Crime A Racist Attack Shows How Whiteness Evolves - When Jayendra and Balwinder urinate on Shanquisha and Precious, who is to blame?

By Nell Irvin Painter
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Dr. Painter is the author of “The History of White People.”

Two 17-year-old boys accused of harassing four African-American middle schoolgirls — using racial slurs and urinating on one of the victims — are facing charges including bias intimidation and lewdness.

The incident, which took place during an Oct. 18 high school football game in the New Jersey suburb of Lawrence Township and was partly captured on a video that circulated on social media, involves a cast of characters that has given some observers pause: Police say the boys are of Indian descent.

While it’s tempting to see the reported ethnicity of the boys suspected in the assault as complicating the story and raising questions about whether the assault should be thought of as racist, I look at it through a different lens. Instead of asking what the boys’ reported racial identity tells us about the nature of the attack, we should see the boys as enacting American whiteness through anti-black assault in a very traditional way. In doing so, the assailants are demonstrating how race is a social construct that people make through their actions. They show race in the making, and show how race is something we perform, not just something we are in our blood or in the color of our skin.

At first blush, this reported assault sounds nauseatingly familiar, like the run-of-the-mill American racial harassment that has always been common but has become increasingly revealed thanks to videos shared on social media. The boys’ actions resemble those of people who feel empowered to act out their resentment against nonwhite people who are deemed out of place, confronting them with hostility or slurs or calling the police. The people patrolling what they see as their spaces are often — but not always — white. The Yale sociologist Elijah Anderson calls areas that are policed in this way, “the white space,” even though the spaces in question are officially public. The experiences of black people accused of these purported infractions have acquired a panoply of names that capture the absurdity of facing such hostility while innocently carrying out everyday activities: driving while black, barbecuing while black, walking while black, sitting at home while black. The encounters often end with violent — too often, fatal — outcomes.

In the New Jersey incident, the heritage or skin color of the boys suspected of the assault doesn’t matter. What matters is that they were participating in this pattern and thus enacting whiteness in a very traditional way.

The way in which whiteness is labeled has changed over time, with relevant categories morphing from Teutonic to Saxon to Anglo-Saxon to Caucasian to Nordic to WASP to white to white-ethnic as the society changes, as politics change. As tempting as it is to assume that races are boxes that people fit in once and for all, that kind of thinking is too simplistic, too lazy to help us understand American history and culture.

Since the 1960s, some Americans from the Caribbean and Latin American have expressed that they don’t fit into the traditional black/white binary. At this point, we should wonder if or how other Americans might find places in the black/white traditions. Will Latinos of various skin colors come to consider themselves black or white? What about Asians of various skin colors?

To find out, we should observe their actions. Or how they perform race.

Multicultural New Jersey holds worlds enough to carry national, if not global significance — my state makes people from everywhere into Americans. Here, people of South Asian descent, like people from many other backgrounds, have skin colors that vary widely, from very dark to very light, and women are often subject to aggressive colorism. Further, they cannot be lumped together by class. The business pages of local newspapers feature powerful, wealthy men of South Asian descent and, at the same time, rush-hour NJ Transit trains include people of South Asian descent among the masses of working stiffs commuting to and from New York City.

For a clue on how American racial identity is evolving, it may be less useful to look to clues like complexion, and more to the performance of identity. The performance here — flinging around the N-word, with the befoulment of urination — holds an answer. One potent way of being American, no matter where you or your parents are from, is enacting anti-blackness. And traditionally, acting out anti-blackness has meant acting white.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/26/opinion/new-jersey-high-school-racism.html
https://archive.li/Q3ZYb
 
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So all you need to be seen as white is to piss on a black chick? Hell of a precedent to be setting.

Edit: holy shit, the more I read this thread more I can feel the author almost breaking through their conditioning and coming to an understanding of race relations that actually reflects reality. Then the brainwashing takes hold again and they go back to dissembling and babbling.

Academia is the province of fools.
 
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In the New Jersey incident, the heritage or skin color of the boys suspected of the assault doesn’t matter. What matters is that they were participating in this pattern and thus enacting whiteness in a very traditional way.

tfw this whole time black on black crime is actually white people's fault because the black people were attacking black people and therefore being white racists. fuck.
 
Yes, peeing on black people is a stereotypical white behavior. Amos and Andy were always dripping with the pee of whiteness in those old cartoons. Birth of a Nation ends with the villainous mulatto being washed away in a massive conflagration of Caucasian piss.

Truly, Affirmative Action produces only the finest PhD recipients.
 
Or maybe we ignore skin color altogether because that's the foundation of all racism and instead look at this behavior as a function of socioeconomics.

Oh, wait, scratch that. Not being racist in some degree would render people like Dr. Painter completely irrelevant. Can't have that!
 
I've read a lot of stupid shit in my life but I think this takes the cake. I'm really confused why people suddenly think white people invented racism and that racism is just white culture. There's old text from various cultures with different melanin that have people saying racist things about their neighbors, it's incredibly common.

I wish white people were as racist as these idiots think they are. The world would be a better place for me if they were.
 
What's so hard to understand about racism simply being racism, there's nothing inherently "white" about it.

White people did not fucking invent the concept of racism.
In my opinion these people just cannot understand that white people didn't invent all the bad things in the world. In one class I took I had to watch this Ted talk by this gay Indian woman where she talked about how the British made India homophobic, because they were the first ones to institute anti-sodomy laws.

I think that kids that drink the far-left koolaid just can't separate discrimination from white people.
 
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