Look around the world and you’ll find that America is the most tolerant and open society on earth
… despite what Obama says, racism is not passed along in DNA through the generations
writes
Katie Pavlich (thanks to
Instapundit), echoing
Dennis Prager.
If that were the case, America wouldn’t be the tolerant, multi-racial country it is today.
Yes,
America, like the vast majority of the rest of the world, at one time
participated in slavery. While the sin of slavery is not justified, it
is important to acknowledge that the sin of slavery isn’t a uniquely
American sin, but rather one of mankind throughout the course of
history. Further, owning slaves is not a sin unique to white people; in
fact, black Africans sold other blacks into slavery (and still do
today). Slavery is uniquely human, but societies and countries that
respect human dignity, like America, have stopped the horrifying
practice.
America had the dignity to end slavery through a civil
war and has since moved forward to correct wrongs with the civil rights
movement, affirmative action, legislation, pop culture and much more.
Institutional racism is no longer prevalent in the ways the left claims.
Obama, elected twice by American voters, is black, as is former
Attorney General Eric Holder and current Attorney General Loretta Lynch.
There are a number of blacks serving in the U.S. Congress, including
Republican Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.) and Congresswoman Mia Love (Utah). The
likes of Oprah Winfrey and Beyoncé are business and pop culture icons.
Look
around the world and you’ll find that America is the most tolerant and
open society on earth. The World Values Survey shows India, not the
United States, is in fact the most racist country with a class system.
The same survey has shown for years that Americans are among the least
racist in the world and therefore are the most tolerant.
Do racists exist in this country? Of course they do. Is their
racism sanctioned by the government and celebrated by fellow citizens?
Absolutely not. In fact, the Charleston shooter (who I refuse to name)
told friends he felt isolated and alone in his evil, racist views.
That’s a silver lining. As a society we have corrected many of the
wrongs of slavery and racism, the individuals who have not corrected
their racist views are an innumerable minority roundly and strongly
condemned by the rest of society.
The Charleston shooter’s
feelings about race are the exception, not the rule, in this country.
This is demonstrated by the response in Charleston of blacks and whites
holding hands and coming together, not apart, to honor the memory of
those who were killed.
America isn’t a racist country, not even
close, and it certainly isn’t a “white supremacist” society. The left
falsely saying so promotes not progress but division. American history
includes slavery and racism, but its current status and future as a
whole does not.
The people who lost loved ones at Emanuel AME
Church have forgiven their killer. It’s time the left does the same with
America for her long past sins.