First of all, guilt simply means "a feeling of having done wrong OR failed in an obligation."
I didn't create the racist systems that I benefit from as a white man.
But once I became aware of how those systems privilege me, I would've been guilty if I'd stayed silent.
Imagine being on the top academically at your school. You get all the awards, praise, privileges.
Then you find out your parents paid off the school to unfairly advantage you.
It's not your fault. You need not feel guilty—but you should feel an obligation to right the wrongs.
But what if you still FELT like you had cheated even though that wasn't the truth?
You might then fear you'd lose, not only privileges, but be found guilty and punished if others found out.
So instead of correcting others' wrongs that benefited you, you become complicit.
You can quickly go from being the unwitting benefactor of another's wrongs to fighting tooth-&-nail to defend yourself & evade a punishment you fear you deserve.
You start to see yourself as the victim of any threat that the wrongs may be uncovered.
It can drive you to kill.
Many white folks know intuitively that they benefit from systemic racism & white privilege—even if they can't name those concepts.
They fear that acknowledging these things will mean they must pay, not just in loss of privilege, but eye for eye, tooth for tooth, lash for lash.
Those white folks have usually never had any real, meaningful relationships with Black folks or any honest conversations about racism.
They think Black people secretly walk around wanting to punish them for it—wanting revenge.
Because it's what they'd want. It's deflection.
So instead of acknowledging the reality of systemic racism & working to dismantle white supremacy, their guilt drives them to a defensive crouch & they actively, knowingly become complicit in racism by denying its reality & declaring themselves victims of "reverse racism."
That is why many want to stomp out what they erroneously call "critical race theory" (they really just mean history & social studies that acknowledge the reality of racism).
They see such education as a personal threat. So they say teaching about racism is... racist.
That's why the "color blindness" the media, conservatives & centrist liberals heavily promoted in the 1990s-2000s was comforting: People thought, 'As long as I, an individual, cannot see race, I can't be a racist.'
But it also meant pretending not to see gross racial injustices.
The great irony of it all is that critical race theory provides a framework that would free those very white folks from that individual guilt.
It doesn't focus on racism as a sin of the individual—but as something perpetuated by social structures we all have the power to alter.
But they can't see that because, by burying themselves in a defensive position that denies the existence of systemic racism, they've knowingly made themselves complicit in it as active participants. The guilt, if anything, has compounded.
White guilt becomes white defensiveness.
Defensiveness is destructive. On a personal level, it can ruin marriages (I've had to learn to tame my own personal defensiveness over the years).
On a social level, when we're talking about one group who benefited from centuries of slavery & apartheid? It's nuclear.
Unchecked white guilt becomes white defensiveness and mutates into white grievance.
Savvy, soulless political demagogues & media figures (like @TuckerCarlson) know how white guilt works.
They exploit it and manipulate it (for votes, for ratings...) to increase their own power.
People like Tucker Carlson and Donald Trump allow those with advanced stage white guilt (white grievance) to see it as something else.
They reframe it as patriotism—as the essence of being American. Now, instead of guilt, it's a noble cause that must be defended.
That kind of demagoguery can turn people against their own interests (make no mistake, even many white people are indirectly harmed by systemic racism).
It can turn them against democracy.
It can convince them to attack their nation's Capitol in the name of patriotism.
Not only do political and media demagogues exploit white guilt (whether to amorally increase their own power or out of true devotion to white supremacy), but so do avowed, unrepentant, clear-eyed white supremacists.
They use it to grow their ranks. The result can look like this:
More often, it looks electing leaders who uphold racist policies in policing, education, housing, voting, crime and a host of other areas.
It also looks like every day, banal, passive racism.
White guilt, particularly in its malignant form, is one of white supremacy's most potent tools.
And the truth is, critical thinking about race and systemic racism is a threat to that gravy train for demagogues and white supremacists because it can rob white guilt of its power.
If too many white people stop naval gazing and start reckoning with race as a systemic issue—which began happening in 2020—it's a threat.
Demagogues and white supremacists need white guilt to flourish so they can harvest and reap the rewards of metastasized white grievance.
It's no accident that, after a year in which millions of white folks across the country began really learning about and understanding how systemic racism works, a full-throated effort is on to stamp that out & convince white folks that racism is about individuals, not systems.
White guilt is not a threat to white supremacy.
It's one of its secret weapons for corralling the white masses into doing the bidding of demagogues & self-avowed white supremacists.
But white people collectively understanding & taking action against racist systems IS a threat.
It's helpful to tell white people that racial justice means retribution against white people for the sins of their fathers—lash for lash, lynching for lynching.
"If CRT is taught, SYSTEMS OF POWER WILL FALL!" is far less scary.
It even risks making converts.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Kamala Harris will accept the Democratic nomination 60 years to the day after Fannie Lou Hamer—a Black woman and sharecropper from rural Mississippi—rattled the DNC with her "Is This America?" speech about being brutalized for trying to register to vote. mississippifreepress.org/kamala-harris-…
Fannie Lou Hamer, who helped organize Freedom Summer to register and educate Black voters, was one of the leaders of the Mississippi Democratic Freedom Party who traveled to the 1964 DNC in New Jersey to challenge the state's all-white delegation. mississippifreepress.org/kamala-harris-…
Fannie Lou Hamer was also an advocate for bodily autonomy.
A white doctor had performed a hysterectomy on her while removing a tumor in 1961.
NEW: After discovering that some officials in Mississippi and nationwide were keeping unidentified bodies for "personal collections" and refusing to return them, Pascagoula Lt. Darren Versiga began pushing for a law to regulate how remains are handled. mississippifreepress.org/40991/cold-cas…
Lt. Versiga told @Shaunicy_ that he uncovered the problems when he began looking into decades worth of unsolved cold cases in Pascagoula.
@Shaunicy_ Lt. Versiga also said the bill, introduced by Sen. Brice Wiggins, could also help prevent cases where counties bury bodies without ever informing families of a loved ones' death—as happened to at least seven families in Hinds County. mississippifreepress.org/38668/mothers-…
NEW: The Mississippi Senate stripped out the House Medicaid expansion bill and replaced it with one that could cost the State millions more while covering less people.
Sen. Kevin Blackwell estimates that 80,000 Mississippians would qualify for Medicaid coverage under the Senate plan, but said he expects as few as 40,000 may actually enroll—significantly lower than the House’s estimation of up to 200,000 for its version. mississippifreepress.org/40893/senate-m…
The House plan includes full Medicaid expansion under the ACA, allowing residents who make up to 138% of the federal poverty level ($20,120 for an individual) to qualify. The Senate plan only allows people making up to 100% (~$15k) to qualify. mississippifreepress.org/40893/senate-m…
To quote Taylor herself reflecting on her eating disorder:
“If you’re thin enough, then you don’t have that ass that everybody wants. But if you have enough weight on you to have an ass, your stomach isn’t flat enough. It’s all just f—ing impossible.” variety.com/2020/music/new…
Here's how people reacted after she stopped starving herself (yes, she really did that).
"'No, I would not protect you. In fact, I would encourage [Russia] to do whatever the hell they want,” Trump said, recalling a conversation with an American ally's president. mississippifreepress.org/39734/trump-en…
You can support our work by following @MSFreePress.
As a nonprofit newsroom, our journalism is always free to anyone to read, but we do rely on support from our readers to grow and do this work.
NEW: Brett Favre was interrogated by state attorneys for nine hours Monday during a secret deposition about the Mississippi welfare scandal and the millions in TANF funds that went to him, a volleyball stadium and a drug company he was heavily invested in. mississippifreepress.org/38290/brett-fa…
Favre's deposition was originally scheduled for October, but the State rescheduled it for after the statewide elections.
Hattiesburg Patriot's Tom Garmon found out about the deposition's secret location and staked it out. Clip courtesy @HPatriot mississippifreepress.org/38290/brett-fa…
It is unlikely that the transcript will become public anytime soon. In October, a judge agreed to a request from the State, Favre and other defendants to issue a protective order sealing certain discovery documents—like deposition transcript.