Aspen Ideas Festival: When colorblindness renders me invisible to you
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In conversations of race, inequality and acceptance the word "colorblindness" often gets thrown around. It's the notion that everyone can interact, cooperate and succeed in America in the same way, regardless of race.
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. proposed the term as a virtue that Americans should strive toward. But today, many argue the term is no longer sufficient in describing society's goals and in some cases, that mindset can lead to more oppression.
"In fact, being colorblind in some ways concretizes those systems and structures and policies that were built on race," said Ford Foundation President Darren Walker at a recent panel discussion at the Aspen Ideas Festival.
We need to be able to have conversations and make distinctions about race because there are still so many disparities that still exist today.
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"I like to use the phrase 'privilege is invisible to those who possess it,'" said Jeff Raikes of the Raikes Foundation.
There's a common narrative in America in which white men in powerful positions say they got to where they are because of hard work. To admit that they may have been given an advantage because of the color of their skin is almost unheard of.
"As Americans, we want to believe that you can get to that mobility escalator and get as far as you want. But that no one rides it faster than anyone else," Walker said.
It's important that these same men speak out about these issues because they are coming from inside the system and sound a lot more credible than those knocking at the door, asking to be let in, Walker said.
The discussion was moderated by former NPR host and Minnesota native Michele Norris. Norris is now executive director of "The Bridge," a new Aspen Institute program on race and cultural identity.
To listen to their discussion, click the audio player above.
More from Aspen Ideas Festival
• Walter Isaacson on how we can be more like da Vinci
• Jon Meacham on presidential character and temperament
• Reclaiming the democratic virtues of moderation, civility and compromise
• Being Muslim and American in 2017
• Being Latino in America today
• Can DNA help us grapple with the past?
• Living in the surveillance economy
• What your interactions with robots say about your character
• Prescriptions for a better health future
• Rural realities, problems and opportunities
• Stopping the violence in America's cities
• Has democracy run its course?
• StoryCorps founder David Isay on the importance of listening
• Bill Bishop on why we live with people just like ourselves
• David Brooks on 'The Second Mountain'
• How presidents prepare for Armageddon
• Why millennials work the way they do
• The social downside to technology
• What you need to know about Martin Luther King
• Conservatism in the Trump era
• American values and the Constitution
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