I wanted to write about what it means that
some people seemingly have to “earn” or
do something to deserve access to things that
we think about as basic necessities.
So how hard can you work to earn access to
a meal every night, or like what do you have
to do to “deserve” a good education?
What do you have to do to deserve to have
housing?
And that’s one of the ways that race sort
of works in this country, is that there’s
some people that are deemed “inherently
worthy.”
So we think about the way whiteness works
and white supremacy, white people are just
deemed worthy of things, but there’s this
notion that you need to work extra hard to
deserve a great public education.
I am from Baltimore and when you think about
the school system Baltimore City is not funded
equitably at all and it’s like, what do
those kids have to do to like earn equitable
funding?
They actually don’t need to do anything
besides just be alive!
And one of the things that we need to do is
make sure that we set up a system where people
just have the basic necessities like food,
water, education.
We can guarantee that.
There’s no reason why we don’t have it.
I actually think about the difference between
equality and equity.
Equality is “everybody gets the same thing,”
equity is that “people get what they need
and deserve.”
And the work of justice, we’re almost always
fighting for equity.
So we think about things like school funding,
we are not asking for equal funding, we know
that it just costs more to educate kids who
grow up in poverty, it costs more to educate
kids with special needs, and we know that
we need to pay that cost, that those kids
deserve that.
We’re not saying that every kid it costs
the same to educate every kid, that’s just
not true.
We want a world of equity where people get
what they need and deserve.
We know the disparities around criminal justice,
that there are disparities around race and
we want an equitable system that doesn’t
penalize people for where they live, how they
show up, what ZIP Code they come from.
So the difference between equity and equality
is an important distinction, and the only
way to get to equality—equality of access,
whatever metric of equality you want—is
by having equity of resources, equity of experiences,
that the equity piece says that “you need
something different and you deserve something
different, and from a system level I’m going
to make sure that you have access to that.”
So I was talking to somebody about food stamps
once and she was like, “People should have
to work for food stamps because if they work
for it they’ll have dignity.”
Like, not eating, I think, is pretty like—not
having food is a lack of dignity right there.
Food is one of those basic things— we have
enough food that we could feed everybody,
we have enough water that everybody can have
three meals every single day, like we can
guarantee those things, we don’t need to
artificially create this “requirement”
that people work so they can earn food.
Like we can actually guarantee these basic
things for people.
And one of the things that we have to do as
we fight for social justice is talk about
these things, as basic as they are.
That it’s not radical to believe that we
can live in a world that police don’t kill
people.
It’s not radical to say that every kid should
be able to read and write.
It’s not radical or extreme to say that
we can feed every single person every single
day.
The only radical thing about it is that we
have to say it in the first place!
Like that is actually where the radical part
comes in.
And I think about that because polarization
thrives in a world of extremes, and so often
people want to paint our positions as extreme.
It’s not an extreme position to say that
like there should be equity and fairness.
And that’s not extreme.
The only extreme thing about it is that we
don’t have it right now and we have to fight
for it.
I was in a meeting once and we were talking
about welfare and it was people from the Right
and the Left.
And there was a person in it who was sort
of against welfare and her push was like,
“People need to earn it, people need to
like work hard for it, and if they work hard
for it they’ll feel better.”
And it’s like…
I don’t know, I think that people like have
already worked hard to get a meal.
I think that people being alive is enough
of that, and there’s some people who feel
like they just deserve everything.
Like one of the ways white supremacy works
is that people really do feel like they’ve
put in the hard work, they’ve done something,
or that all the things that they get are actually
the benefits of their hard work.
You think about the way wealth works in this
country is that in 2053 the median wealth
for black people is going to be zero dollars;
the lowest recorded wealth since we’ve been
recording wealth in this way.
And you think of what a median wealth of zero
dollars, and you think about white wealth,
which is, it will be about $100,000—and
the median black wealth will be zero.
It’s not like white people worked hard for
that.
It’s not like every white person was like
some entrepreneur that like did all these
wealth-building things.
The government literally gave white people
wealth.
The government gave white people housing loans
with very little interest; the government
gave white people land; the Highway Administration
created the suburbs.
And you think about what it means that the
government gave white people like education
en masse.
Like those things contributed to white wealth,
but there are people that are like, “I worked
really hard,” and it’s like, how hard
did you work for a system that just benefits
your skin color at every turn of the way?
You didn’t do that.
How hard did you work for every Band-Aid to
look like you?
How hard you work for “nude”(TM) to be
the color of your skin and not mine?
Like you didn’t do that, a system did that.
And like you benefit from the system and part
of the work of white people is to understand
the privilege of whiteness and to understand
how a system provided that, and work to dismantle
it.
It actually is dangerous to teach it—so
there’s a study that came out that for the
first time measures how meritocracy impacts
middle schoolers, and it’s seventh grade
kids.
And it shows that kids actually kids of color
do worse later if they believe that meritocracy
is like a real thing, because the system starts
to bear down on them often in hard ways, and
they think that it’s a result of “I’m
just not working hard,” and it’s like
no, we know that the way systemic racism shows
up later means that no matter how gifted you
are, how great you are, the outcomes still
just aren’t the same.
We know with criminal justice—you think
about New York City—that 90 percent of the
people arrested for marijuana are black and
brown.
You and I both know, that 90 percent of the
people in New York City smoking weed are not
black or brown!
When we think about the arrests, we think
about disparities in education, the meritocracy
sometimes causes people to blame themselves
for outcomes and not realizing the system
is almost guaranteeing a set of outcomes.
