Racism is making Black people sick: Research links racism with chronic stress and poor health in Black people. Diversity specialist Mary-Frances Winters highlights the multiple forms of racism Black people still endure today. Such racism helps generate an intergenerational cycle of inequality. Winters urges readers from all backgrounds to acknowledge different forms of privilege and the power structures and attitudes that perpetuate bias.
Systemic racism passes trauma and stress down through the generations, causing “black fatigue.”
Black fatigue is a consequence of the oppression that racist systems have perpetuated against Black people and their communities for generations. The collective trauma Black people must live with contributes to Black fatigue.
Black people still experience racism on multiple levels today: interpersonal, institutional, structural (as when corporations fail to prioritize diversity and inclusion) and internalized. White people must aspire to be antiracists and push for systemic change.
White people should stop denying their privilege and act as agents of social change.
During the 2020 protests supporting the social movement Black Lives Matter, many white people reacted by claiming ignorance of how everyday racism affects Black people. White people sometimes experience “sublime ignorance” about racism, because they don’t feel the need to understand something that doesn’t have a direct impact on them. Instead, people should recognize the advantages they have and stop denying “white privilege.” White people also need to become better at understanding which...
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