The Aggressive Fragility of ‘I’m Not Racist’ and ‘Not All White People’

Dear Sharon Osbourne, Piers Morgan, and Becky from ‘The Real World Homecoming’: Please. Stop.

Jeremy Helligar
Momentum

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Clockwise from top left: Becky Blasband on ‘The Real World Homecoming’: New York (Paramount+), Sharon Osbourne on ‘The Talk’ (YouTube), and Piers Morgan on ‘Good Morning Britain.’ Image: GMB/Twitter

People can be so exhausting. Correction: Some people can be so exhausting. Although exceptions are generally implied when we generalize, for some people, nothing can be left to implication — especially if the subject is racism.

I see evidence of this in the comments section of nearly every article I read or write about race. There are always a few in the audience, usually White, who take offense because they presume that when Black people write about the racism White people inflict on them, unless “White people” is qualified with “some,” they are being lumped in with the main offenders. Apparently, for them, the true horror of racism isn’t racism itself but being accused of it due to association.

I understand the frustration, even if I think it’s kind of pathetic. For many Whites, merely implying they might be racist can be as triggering as being called the N word is for blacks. Although the latter is accompanied by centuries of brutal history and a system that continues to undervalue us, the R word is a label most White people, even ones who are openly racist, don’t want to wear. KKK members and White nationalists deny…

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