Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Implicit

I'm going to get into some trouble for this one, but that is neither here nor there.

I believe that racism, sexism, homophobia, ableism, ageism, and all those various isms exist. I mean, I'm Black and gay; to not believe in such things gives real credence to the idea that 'ignorance is bliss.' However, all of these forms of discrimination have taken on another form. One that is not easy to discover, see, or understand. One that is constantly defended as a natural part of our status quo. These are all implicit, institutionalized, quiet, and sometimes 'innocent.'

Racism today does not look like racism of 50 years ago. Homophobia has seeped into our language in seemingly benign ways. Now you have to dig for them. However, trouble arises in that, when you dig, sometimes you think you've found something significant when it isn't, or other times people don't accept your message.

'This is the way things are,' or 'It was all innocent,' or the very common, 'It was a joke. Lighten up!' I see this especially among video game players and comic fans. Many people turn a blind eye to the extreme lack of representation of various minority groups and women, or benignly accept how these people are portrayed. And let someone raise awareness to this fact; if you do so, you have a veritable shitstorm on your hands for 'Making race an issue' or 'Looking for things that aren't there.'

Some of this is based on perception. Sometimes, if you don't see it, you just don't. However, that's why the implicit nature of these forms of discrimination is dangerous. If you don't question, you don't find anything. When you do question, you find more than what is there. But it is these same forms of implicit discrimination that is at the root of the belief that Black men are lazy, women aren't as strong as men, and the idea that comics and video games are for boys. We accept these as our daily life, not bothering to wonder if things could be better. Nor do we question how we help sustain such deplorable systems.

I have a feeling people are always going to tell me I'm looking for things that aren't there. I don't care. I'd rather be wrong some of the time than to lower my awareness when it comes to forces within our society that do us no justice (and often affect the justice system) and that support the idea that, based on different characteristics, some people are lesser or some things are only for some people.

No comments: