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Statement on the Racial Privacy
Initiative
by
James A. Landrith, Jr.
October/November 2001
As editor and publisher of The
Multiracial Activist and The Abolitionist Examiner, one half of an
"interracial" marriage, and an individual who can identify as
"multiracial", I would like to take this time to express my commitment to
ending our government's obsession with classifying Americans by "race."
These nasty little classifications have been contributing to America's
"racial" problems from the beginning of our nation's history. It is far
past time for Americans to unite, abandon the insidious concept of
biological "races" and deconstruct the arbitrary "racial" walls dividing
one American from another. Continually dividing our fellow Americans by
"race" reinforces the concept that one group of Americans are so different
from another group of Americans that they must be viewed differently and
as a nasty consequence of this type of thinking, treated differently.
These "racial" classifications do not end or lessen "racism." These
classifications do, however, reinforce the concept of "race", which in
turn fosters the twin demons of superiority and inferiority. This is
government-coerced segregation of the body, mind and spirit. It violates
the most basic fundamental principles of privacy and fairness. It is just
plain wrong and if we are to survive as a free nation, we can no longer
allow it.
Many people believe that abolishing these categories will allow "racism"
to multiply unchecked. These alarmists want people to believe that
abolishing the categories will bring back the horrors of Jim Crow. I
believe those people are wrong. I believe that continuing to force people
into little boxes for the purpose of fighting "racism" is intellectually
bankrupt and a form of collectivist intolerance. These nasty little boxes
were designed from day one to keep people separated for the purpose of
ensuring legislative power in slave states. The very idea that these
categories have the magical power to end "racism" is a perverse concept
when you consider the reason they originally came into being. You cannot
fight "racism" while simultaneously promoting the concept of different
"racial" classifications.
Further, the potential for abuses of such "racial" data are immense. Just
ask those Americans that the Census Bureau so kindly singled out as being
of Japanese descent during World War II. Just ask the Department of
Justice, who used this data to corral these Americans into concentration
camps for the sole crime of ancestral heritage For those who wish to round
up citizens based on supposed "racial" background, there's nothing better
than Census rolls which identify people by address, "race" and number of
people in the household.
Of course, during the 1980's and the Gulf War, politicians and
Administration officials once again discussed rounding up American
citizens based on ancestral descent. In particular, the INS created its
now-infamous "Option Paper," which laid out plans "to locate, apprehend
and remove a body of aliens from the U.S." This scenario included the use
of a 100-acre prison in Oakdale, Louisiana for holding detainees. This
time, instead of Japanese, it was Middle Eastern ancestry that became a
reason to put people in concentration camps. Fortunately, in January 1991,
politicians like Representatives Don Edwards, Norman Y. Mineta, and Romano
L. Mazzoli, among others spoke out and changed the direction of the debate
away from the ugly path that America appeared to be headed down. Now, in
light of the events of September 11, we need more than ever to abandon
this insidious concept of separating Americans by supposed "race."
Unfortunately, the terrorist attacks have led some to commit cowardly
retaliatory attacks against those perceived to be of a specific
demographic. Our government only feeds this type of mindset with its
insistence on dividing Americans by "race."
When fascist forces rear their ugly heads again in government, we must not
make it easier for them to fulfill their horrific agendas by providing
them with lists of Americans by "race" and home address.
So, with the thought in mind, that in order to defeat "racism" in America
we must first defeat and destroy the concept of "race," I have accepted
Ward Connerly's invitation to serve on the steering committee of the
Racial Privacy Initiative (RPI). RPI will ban the State of California from
classifying people according to race, ethnicity, color or national origin.
While this alone will not end "racism," it is an important first step in
allowing Americans to break out of the "racialist" mold. Governments must
not be allowed to continue to impose "race"-based thinking on it's
citizens.
"Mighty little force is needed to
control a man whose mind has been hoodwinked; contrariwise, no amount of
force can control a free man, a man whose mind is free. No, not the
rack, not fission bombs, not anything-you can't conquer a free man; the
most you can do is kill him." -Robert Heinlein
The concept of "racial" classifications is
one of modern history's biggest "hoodwinks" and is anathema to the
concepts of liberty and free will. These nasty little boxes, as used by
the government, have now become the weapon of choice by "racialist" groups
like the NAACP and National Urban League in their battles for political
power against "multiracial" people and "interracial" families who refuse
to submit to the oppressive "one-drop" rule. The "one-drop" rule as
currently applied by these groups dictates that individuals with even the
slightest amount of so-called "black blood" must identify solely as
"black" for the sake of "black" political power. Aside from being
biologically false, and perpetuating "racist" stereotypes of what is and
isn't acceptable "black" behaviour, this offensive philosophy violates the
free will of Americans to identify how they see fit, including the right
to shed a "racial" identity altogether. This is intolerable and must end
now. The American public has pushed the Ku Klux Klan and Aryan Nations to
the fringes of society, so shall it be with the NAACP, National Urban
League and other traditional civil rights organizations if they continue
to push these offensive 18th century "racialist" designs down the throats
of "multiracial" people and "interracial" families.
It is my steadfast belief that until these categories are gone, we will
not be able to begin to give "racism" the appropriate burial it deserves.
These categories, created for the sole purpose of ensuring slave state
political power at our nation's birth are not the solution to "racism." To
state otherwise is a perverse distortion of history. America, it's time to
step out of the 1790s. The Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863,
yet here we are in 2001, still trying to ensure slave state political
power.
It's time to let the deconstruction begin.
James Landrith
is the notorious editor and publisher of The Multiracial Activist and The
Abolitionist Examiner, two cyber-rags dedicated to freedom from oppressive
racial categorization. |