What’s So Bad About Discrimination?
by
Brian
LaSorsa
Taki's
Magazine
About two
months ago I mentioned my disappointment
that Raleigh, NC lacked Southern culture, only to be informed in
the comment section that true sweet-tea-drinking Southerners don't
even consider the city to be part of the South. The longer I stay
in this godforsaken place the better I understand why real Southerners
share the sentiment.
Last week I
couldn't take a single step without hearing a television pundit
cry about rampant racism in North Carolina. One would almost assume
the Black Panthers and Aryan Brotherhood were fighting in the streets
immediately outside the UNC campus. Turns out the only thing that
happened is that businessman Todd Chriscoe didn't let a black guy
eat at his sports bar, a phenomenon I refer to as "private
property, get over it."
The guy who
was kicked out of the bar is Jonathan Wall, a 21-year-old student
with plans to attend graduate school next fall at Harvard University,
the esteemed institution that hosts an "Understanding
Obama" reading group. Among Wall's other accomplishments
is a stint at the NAACP's
Atlanta branch.
Wall insisted
after sparking the initial stir, "I'm
not trying to cause trouble
.But I can't just sit back."
He continued not trying to cause trouble by giving numerous interviews
to popular news outlets and plastering his story all over the Internet.
Then came a press
conference followed with other people claiming to have been
kicked out of the bar for racial reasons. One man described his
experience as "not physical," but he somehow knew the
owner was racist due to "the way they treated me." Another
man spoke out about how the establishment treats blacks like "second-hand
patrons" even though "it's subtle."
If I were to
hear these nonspecific explanations alone, I'd say the discomfort
they felt had more to do with race-centric paranoia than anything
else, but the evidence piling up suggests that the bar owner really
doesn't like black people. Local news station WRAL did one of their
hyperbolic
investigations eleven years ago at another one of his businesses
which frequently turned away black couples and allowed white ones
to enter.
Let's assume
that Chriscoe openly discriminates on a racial basis.
Who cares?
Raleigh's residents
seem perplexed about how someone can voluntarily discriminate and
still maintain a successful business.
Read
the rest of the article
July
18, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 Taki's
Magazine
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