Race consciousness is a very tricky business. We should treat everyone the same but we should respect cultural differences, for example. How do we do both? Well, we can, usually, perhaps depending a bit on just what the cultural differences are. Respect religious differences? Sure. But suppose God tells someone not to get the vaccine? Are we at least allowed to say, as I like to imagine saying but have not yet said, "No, I was talking to God just yesterday and He said that you misunderstood His instructions"?
Two stories from my youth.
1. (I have told this one before) Growing up there was very little interaction with Black youngsters. Some, but very little. When I reached the university this changed. I was aware of someone being Balck and I worried about this trait. Then I was playing chess at a coffee shop, some Black guy was kibbing and commented on my every move. After a bit I had had it with him and spoke up. I later realized I had handled this just as if he were White and I liked that. Of course that's not, in itself, a complete solution but it relaxed me a bit.
2. When I was a grad student, now we are getting into the 60s, a White friend called and asked if I would like to join him and another guy attending a talk at a church in a predominantly Black area of St. Paul. A well-known White guy, whose name escapes me right now, was giving a talk on community organizing and such. I asked if we would be safe and got a lecture from my friend about asking such a question. Ok. I joined them and I drove. The other guy with us was Black, and when we got near the church he told me to be careful in choosing where to park and to be sure and lock up the car. "This isn't the best part of town", I recall the words exactly. This gave me some satisfaction.
And I remember a bit of the talk. He said you take some issue. There will always be some issue available. And then you rub it raw. His words, he repeated them throughout the talk. The idea was to get everyone good and riled up. Ok, that was his idea, I was ready to go home and try to prove a theorem for my thesis.
If we start with the idea that making life good for everyone helps everyone, expecting that my life will go better if the life of the other guy also goes better, then this can be a decent basis for something.
I sometimes think that getting too deep into cultural issues can do more harm than good. I'm not big on Rap, but then I don't often play Stravinsky either. Duke Ellington is just fine. Caravan. Mood Indigo. A couple of my favorites, both popular with radio djs in the mid 50s.
Afterthought: WaPo has an article about "the First Thanksgiving." I suppose it might have occurred to me that this was 400 years ago this month, but it hadn't.
https://www.washingt...dians-pilgrims/
And, while I am at it, here is a 15 minute version of Mood Indigo. They tell me I should get the vinyl. I'll tell Santa.
https://mail.google....WbB?projector=1