Cambridge, Mass. LAST week, the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, found himself in trouble for once suggesting that Barack Obama had a political edge over other African-American candidates because he was ‘light-skinned and had ‘no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one. Mr. Reid was not expressing sadness but a gleeful opportunism that Americans were still judging one another by the color of their skin, rather than – as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., whose legacy we commemorated on Monday, dreamed – by the content of their character. The Senate leader’s choice of words was flawed, but positing that black candidates who look ‘less black have a leg up is hardly more controversial than saying wealthy people have an advantage in elections. Dozens of research studies have shown that skin tone and other racial features play powerful roles in who gets ahead and who does not. These factors regularly determine who gets hired, who gets convicted and who gets elected. Consider: Lighter-skinned Latinos in the United States make $5,000 more on average than darker-skinned Latinos. The education test-score gap between light-skinned and dark-skinned African-Americans is nearly as large as the gap between whites and […]
Tuesday, January 19th, 2010
Shades of Prejudice
Author: SHANKAR VEDANTAM
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 18-Jan-10
Link: Shades of Prejudice
Source: The New York Times
Publication Date: 18-Jan-10
Link: Shades of Prejudice
Stephan: Colorism is going to become the new civil rights cutting edge, and it is going to upset everyone, because colorism is as intra-racial as it is inter-racial.
Shankar Vedantam, a Nieman fellow at Harvard University and a reporter for The Washington Post, is the author of the book 'The Hidden Brain: How Our Unconscious Minds Elect Presidents, Control Markets, Wage Wars and Save Our Lives.'