How many acts of domestic terrorism, how many mass murders, does it take for a problem to be "real"?
"Its actually not a real problem in America...This is a hoax...They're making this up..." These were the words of political pundit for Fox News, Tucker Carlson, on his show on August 6th, two days after the mass shooting in El Paso that killed 22 people who were targeted because of their race by a young man who subscribed to White Nationalist ideology. {Fox News host Tucker Carlson says white supremacy is ‘not a real problem in America’} To give Tucker Carlson the benefit of the doubt (whether his past actions/words deserve it or not), it seems that he was trying to make the case that there are more important/significant problems in America today than white supremacy. And while terrorism of any kind has never been high on the list of causes of untimely death in America, I don't recall anyone arguing after 9/11 that Islamic jihadist terrorism was not a big deal for America (even with the Muslim population in America below 1%). It was easy to get on board with fighting against Islamic jihadists, after all, they lived elsewhere and didn't look like us, to combat them was a military issue that didn't require us to look in the mirror and ask hard questions. {At least not early on, war tends to result in hard moral questions whether we want it to or not} The reason for Tucker Carlson's assertion that white supremacy is a "hoax" was also clearly expressed, he believes that treating it like an actual problem in America would be bad politically for those he supports. His decision to downplay the threat of white supremacy was not a moral decision, but a political one. Also, to say that a problem isn't the "most important" one as a way of dismissing it, is both illogical and an act of moral cowardice. To those affected by this most recent example of white supremacy which resulted in violence, it does little good to point out that heart disease kills more Americans each year. Evil is still evil, even if there are greater threats and fears in this world. {This is the inherent flaw in the argument made by Neil DeGrasse Tyson for which he was roundly criticized: Critics say Neil deGrasse Tyson should ‘stick to astrophysics’ after his tweets about mass shootings Also, accident are not morally equivalent to purposeful acts.} And while I could point to other instances of sin that are more prevalent in the American Church (pride, materialism, and sexual immorality certainly outnumber racism by sheer volume), and within American society in general, how does that in any way diminish the fact that racism/white supremacy is by all statistical measure a problem that is currently growing not shrinking?
I will choose to not address the political ramifications of our society treating white supremacy like a real problem (in other words, whether or not Tucker Carlson is correct in his fear of its impact upon the side he wants to win), for my primary concern is NOT politics, but morality. From that perspective, white racism and its natural final manifestation, white supremacy, has always been a deadly threat to the American Church. As a nation that has always had a self-avowed Christian majority, and still does, things which are detrimental to the Church are also likely to be detrimental to the United States. From how the first settlers interacted with the American Indian population, to the arrival of the first African slaves, the American colonies and later United States of America, have always struggled with the pervasive sin of treating people unlike ourselves as an "other" to be disregarded, mistreated, and even exterminated. That these faults are not unique to any particular race or nation does not make them any less corrosive and dangerous to the people who make up this nation.
While better healthcare for those suffering with mental illnesses would benefit the nation greatly, that is not the root of racism/white supremacy. For the vast majority of those suffering from mental illness have never been violent. Southern slave owners were not mentally ill, they were racists choosing to commit evil acts. When the Klan was able to organize parades at the beginning of the 20th century attended by a hundred thousand people, it was not an outbreak of mental illness, but immorality. Nearly all of those who hate others based upon how they look or where they are from do not suffer from a mental illness, they have chosen to embrace evil. Some of those who lash out in violence might also suffer from a mental illness, but the true danger of this ideology is far more mundane, and far more difficult to treat than an illness. Hate is rarely a mental illness, it is a darkness in the human heart that requires a spiritual cure.
Hate is real. Racism is real. Anti-Semitism is real. White Supremacy is real. When pushed to a dark corner, or exiled from the mainstream, they regroup and return again. Chants of "Never again" cannot stop them, for they thrive in the fallen human heart. If we are to minimize them, protect the innocent, and even rescue some of those in their thrall, we must first acknowledge how very real they are.
I have written about the danger of racism in connection with Christianity on a number of occasions:
White Supremacy and White Nationalism are an Abomination to the Church
The Church: The most diverse organization in the history of the world
If you have a problem with Christians who don't look like you
There are no racists at the Cross
Why we can never allow "them" to be singled out
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