Pride in America is a double-edged sword…
Sometimes I’m amazed and full of pride at how far this country has come when it comes to equality among workers. But sometimes I’m anything but proud.
There was a lot of hoopla over Michelle Obama’s comments recently about American pride.
“People in this country are ready for change and hungry for a different kind of politics and … for the first time in my adult life I am proud of my country because it feels like hope is finally making a comeback.”
Many people were outraged that she would say such a thing, that she hasn’t been proud all along. But those people apparently have no clue about the prejudice that still permeates throughout our society.
Today, The American Medical Association, the largest and most respected physicians’ group in the nation, is issuing an apology to African American doctors throughout the country because of decades of discrimination against them.
Today they are doing that. This is 2008 folks, not 1958.
The Washington Post writes that the AMA is “expressing regret for a litany of transgressions, including barring black physicians from its ranks for decades and remaining silent during battles on landmark legislation to end racial discrimination.”
It’s a great thing that such an organization is expressing remorse, but it should also be a wake up call to all of us that we still have a long way to go when it comes to equality in this country.
Discrimination against African Americans in the workplace is actually on the rise. If well-educated, well-off black doctors can’t get a level playing field, what hope do rank and file minority workers have?
I wrote about a rise in workplace racism for MSNBC.com a few months back:
Many of us are marveling at how seemingly far our society has come given a man with an African American heritage is being considered a serious candidate for president. But in the workplace, attitudes toward many black workers are anything but inspiring.
Racial harassment is up to record levels in offices and factories across the country, and we’re not talking just the use of the “N” word. Racist graffiti, Klu Klux Klan propaganda and even physical threats including the display of hangman’s nooses are included among the intimidation tools.
“It is shocking that such egregious and unlawful conduct toward African American employees is still occurring, even increasing, in the 21st century workplace, more than 40 years after enactment of the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964,” says David Grinberg, spokesman for the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, also known as the EEOC.
It’s hard to stand up and claim to be prideful when you hear this. It’s a disgrace that in this day and age we’re still dealing with such ignorance.
We should always question injustices, just as the AMA’s past president did in a publication for the group. Ronald Davis wrote that many of the organization’s questionable actions reflected the “social mores and racial discrimination” that existed for much of U.S. history. But, he added, that should not excuse them.
“The medical profession, which is based on a boundless respect for human life, had an obligation to lead society away from disrespect of so many lives,” Davis wrote. “The AMA failed to do so and has apologized for that failure.”
Failure is a fact of human life. But we shouldn’t allow failure to go unchecked and pretend everything is great when it’s not.
So don’t be surprised if someone says they are finally proud of America when it seems, as a nation, we’re trying to right the wrongs of the past.
July 10th, 2008 at 5:55 pm
In recent years, the Canadian government apologized for the internment of Japanese Canadians on the west coast during WW2 and also for a special head tax once imposed on Chinese immigrants. The public acknowledgements of historical wrongs doesn’t mean that they are still happening today. These two aren’t.
Your tone toward the Medical Association is one of disgust as if it is still doing wrong today. You don’t offer any evidence of wrongdoing however so we have to assume that it isn’t so.
It’s right to campaign against any kind of bigotry but your approach is flawed. If you want to say “too little, too late” just say so. But give them a current clean bill of health if they deserve it. No need to imply that something shady is still in the works.
July 10th, 2008 at 6:03 pm
I am sorry you misunderstood me Recruiting Animal. I wasn’t trying to imply something shady is still afoot.
My point was that even groups as well-established and well-respected as the AMA realize/acknowledge there have been and still are injustices.
It’s not a question of too little, too late. It’s all about the reality of bigotry we still face in this country.
July 11th, 2008 at 9:37 am
I, too read a conveyance of disgust, but I did not sense that it was targeted at the AMA, but rather at our society-at-large for being an environment where blatant bias and mistreatment still occurs far too often.