The art of the denial

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By Phillipe Copeland, Boston Globe

How racism deniers obscure the reality of racism, minimizing its significance

Examples of racism denial. (ALEX LASALVIA)

Elon Musk posted a video mocking some “Stay Woke” T-shirts he found in a closet at Twitter headquarters.

He also posted that the U.S. Dept. of Justice under Barack Obama found that Michael Brown, the teen whose killing sparked the Ferguson protests, did not have his hands up. The implication is Black Lives Matter is based on a fiction and lacks credibility. This only makes sense if you choose to ignore the rest of what justice officials found: Ferguson, Missouri, residents were victims of racist policing.

This fact does not concern Musk and other people though, because they are engaged in “racism denial.”

Racism denial involves obscuring the reality of racism or minimizing its significance. Racism denial is a political strategy. Its proponents know they benefit from racism and want to perpetuate it. They attempt to convince people racism is no longer an issue or is not a big enough one to require attention.

Racism denial is a coping tool. The contradiction of living in a society that preaches equality, freedom, and democracy but often practices the opposite, generates psychic distress, triggering denial. Whether reflecting strategy or psychology, racism denial comes in many forms.

From refuting to distorting, the Boston Globe provides examples of this denial.

You can see examples of this denial in action in our hateful speech exhibit.

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