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Ferguson versus Whitopia
al-Jazeera ^ | September 21, 2014 | Rich Benjamin

Posted on 09/21/2014 8:41:20 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Focus on police bias obscures meaningful debate on structural racism that perpetuates racial injustice and inequality.

In the wake of the death of Michael Brown, the unarmed teenager shot by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri, on Aug. 9, the public has heard quite a bit about the town, its residents and their supposed violence.

But about half an hour drive west of Ferguson, along a highway straddling the Missouri River, you will come to what may seem a planet away: St. Charles County.

St. Charles is a “Whitopia” — a predominantly white county that has posted 6 percent population growth since 2000 and exhibits an ineffable charisma, as well as a pleasant look and feel. An outer-ring suburb of St. Louis, St. Charles is 91 percent non-Hispanic white, visibly whiter than its surroundings. Its metropolitan region is 77 percent non-Hispanic white in a state that is 81 percent Caucasian. Home to about 76,000 residents, St. Charles is the wealthiest and one of the fastest growing counties in Missouri.

Its quiet invisibility stands in stark contrast to the dramatic images we saw during the protests after Brown’s death. As the nation and world gawk at Ferguson, we need to train our eyes on St. Charles County too, for St. Charles’ economic and political realities contextualize the plight of Ferguson. It embodies the severe economic and racial segregation that harmed Brown long before Wilson ever fired a shot.

Distribution of resources

The ongoing debate about police misconduct sparked by Ferguson has highlighted the existence of deep-rooted structural racism in American society that erects barriers to opportunity and widens racial injustice and inequalities. Even when structural racism is recognized, its ambiguity and enormousness discourage the public from taking action. Consequently, the media focus instead on reported police transgressions, specific acts of overt discrimination and the dramatic images of Ferguson protests.

But structural racism is the deeper disease, and acts of police misconduct are merely a symptom of it. It concerns how we distribute public resources to strengthen or debilitate our communities. Unemployment, underemployment, foreclosure and destitution have become the hallmarks of America’s new multicultural poor, a group that negates conventional political and academic assumptions about aspiration and poverty in America’s suburbs. By contrast, rising property values, well-funded schools and segregation have become the markers of the affluent communities that have separated themselves from surrounding areas. This is why if we want to understand Ferguson, we must also study St. Charles.

Over the past 15 years, as people and jobs scatter across the country — because of the migration of industries, the economic displacement of the poor and the social flight of the privileged class — segregation and inequality have also dispersed and increased significantly. In 2005 the suburban poor in the United States outnumbered their city counterparts by more than 1 million people. Class and racial disparity have migrated to inner-ring suburbs, those closest to cities, such as Ferguson.

The median household income in Ferguson was $36,121 in 2012. By contrast, St. Charles County residents’ had a median income of $71,458 in 2010. Furthermore, in the past two decades, Ferguson has seen dramatic racial changes. In 1990 blacks made up 25 percent of Ferguson; today they make up roughly 70 percent. St. Louis County has seen residential flight by people of all races. But the concentration of long-time black residents in Ferguson and new black migrants heightens this segregation. Such are the new American suburbs.

"Beyond reforming police practice, America, as it emerges from recession, must rebuild an integrated opportunity landscape. That means taking a fresh, nuanced look at the suburbs, class and race — and the geography of opportunity.”

A generation of white Missouri politicians, including former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, has made fighting school desegregation a centerpiece of their appeal to white voters. In 1996, Jay Nixon then Missouri’s attorney general and now its governor, fought to end a school desegregation program that bused students from St. Louis into better-equipped districts in whiter communities. Nixon, a Democrat, hails from Jefferson County, another modern-day Whitopia. In 2010, Missouri had 18 such counties with similar demographic and economic characteristics. The continued prevalence of segregated counties such as Jefferson and St. Charles dovetails with the leadership failure on government-supported integration as well as the decline of public support for racial integration.

Inevitable social engineering

The many Americans who dismiss racial integration as a form of social engineering fail to grasp the social engineering involved in segregation. For example, St. Louis and Ferguson have limited quality, affordable housing. And the public and private housing that is built goes up in neighborhoods where unemployment is high, where public transportation is shoddy and where there are poor public facilities such as parks and roads. And the school district where these facilities are placed is underfunded, with residents owning less property and wielding less political power. The Fergusons of America, then, seem all the more isolated, with their underfunded schools and transportation and lack of job centers. Meanwhile, the police do not appear underfunded. In the Fergusons of America, myriad black and Latino communities miss opportunities for quality housing and support systems — to say nothing of the disappearance of living-wage jobs.

Nationwide, counties are enacting suburban land-use and zoning policies to promote larger lot development to sustain private property values and to restrict suburban rental housing — all of which limit the influx of black and Latino households. Such public and private behavior continues a legacy of residential segregation in counties such as St. Charles, inflicting a double whammy: The residential segregation furthers unacceptable disparities in wealth between the races, creating a geography of opportunity which determines who has access to the valuable resources that improve one’s life. The geographic gulf between placid St. Charles and Ferguson illustrates the underlying structural racism, which doesn’t arrive at the point of a gun.

Even if community demands for the arrest and prosecution of Wilson are met, it will do nothing to change the power dynamic between Ferguson’s black protesters and the white establishment. The focus on policing might avert a potential for dramatic, long-term protests. But it extinguishes the necessary debate on the more critical issue of structural racism.

Brown was due to attend Vatterott College this fall, and his parents are now left wondering what valuable contributions he might have made to his community. The police and conservative media paint him as a deficit to our society. But Brown’s shunted life and missed opportunities serve as a cautionary tale of two counties. Beyond reforming police practice, America, as it emerges from recession, must rebuild an integrated opportunity landscape. That means taking a fresh, nuanced look at the suburbs, class and race — and the geography of opportunity.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; US: Missouri
KEYWORDS: agitprop; aljazeera; antiamericanism; arabstreet; blacks; ferguson; incomeinequality; missouri; propaganda; racist; whites
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Rich Benjamin is the author of “Searching for Whitopia: An Improbable Journey to the Heart of White America” and the director of the fellows program at Demos.

1 posted on 09/21/2014 8:41:20 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: 2ndDivisionVet; GeronL

What is a “Whitopia”?


3 posted on 09/21/2014 8:45:06 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Hey Obama: If Islamic State is not Islamic, then why did you give Osama Bin Laden a muslim funeral?)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Good Lord! Giorgio Tsoukalos in black-face.


4 posted on 09/21/2014 8:45:56 PM PDT by Tupelo (I am feeling more like Phillip Nolan by the day.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

A bigot stoking the fires of anti-American agitprop for the foreign (and state owned) media.

Was a tool.


5 posted on 09/21/2014 8:46:17 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Hey Obama: If Islamic State is not Islamic, then why did you give Osama Bin Laden a muslim funeral?)
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To: Tupelo

OUCH!


6 posted on 09/21/2014 8:47:26 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I live in Whitopia and we don’t have a lot here but that’s what I like about it. We live rich and poor right side by side without any problem.


7 posted on 09/21/2014 8:48:20 PM PDT by cripplecreek ("Moderates" are lying manipulative bottom feeding scum.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Strange... I’m pretty sure that if I were walking down the middle of the street and then punched and attacked a police officer when he/she asked me to move that I might just get shot dead too. I’m 6’3” and about 240 lbs...

If I were much whiter I’d be an albino...

Act like a thug get shot like a thug...

Skin color doesn’t have much to do with it...


8 posted on 09/21/2014 8:50:20 PM PDT by DB
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To: a fool in paradise

lolz

Sounds like a gay bar


9 posted on 09/21/2014 8:51:19 PM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: DB

At 6’ tall, 340lbs and whiter than cream, I’m on the same page as you are.


10 posted on 09/21/2014 8:52:57 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Wasn’t he one of the “Little Rascals”? He looks like another one of those guys who is taking Rogaine and Viagra at the same time.


11 posted on 09/21/2014 8:54:11 PM PDT by FlingWingFlyer (Don't just stand there! Help fight political correctness!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

He want whitey’s in “Whitopia” to spread more wealth.

What he doesn’t seem to understand is the simple fact that folks in “Whitopia” (ST Charles, for example), work hard, save their money and keep their homes and neighborhoods up. They don’t expect, or demand that the government (tax payers) pay for everything they do or have.

By his reasoning, should we call Ferguson “Blackdystopia”?


12 posted on 09/21/2014 8:55:15 PM PDT by Jane Long ("And when thou saidst, Seek ye my face; my heart said unto thee, Thy face, LORD, will I seek")
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

From reading the article he hates or very much dis-likes Whitey McCracker-Honkey.


13 posted on 09/21/2014 8:58:02 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine (Pubbies = national collectivists; Dems = international collectivists; We need a second party!)
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To: cripplecreek
i'm not saying he was thuggery, but he was thuggery...

14 posted on 09/21/2014 9:01:27 PM PDT by Chode (Stand UP and Be Counted, or line up and be numbered - *DTOM* -vvv- NO Pity for the LAZY - 86-44)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
"Michael Brown, the unarmed teenager"

*drink*

15 posted on 09/21/2014 9:03:19 PM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Resist We Much)
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To: Jack Hydrazine

Usually the advocates for building flophouses in affluent neighborhoods speak of “affordable housing”, and aren’t quite so manifest in their hatred of white people.

It’s interesting that Mr. Benjamin’s parents decided to name him “Richard” rather than some faux-French/African portmanteau. Were they acting white when they did so?


16 posted on 09/21/2014 9:05:03 PM PDT by oblomov
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Damn, Farina grew up to be a pundit.


17 posted on 09/21/2014 9:08:05 PM PDT by Argus
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>> Whitopia

Across the tracks from Frotopia?

Idiot.


18 posted on 09/21/2014 9:09:46 PM PDT by Gene Eric (Don't be a statist!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

19 posted on 09/21/2014 9:15:20 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Lol...


20 posted on 09/21/2014 9:24:06 PM PDT by Dallas59
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