Category Archives: Race

America’s Transit of Venus

What kind of civilization will America be in December 2117? Will it be reduced to a once-extravagant wonder, a country whose glory days are found in history books that nobody reads anymore? In Shirley Hazzard’s 1980 novel, “The Transit of Venus,” a prosperous New York attorney tells his wife, a young woman from Australia: “Our […]

Rodney King’s ‘Junkyard of Dreams’

The last time I saw Rodney King was in a small courtroom in Fontana, Calif., east of L.A. It was seven years after the riot that correctly bears his name. He was wearing shoes that looked like Bruno Magli and a suit made of fine cloth, the kind that drapes just so. He still had […]

Doing the Wrong Thing

The more we talk about race the less we are allowed to say – at least some of us. “If the city of Portland can’t fix this, it’s going to be a long, hot summer,” Jo Ann Hardesty (formerly known as state Rep. Jo Ann Bowman) declared at one of the recent protests against the […]

The Man With The Megaphone

When black men gathered at Self Enhancement Inc. to talk about Trayvon Martin and how to improve their families, it was a segregated affair. The men met in the auditorium. The dozen or so women who showed up were sent to a classroom. A woman leading the discussion for the females assured them that the […]

Wild Shots in the Dark

A man hears a noise in his yard, grabs a rifle, steps outside and sees someone running away in the dark. The man fires four times and kills 19-year-old Daniel Moore. You’ve never heard of Daniel Moore. He was white. He was walking home from a friend’s house one evening where he had been playing […]

Gay Bullies: It Gets Worse

LaGrande, Ore., Mayor Daniel Pokorney has joined CNN commentator Roland Martin on an apology tour seeking forgiveness from gays. If you could read the minds of Pokorney and Martin, would you find sincere apologies? Or would you find fear? The gay community mobilizes and pounces at the slightest offense – demanding apologies, firings, resignations. This […]

Memo to Privileged White Folk

February is half over. Have you genuflected enough? Have you acknowledged, with a quiver in your voice, the advantages bequeathed to you by your pale-faced father and mother? If not, a young blonde woman named Olivia did so on your behalf this week in the Council Chamber at the Templeton Campus Center at Lewis & […]

Religious Sensitivity on The Prairie

Every year we unknowingly pass the anniversary of what will be the date of our own death. Except for W.S. Merwin, who wrote a poem on the subject, most people don’t think about this. Melissa Doi’s anniversary was Sept. 11, trapped in the South Tower, the victim of religious terrorists. But her final minutes live […]

No Revolt on this Poverty Tour

Cornel West and Tavis Smiley ended their national poverty tour in August without a stop in Portland or Oregon. Too bad. Apparently they haven’t heard that Oregon is becoming the Mississippi of the West. And Portland — where better to see how the Democratic Party has failed the poor. They could have seen why there […]

Celebrating a Red Coffin

Too bad song, dance and prayer can’t end violence. The Celebration of Life held for 14-year-old Yashanee Vaughn turned into a three-hour, big-screen extravaganza, marked by a regular refrain: “End the violence.” Unfortunately, the only person who had any ideas for ending violence was the last speaker. By then some folks were drifting away when […]