Category Archives: Race

Craven conversations on race

It’s too bad Willamette Week’s cover story on the expulsion rates of black students in Portland didn’t run a week earlier, when Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was in town. What would he have said about Kwame Briggs, whose 12-year-old son has been suspended more times than the dad can remember, and who blames his […]

King and ‘the Gangstahs’

What happens to a dream deferred? Ask anyone. We’ve all had dreams deferred. Langston Hughes asked if a dream deferred festers like a sore — and then runs, or does it stink like rotten meat, or sag like a heavy load. What he led up to in his poem Harlem was that a dream deferred […]

Playing Now: The ‘New Jim Crow’

The summer of Trayvon Martin is morphing into the summer of Oscar Grant. Two young black males shot and killed by two non-black males who felt threatened. (Had the shooters been black, we wouldn’t have heard about Martin or Grant. They would have been reduced to news briefs.) Grant, 21, was killed in 2009 during […]

Let Us Now Praise the Jury

George Zimmerman’s best defense may have been his fearful baby face. He was accused of trying to be a hero or a wanna-be cop. He looked like an ordinary man, scared and tired of being scared. “They always get away,” he told the 911 dispatcher, reporting what he thought might be a suspect in a […]

America’s Marathon on Race

They were young, male and they bore a terrible trauma on their souls. Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev? The Central Park Five? In 21st Century America any disaffected male minority can lay claim to ancestral suffering to explain bad behavior. Here in Oregon, the state Senate recently passed a bill requiring that any new legislation include […]

“That (Cop’s) Crazy”

Christopher Dorner’s law enforcement career did not turn out like he had planned, and no doubt he had big plans. Dorner was a police officer at a time when blacks were rising through America’s law enforcement ranks, and were even becoming chiefs. The Los Angeles Police Department had its first black chief in 1992. Like […]

Truths About the American Way

In the real world, Clark Kent would have been forced out of newspapers years ago. Too old. And in today’s world of American newspapers, even Superman couldn’t replace the lost ad revenues that has decimated news staffs. But in the latest comic book series, Superman’s writers don’t have Clark Kent stand and deliver those truths […]

Obama’s America, Romney’s America

Suppose a distant relative showed up at your door, down on his luck and needing a place to stay. You don’t really know this person, but you feel sorry for him. And you want to set a good example for your kids. Compassion in action. So you turn over a spare room to this relative. […]

The Man With The Signs

In a worst-case scenario, the Portland Public Schools bond will pass in November, and almost a half-billion dollars will buy no substantive change in education. The bond calls for modernizing three high schools and a middle school, upgrading middle school science labs and seismically retrofitting 14 schools – all worthy endeavors. But given Portland’s low […]

The Next Rodney King

Somewhere there’s a young, black American male looking to hit it big on the Blue Lotto. A young, black man who has dropped out of school, has used drugs, spent some time in jail and has weighed the career options that seem available to him – hip-hop star, football or basketball star, drug dealer – […]