If I Were A White, Male Middle Aged Forbes Columnist...
In a reaction to President Obama's big, pragmatic, race-free economic inequality speech in Osawatomie, Kansas, "Forbes" tech writer Gene Marks crafted a recklessly condescending column called "If I Were a Poor Black Kid." In just two days, this white, middle aged keyboard monkey madness has garnered 518 comments on the site and God knows how many page views. It's officially Internet catnip. Now Marks, who in his bio describes himself as "a short, balding and mediocre certified public accountant," starts off well enough: But things start to fall apart when Marks takes on the rhetorical style of Miss Grant's "You got big dreams" speech from "Fame" Season 1:
Having established his alleged expertise, Marks goes on to negate the very privilege he's stating and put the onus of hundreds of years of structural racism and decade after decade of class stratification on the shoulders of, drum roll, poor black kids:
The assumption here, of course, is that poor black kids in West Philadelphia (the 'hood I'm from, by the way) don't like reading and writing, that they're too busy hippidity hopping and bling-fixating to make their shitty schools work for them. Within this frame, Marks offers a range of subpar-to-mediocre stopgaps. For instance, if he were a poor black kid, he would "visit study sites like SparkNotes and CliffsNotes to help me understand books." (Right. Because nothing says "I'm prepared to compete in a global information economy" like CliffsNotes.) Without giving any meaningful consideration to the new digital divide, Marks also says he'd "watch relevant teachings on Academic Earth, TED and the Khan Academy," when possible "get my books for free at Project Gutenberg" and "learn how to do research at the CIA World Factbook and Wikipedia to help me with my studies." Armed with what he describes as "cheap computers" from outlets like Tiger Direct and the Dell Outlet, Marks's hypothetical black kid will get himself into "nationally recognized magnet schools like Central, Girls High and Masterman," competitive public institutions that require high standardized test scores and stellar grades. And for the ones who don't make the cut, says Marks, there's the option of private school tokenism:
The irony of Marks's vision is that it's so thoroughly mediocre. He can flaunt his own "I don't know much about much" ethos because he's not a poor black kid. The reality is that to compete in earnest with the children of middle class, white male, tech writers, poor black kids (and their brown, Asian and Native American sistren and brethren) have to be beyond excellent. And they still might not get the fucking scholarship. Hell, they might not even have a secure, safe place to live. (Thanks subprime housing market!) Marks could have used technology himself and Googled to find a few of the structural barriers he glances past. In just the past couple of months we've seen news that black students get suspended at a far! higher rate for the same infractions as white students; that all but four of the students NYPD arrested this summer and fall were black or Latino; and that those poor black kids who evade the police-state in their schools and make it to college aren't finding Marks's easy-grab scholarships, since one in three of them owe more than $38,000. As only artists can, my friend Lekan Jeyifo has been posting Marks-style prose on Facebook over the past couple of days. (This Nigerian-born, bongo-loc'ed illustrator and architect is also using Marks's photo as his profile picture, but that's another story.) My two favorites:
Lek's satirical paragraphs speak more truth about structural inequality than Marks's entire column. Given the gravity of the topic, that's scary as hell. |
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