White Supremacy Fuels Both Police Violence and Climate Destruction

A friend of mine recently talked to me about white supremacy. He said the white supremacy groups like the ones that marched with torches in Charlottesville in 2017 at the “Unite the Right” rally really scare him.  “But when people start talking about white supremacy being everywhere, I don’t get it. We’re not all like the KKK.”

His confusion is understandable. The term “white supremacy” is often used today in two rather different ways. On the one hand it refers to the beliefs of various right-wing hate groups that are quite explicit about wanting the U.S. to be a country for white people and seeing black and brown people (and sometime all Jews, LGBQT+, Asians, and Indigenous people) as the enemy.

A prevalent way of thinking
On the other hand, “white supremacy” is also used to describe the, often implicit, ideology that has been prevalent throughout the United States, from the beginning, that has led to laws, policies, and institutions that have favored white people. This more common, often unexpressed, way of thinking has affected all of us. It has led white people, in general, to feel more comfortable with other whites, and to see most white people as more responsible, trustworthy, and intelligent, and less violent than black and brown people. Even those of us who are committed to racial justice can find these ideas arising in our minds against our will. Studies show that even a significant percentage of black and brown people have internalized some of these messages, as well.

Primary features
Some of the primary features of white supremacy ideology are superiority, domination, and entitlement–especially entitlement for white people to pursue what they want and to seek their personal wealth, power, and comfort without regard to the effects of their actions on other people (especially black and brown people) or on the natural environment. We see these features of white supremacy in everything from slavery to today’s right-wing efforts to limit voting rights, from failures to challenge racial discrimination to how racially segregated many neighborhoods are today.

Fossil fuel industry
We see the same greed and disregard for the effects of their actions in the U.S. fossil fuel industry continually seeking to increase extraction of coal, oil and gas long after knowing that this was heading us toward climate disaster. The effect has been to enrich a small number of mostly white people and to create devastation for people in frontline nations in Africa and around the world, and for the environment itself.

Policing
We also see white supremacy in the way policing has been carried out in the U.S. Historically police departments have been assigned the job of maintaining order and protecting the status quo. In a racialized society like ours, where much of the power is held by white people, this has ended up meaning protecting white property rights, often at the expense of the human rights of black and brown people.

White supremacy ideology has imbued much of the white population with a sense that many black and brown people tend to be violent, irresponsible, and dangerous. This has resulted in a great many police departments having an institutional culture that sees black and brown people as a threat to the peace-keeping mission of the police and as a threat to police officers themselves.

A number of police officers have shared with me that they think most police see themselves as in danger whenever they are on duty. Many see their own personal safety as being provided by their batons and guns. This, too often, leads to police violence against black and brown residents.

Tyre Nichols
Tyre Nichols, a black man, was beaten to death by five Memphis police officers in January. The five officers were all black. This has led to some confusion about the role of white supremacy in his murder. White supremacy is embedded in many of our institutions and does not depend on racial hatred by individuals. If protecting society from violent black men is seen as a major role of the police and the culture of a police department sees such men as a danger to the officers themselves, then even black officers may become part of that mission and culture when they join a police department.

Studies show that Black and Latinx police officers tend to use less force against civilians than do white officers. However, they are not immune to the power of the culture of their departments and the presence of white supremacy ideology throughout the society.

Our work – to undermine white supremacy
Because white supremacy is all around us in this society, we all inevitably internalize some of it even if we don’t want to. Part of our work is to undermine the way these ideas sit in our heads. We must join together to undermine the view that white lives and property are any more important than the lives of people of the global majority whether they live in the black neighborhoods of Memphis, on a Pacific island, in Africa, or anywhere else.

Ending police violence and continued climate destruction requires boldly claiming that every life matters as much as any other, regardless of the color of people’s skins. Together we will need to call all people to join in reaching for each other across divisions of race, class, and nationality, and anything else that might divide us from working together for solutions that work for everyone.

________________

The photo above is a New England brook on New Year’s Day, taken by Russ Vernon-Jones.

I’ll let you know when my next new post is available.
Click “Subscribe” below.

SUBSCRIBE

4 thoughts on “White Supremacy Fuels Both Police Violence and Climate Destruction

  • February 15, 2023 at 7:13 am
    Permalink

    Thank you for delineating the two threads of white supremacy: one explicit and the other implicit and cultural, almost immune from well-intentioned efforts to eradicate it, largely because it operates structurally and does not depend on intentions to persist. Rachel Maddow’s recent podcast series “Ultra” lays bare the workings of white (Christian) supremacy in the 1930’s and 1940’s, foreshadowing in very disturbing ways the re-emergence into the open of explicit white supremacy in our time. The tragic play, “Soldier’s Story” show how black people are not immune to internalizing white supremacist thinking.

    Thank you, Russ, for your witness of clarity, justice, love, and hope. I so much look forward to reading your posts (and your recent Daily Hampshire Gazette guest column) on how population growth, especially in Africa, is not the heart of the problem that we thought it was back in 1973, but the consumption patterns in the global north that have wreaked such devastation in the habitats of the global south.

    Reply
    • February 15, 2023 at 10:09 am
      Permalink

      Ralph,
      Thank you for making these connections to other resources and sharing them with us. In this comment you get right to the heart of key points I wanted to make. Thanks for your thoughtful insights.
      Russ

      Reply
  • February 15, 2023 at 9:16 am
    Permalink

    Hello Russ,
    I read your posts every week. I especially liked reading this one. As a Black gay woman in RC in NC, I agree we all internalize this dominant, privileged oppression. I was just in a discussion yesterday in my “She Speaks” group of 7 Black women, one college age and the rest middle age and older. As a result of the Tyre Nichols murder, we are having a March and candlelight vigil on the campus of UNC Charlotte, to show solidarity with our white sistas. At first, one of the Black sistas in my group objected, stating she just can’t. That she is too angry with white people. I said a March and vigil would be too impersonal and I wouldn’t join the vigil. I suggested we sit down together with our white sistas, build our relationships, journey together for a while, heal together. Well, I decided to join the vigil today and we will meet in April with our white sistas to start our journey together. Because it’s like you said, we need all people reaching across divisions of race, class, or anything that divides us to come up with solutions that work for everyone. Sadly my Black sista is still not ready, yet. However our relationship continues.

    This is what will affect/effect the climate crisis.

    I appreciate you and your column!

    Reply
    • February 15, 2023 at 10:14 am
      Permalink

      Dear Angelia,
      I’m honored to know that you read my posts regularly. Thank you for sharing this comment and for your commitment to building relationships and healing together. You are doing truly world-changing work. I’d love to hear how it goes as you proceed. I send you my very best wishes for you, your sistas, and for all your efforts.
      Russ

      Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *