Dear , The Buffalo murders have shown us, once again, how dangerous unfettered racism and hate is in our society. Whether the hate targets African Americans, immigrants, Jews, Muslims, or Asian Americans, that hate and racism breeds ideologies that encourage and enable violent crimes and murder. Most of the violence against people of color and minority religions is not as visible as a mass shooting, but is equally deadly and dangerous, nonetheless. Instead of trying to bury Virginia’s racist history and our violent past of lynching Black men, closing public schools so Black and White children wouldn’t go to school together, tearing apart Black neighborhoods with expressways, and discriminating against African Americans’ mortgage applications, we must learn from the history. We must recognize that this sordid history continues to live in most aspects of Virginia’s economy and fabric.
Healthcare outcomes for African Americans in general, and especially pregnant women and their newborns, are significantly below outcomes for Whites, regardless of income and education levels. Studies repeatedly show that medical personnel do not listen to African Americans, order fewer tests and give less attention than they do to White people.
Racism exists in healthcare, which is why VICPP is fighting to get a training requirement for healthcare professionals on unconscious bias. Racism is embedded in our labor laws, which is why VICPP will continue to fight to remove the racist farmworker exemption from the minimum wage. And although paid sick days, on which VICPP continues to work, will help all workers, it will disproportionately help people of color who are concentrated in sectors without paid sick days.
Racism is rampant in our criminal justice system, which is why VICPP helped lead the fight to abolish the death penalty and is now seeking to limit the excessive use of solitary confinement. Racism is abundantly clear in housing statistics. The gap between White and African American home ownership rates is wider than it was fifty years ago. And when home ownership is the primary path to wealth, African Americans are deprived of this wealth-building vehicle. VICPP has been supporting efforts to increase money for affordable housing and home ownership.
Racism and hate led to the Buffalo mass shooting. Racism and hate drove or exacerbated most of the social and equity problems Virginia faces today. Pretending that racism doesn’t exist won’t help. Facing our sins and history provides opportunities for change and healing. I am grateful for the VICPP staff, board, and leadership who are sincerely, with faith and love, seeking to challenge racism and hate. We are all created in God’s image. Racism and hate kills.
In sorrow,
Kim Bobo Executive Director
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