Bellow called this class “the nonthinking good.” Today, they are all around us. They post black squares on Instagram. They claim that racism is as American as apple pie. They read and retweet articles by Ta-Nehisi Coates. They say that “riots are the language of the unheard,” without the recognition that Martin Luther King Jr. was acknowledging the rioters’ anger, but condemning their violence. They’re for all the good causes and against the bad ones. And they’re poised to become Critical Race Theorists.
Many ordinary citizens have noticed the slow creep of critical race theory into everyday life. Unconscious bias training has rampaged through corporate offices. When two black men were arrested inside a Starbucks, after baristas phoned the police, the company closed 8,000 of their stores so that their employees could undergo racial bias training. Later, the beauty shop Sephora closed their stores, so employees could receive diversity training, after the singer SZA claimed to have been racially profiled. Even after such high profile events, the growing influence of Critical Race Theory remained on the periphery of our awareness. Yet it has seeped into our culture and positioned itself to capitalize on the current moment.
The killing of George Floyd has people asking how they can fight racism. Sales of antiracism books have surged. In the UK, Reni Eddo-Lodge’s Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race is Amazon’s #1 bestseller. In America, it’s Robin DiAngelo’s White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard For White People to Talk About Racism. In Canada, sales of Policing Black Lives: State Violence in Canada from Slavery to Present by Robyn Maynard shot up by 172%. Behold the nonthinking good scrambling for their opinions.
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