May 25, 2020
I didn’t watch the full video. Eight minutes and 46 seconds. I saw parts of it, but not the whole tape. I can’t watch the video of George Floyd dying, of anyone dying.
I had the privilege to sit with my feelings, learn more, and take it all in. Then, I began reading, looking, and researching for anything I could find.
I found a mountain of information. Podcasts. Books. Videos. Theses. Documentaries. Journal articles. Newspaper pieces. Magazine reports. Websites. There was no end to the documentation I could read, view, and listen to—new information to learn, shatter my old misunderstanding, and develop a more accurate picture.
I shouldn’t have been surprised by the deluge of resources I found, but I was. It was eye-opening. Once I started looking, I learned so much about US history. More than in any class I took. Our history spells out the impact of racism and how far its tentacles stretched. Education, healthcare, housing, travel, restaurants, the GI Bill, voting rights, religion, policing, marriage, and redistricting – there isn’t an area of life that isn’t affected by systemic racism. Every person in the United States has benefited from or been disadvantaged by this disease.
There are many perspectives on history. The white view is the primary one told in this country because white is the dominant race, the dominant caste. A vast amount of US history isn’t taught because it doesn’t paint white people in a positive light. This void creates an incomplete and unfair narrative of our country, its history, and its people.
Redlining. Gerrymandering. Jim Crow. Segregation. Racial profiling. Stop and frisk. Voter ID. Poll taxes. Travel bans. Internment camps. Reservations. The war on drugs. All forms of racism make it harder for people of color to live their American dream. All efforts to keep the privilege in the hands of white people. White privilege. White power. White supremacy.
The United States has not established equal rights for everyone. All lives don’t matter until all lives are treated like they matter. Black and brown lives don’t matter in the United States. Four hundred years of history demonstrates this. The evidence is there for anyone to see if one is open to seeing it.
I believe that the United States of America is a great country. I believe in the quest to form a more perfect union…more perfect union for ALL those who call the United States home. I also know that quest is a messy one. We are not a country of saints. Far, far from it. To paint this country as such is a lie and dooms us to repeat our past sins.
If you are open to learning about how systemic racism permeates our society, I encourage you to access the Google Docs link below. It is a file that contains the list of resources I found in my research on systemic racism. As I continue collecting resources, I will continue to update this document.
#SystemicRacism Resources Google Docs Link
These resources tell another side of US history. It’s not pretty but true. I hope that the research I have done will help open more eyes to the reality of our nation and those mistreated in it because of the color of their skin. I dream that as we know the fuller story of US history, we will break the ongoing cycle of systemic racism.
I will update this resource list as I find new materials on systemic racism. Please check back periodically to find new resources to use in your courses.
This blog is also listed on my Projects page for easy access.
First Posted: July 31, 2022
Last Updated: July 31, 2022