I, Racist: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:


<blockquote>
<blockquote>
You showed yours, I take courage and show mine.
1.  I feel unhappy in the presence of angry people
2.  Every black person in the Twin Cities is angry (certainly every black person I see in downtown Minneapolis, where I worked at the time)
3. I must leave the mixed-race city for an all-white small town
</blockquote>


1.  I feel unhappy in the presence of anger<br>
== ==
2Every black person I meet is angry<br>
 
3I must leave the mixed-race city for an all-white small town
<blockquote>
https://gnomonchronicles.com/wiki/I,_Racist
 
Steps 1 and 2 were very clear in my mind when I left the city, summer 2019
 
Step 3 was not absent from my mind, but neither was it decisive in my thinking, nor (I think) decisive in my actions.   
 
I was almost never the target of direct anger from anyone, just that generalized smolder that black men have when when men come around. 
 
It's the generalized anger, and anger turned against onself and one's familyA mother shouts at her six-year-old-daughter:  "Hurry up or I'll break your fucking arm!"
 
I can't live thereIt makes me die inside.
 
The decisive quality is the city itself — traffic, automobiles — density — too much, too big, too fast, too cruel.
 
Lacking love.
 
To be sure!  Up here in Ely, red-hat MAGA culture flourishes, and occasionally I find myself smiling and gritting my teeth. 
 
I came up here to escape strife;  and I am a newcomer in a small town *where I intend to spend my life*.
 
If I think to confront racism up here, I will bring shit on my head to no good purpose. 
</blockquote>
</blockquote>



Revision as of 04:37, 23 April 2021

"I, Racist" is a short poem by Karl Jones.

I, Racist

Context: "Contemplations on systemic racism in myself"

1. I feel unhappy in the presence of angry people 2. Every black person in the Twin Cities is angry (certainly every black person I see in downtown Minneapolis, where I worked at the time) 3. I must leave the mixed-race city for an all-white small town

https://gnomonchronicles.com/wiki/I,_Racist

Steps 1 and 2 were very clear in my mind when I left the city, summer 2019

Step 3 was not absent from my mind, but neither was it decisive in my thinking, nor (I think) decisive in my actions.

I was almost never the target of direct anger from anyone, just that generalized smolder that black men have when when men come around.

It's the generalized anger, and anger turned against onself and one's family. A mother shouts at her six-year-old-daughter: "Hurry up or I'll break your fucking arm!"

I can't live there. It makes me die inside.

The decisive quality is the city itself — traffic, automobiles — density — too much, too big, too fast, too cruel.

Lacking love.

To be sure! Up here in Ely, red-hat MAGA culture flourishes, and occasionally I find myself smiling and gritting my teeth.

I came up here to escape strife; and I am a newcomer in a small town *where I intend to spend my life*.

If I think to confront racism up here, I will bring shit on my head to no good purpose.

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links

  • [ Post] @ Twitter (21 April 2021)