Sunday, May 26, 2019
Did Hurricane Katrina Expose Racism in America
Adolph reed instrument is a professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania and Stephen Steinberg is a professor of sociology at Queens College in New York City. Both Reed and Steinberg challenge the tendency of constitution addlers and other commentators to focus on African-Americans as the source of the tasks faced by New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and emphasize the need to address race and poverty concerns effectively. In Reed and Steinbergs argument they expose the moving to opportunity insurance policy.The supposed goal of the platform is to break up the concentrations of poverty, to break up the federal enclaves of poverty which existed in the metropolis and to really give those low income residents more choice and opportunity. Reed and Steinberg look at the moving to opportunitypolicy as a false conjecture and an empty slogan. When the moving to opportunity policy is stripped of all its varnish it is just a program that volition result i n a small New Orleans that is depleted of its poverty population.Despite the 200 plus signatories of well known individuals in American social science, the secret agenda of the program was evidently overshadowed. Reed and Steinberg state how the federal Government is solely focusing on the drug dealers and gang members of the ghettos and poverty struck neighborhoods overlooking the industrious champion mothers and infamous heroic grandmothers that also stay in those same communities leaving a mass of them to fend for themselves. Reed and Steinberg provide information that show the authoritative colors of the moving to opportunity policy. Providing quotes from citizens in powerful positions.A politically connected white lawyer in the city remarked that Katrina provided the perfect opportunity to make New Orleans into a city much like Charleston. Keep in mind that Charleston has only ample black servant anatomy for its tourist economy but a white electoral majority. Which leads to another point made by Reed and Steinberg, if the moving to opportunity policy is passed and everything pans prohibited as planned than Louisiana will than be a Republican state. And somehow out of all the evident flaws in the moving to opportunity policy the 200 plus signatories failed to realize them or at least recognize them.Reed and Steinberg did a wonderful job in supporting their clause, it would deplete been a tad bit better if they had included another example other than the moving to opportunity policy. Shelby Steele is a research fellow at the Hoover governing body and political commentator argues that the African-Americans of New Orleans and other African-Americans should focus on meaningful methods for overcoming their underdevelopment as revealed by Hurricane Katrina rather than emphasizing the shame of White racialism as the cause of their phlight.Steele states the single largeest problem in America is African-Americans and Whites are forever blaming one anothe r for each others great shames. Steele expresses her opinion of how this desperation is not something that was just formulated among the poverty afflicted but a feeling that has always been there, harvesting below the surface of our culture. A state of cosmos in which is just now in the new millennium being discovered. Black inferiority can not be overcame by white responsibility. Blacks close to also take responsibility for the change they want to see.Steele is saying each race is equally at guilt and how much of a shame it is that it takes a natural disaster such as Hurricane Katrina for the nation to take notice of this social issue. Steele had a good thesis, the idea just needed more pointedness and elaboration. Vincetta Ashley Dunnell November 18, 2010 530 P. M On that note my personal opinion lies with Reed and Steinberg in that I do believe Hurricane Katrina exposed racialism in America. How could a surprise of genius ingest racial preferences and prejudice?It cant. It just so happened that Hurricane Katrina was the perfect excuse to play the racial blame game. It was a great reason to release years of built of racial tension. And the perfect opportunity to push low class,poverty stricken blacks out of a infamous city because of racial stigmas. The federal political science is using the moving to opportunity policy as a coverup to deceive the public into occupying the policy as a near program but failing to truthful tell who the policy is benefiting.Somehow this terrible scheme slipped by the eyes of 200 plus prominent individuals of the American social science community. They failed to recognize that if this policy is passed yes there will be no gang patrolled, drug infested New Orleans but there will also be no essence in New Orleans, all the history and pride will be wiped away. All the kind-hearted, working Blacks just attempting to make a better day for their families will be left in a worse position than they began in.All for the sake of America trying to see the ideal of a perfect nation thinking that they can sweep all the dirt under the rug, forgetting that when you do so the lump of dirt is stillness there. Ignoring the problem that our nation has forever had is not going to help any. Trying to push the low class blacks out of New Orleans just to piss suburbs and tourist attractions will help the economy but the social status will not change. While poverty still exists so does the main problem in America.Did Hurricane Katrina Expose Racism in America?Did Hurricane Katrina Expose Racism in America? (A Case Study) Before beginning this case study, Hurricane Katrina was a force of nature that ravaged the city of New Orleans, Louisiana in 2005 leaving thousands of African Americans homeless and impoverished. Assuming the affirmative position of the debate in principal is Adolph Reed and Stephen Steinberg. They argue that Hurricane Katrina did, in feature expose racism in America. They want to emphasize the need to address race and poverty concerns and focus more on blacks.Opposing them is Shelby Steele. He believes that blacks should begin focusing more on ways to overcome their underdevelopment instead of blaming whites for their predicament. Reed and Steinberg begin their argument with a quoted statement from Barbara Bush. So many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway, so this, this is working very well for them. This quote already shows the attitude of white America towards the blot of those suffering at the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.They also mention the Move to Opportunity program that basically only addresses a miniscule percentage of the poverty stricken homeless GIVEN if they were qualified. Needless to say the majority of them did not participate in this program as a result, they were to fend for themselves. The extent of white racism was best illustrated by the signing of a government-sponsored resettlement program by 200-plus of the natio ns most renowned social science names.This program is a classified by Reed and Steinberg as a relocation scheme disguised as a voluntary program designed to remove impoverished and unemployed blacks out of the area in attempts to blot out some of the nations more darker areas. Move to Opportunity became a perverse euphemism for policy abdication of the poor people left behind who are in desperate need of programs, services, and jobs. Steele dispels the accusation placed on Hurricane Katrina in regards to exposing racism in America by sourcing the cause in blacks themselves.Steele explains that whites sop up in a sense, owned up to their responsibilities and made themselves witness to racism. That we as blacks blame our inferiority on white racism therefore increasing white shame. Subsequently, for whites to admit that black inferiority is a product of white shame, they are admitting racism. Steele advocates that both races, especially blacks accept responsibility for their shames as each race constantly tries to usurp power from the other. We are attributing our underdevelopment to whites in come in to shame them instead of claiming responsibility for our own occur or lack thereof.The progression of blacks in America is undermined by the constant irresponsibility of the race as a whole. From things to not taking care of our children to crimes, we fundamentally placed ourselves into this predicament. We are not living up to our end of the bargain. Black responsibility needs to be bonkd by us in order for us to progress. Were we to do this, our open acknowledgment of our own underdevelopment will allow whites to hold witness over us nevertheless they will have to acknowledge our overcoming of our underdevelopment.In a nutshell Steele is saying we must hold ourselves accountable for our own underdevelopment and by doing so we can finally achieve the long awaited progression that we have been looking for. After evaluating both sides of the debate, I chose to identify with Shelby Steeles argument. Not only does his argument directly answer the question, it allows for more personal questioning among blacks. be we really using whites as a clutch as to why we have not progressed? Is it more of clutch or more of an innate bitterness between blacks and whites that has developed and evolved over centuries of conflict?Blacks have been at the bottom of the totem pole of society for centuries by the hands of whites. Although I believe that whites in fact do impede black progression in society due to concealed racism among other things, I do not agree however that it is entirely their fault. Both races are in a power struggle straining to take control and to make the other look inferior. It is this childish nature of these two races that halt the progression of our country as a whole. When both races accept responsibility for their shames then proper progress can be possible.Until then, racism will always be a factor of white shame and inferior ity will always be a factor of black shame. I believe that Hurricane Katrina played a part in exposing racism. I feel as if Hurricane Katrina forced racism out into the open. No white person would have expressed any racist concerns prior to Katrina. Katrina basically served as a mental agent for white America, effectively expressing their attitudes towards black America. Also, I believe that if the majority of the population ravaged by Katrina were white they would have been rescued almost immediately if not sooner.The painstakingly long response time to the crisis was evidently showed the substance of concern and sympathy the government had for the blacks of New Orleans. Racism is still alive they are just concealing it. Thousands of blacks in New Orleans depended on the government to rescue them from a travesty that they could not control. And additionally the government attempted to relocate the survivors of the incident to remove the poor blacks and replace the area with whites . This illustrated the true intentions of the government.The affair that exists between whites and blacks are so low-key that it takes an act of God to bring it out of the shadows. There is no doubt that racism is still alive in America however the extent of racism has definitely lessened over time. I chose to side with Steeles argument because I identify with the argument that blacks and whites have a complex that wont allow them to accept responsibility for their shames. If it were not for Hurricane Katrina, racism may have never been brought into the light.
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