I honestly don't know if I believe Obama. I think it is likely he recognizes what I said earlier in that regardless of how much racism is involved in the vocal protest, except for instances where it can quite explicitly be exposed as racist it is politically inapt to say so.
For example, most of those people opposing Obama's policy proposals would have even if they'd been proposed by a boring middle-aged white guy. But maybe it is latent racism that takes many people's opposition and bumps it up to anger that gets them out to rallies and town halls, etc.
It is not false to say racism is contributing significantly to the atmosphere. However, it does no good to say so since the individual acts of racism generally can't be identified and it is a measurement of the group average and nobody believes it applies to them (and it won't apply to a lot of people). So, to use a phrase of trade, everybody has plausible deniability ("I'm sure some people are racist but surely not me!").
And, from one perspective it is a sign of improvement that, in general, we've advanced to passive racism of a nature that I suspect is unrecognized in even the people altered by it. Moving to intangible is good, and I'd say it is intangible because they (also subconsciously) recognize that overt is not at all acceptable. And intangible is a lot harder to pass on to the children.
|