By Harry Rix in Rhode Island’s Future
“I don’t think there is a white privilege.” – RI House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello
Rhode Island’s Democratic Speaker on race: “I don’t think
anybody in society views any particular nationality as having any privilege
over any other.”
This denies the experiences of many minorities.
They know whites have greater privileges in education, employment, housing, banking and criminal justice.
They know whites have greater privileges in education, employment, housing, banking and criminal justice.
Hardships perpetuate one another: Poor education leads to poor
job prospects—and these impoverish housing opportunities.
Payday lenders scam often poor minorities who also suffer increased arrests, bail, sentences and fines.
Payday lenders scam often poor minorities who also suffer increased arrests, bail, sentences and fines.
Rhode Island’s fourth-grade reading proficiency is 48 percent
for whites; 18 percent for blacks; 17 percent for Latinos. Should we blame
minority kids? No, students from low-income families score 19 percent, so poor
minorities rank far lower than students from white families with better
schools.
Financial health varies widely by race: The Census Bureau reports black median income for 2013 is $34,600; Latino, $41,000; white, $58,300. Lasting low income affects resources: Pew Research Center reports 2013 median household wealth for blacks is $11,000; Latinos, $13,700; whites, $141,900. The wealth of one white family equals ten Latino or thirteen black families.
White privilege is powerful. Minority disadvantages are
painful—and keep accumulating.
Consider housing. Poor neighborhoods are often minority while
upscale neighborhoods are overwhelmingly white. Public housing projects built
in poor areas preserve segregation.
Also, mortgage discrimination continues long after redlining.
For example, though whites had similar credit ratings, Wells Fargo steered
4,000 blacks and Latinos into subprime mortgages and charged 30,000 minorities
increased fees averaging more than $2,500. Predatory mortgage brokers often
targeted minorities and schemed foreclosing quickly on the first late payment.
The cycle of poverty is vicious: Poor housing reflects poor
income, and these deficits lead to children’s destitute education. Mass
incarceration often penalizes offenders’ families with costly travel expenses,
bail, attorney’s fees, and phone surcharges. Payday lenders’ outrageous tactics
intensify poverty. Thus, poor communities remain perpetually impoverished.
Mattiello affirms the adage, “high tide lifts all boats,” but
this comparison fails: While the rich get richer, everyone else’s economic boat
has not lifted for 30 years. Indeed, Financial Times reports
income distribution so favors the wealthy that, if 1979 levels held, the bottom
80 percent of families would now earn another $11,000 a year.
Could your family use another $11,000 each year? Now consider
the even greater loss to many minorities who, compared to whites, already have
immense disparities in income and wealth.
Mattiello states, “To a certain extent we have to give
particular attention to the minority community,” but also asserts some don’t
“take advantage” of opportunities—“and that’s something that I quite frankly
don’t understand.” But the disadvantage is understandable: Equal opportunity is
a fiction.
It’s not that only some minorities take advantage of
opportunities. Instead of implying victims of systemic discrimination are
callous or lazy, we must accept that opportunities available to whites are
often unavailable to minorities. Need more convincing?
A 2002 Harvard study found whites and blacks, controlled for
similar qualifications, had vastly different employment prospects. The callback
rate from job applications for whites was 34 percent; blacks, 14 percent.
Moreover, whites with criminal records received callbacks 17 percent of the
time; blacks, 5 percent.
This is shocking: Whites with criminal records received more callbacks
than blacks who committed no crimes.
The Harvard study confirmed 1994 results by Sociologist Marc
Bendick, Jr., et al.—but the disparity between blacks and whites without a
record was 24 points, not 20.
Many arrested—but not convicted—are also treated as criminals.
Harvard study authors indicate these unjust employment denials afflict millions
of low-income Americans, especially people of color.
Blacks and Latinos need more than a high tide of nearly nonexistent
opportunity: Mass incarceration must be remedied; banking scams need reform;
and enormous gaps in income, wealth, education and housing require ‘affirmative
action.’
Let’s hope Speaker Mattiello opens his eyes: The evidence for
white privilege is overwhelming.
Rev.
Harry Rix has 60 articles on spirituality and ethics, stunning photos, and 1200
quotations for reflection available at www.quoflections.org. ©2015 Harry Rix. All rights reserved.