherty 2010, 70). He then further describes the drastic separation
of classes within several blocks of neighborhoods that had been salvaged and
replenished.
A fight for Equality. |
Being white
is an intricate narrative of physical appearance surpassing the content of
one’s character. It is not only a
recessive gene, but instead a construct or an idea that is embedded into our
unconscious behaviors. It is not the
white body that is presented to society, but the idea that is created within
this concept. The idea of superiority,
the idea of high social classification, and the idea of worth comes with being a
part of the “white privileged”. This
stereotype does not provide you with a negative stigma, but instead implants a
natural power above the rest. Being
white gives you visibility within society and equal opportunity of mobility
within class after such devastations. It
unconsciously gives you more rights than others, for the white majority’s
views, practices and culture are generally seen to be normal. Being White is the “American Dream.”
I agree it's sad that white people generally have so many more privileges than other races. Being a white male, I didn't realize it as much before I took this class, but after having my eyes open I've realized how unfair the system is.
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