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Posted: 2020-07-21T22:26:10Z | Updated: 2022-07-07T22:25:11Z Yes, You Should Speak Up If Your Family Or Friends Post Something Racist | HuffPost Life

Yes, You Should Speak Up If Your Family Or Friends Post Something Racist

If Black lives matter to you and you want to be an ally, you have to take a stand against white solidarity, even when it means calling out racially insensitive posts your friends or family share on Facebook.
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Nice white people, including those in your family, can still be racist .

That’s a hard lesson many are grappling with as the country enters into the second month of protests and conversations spurred on by the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police.

Perhaps in the past, during the holidays or at family get-togethers, you listened through gritted teeth as racist jokes or comments were casually tossed around, frozen from action because, hey, racist uncles are gonna racist uncle. (Plus, did you really want to be that family member who ruins what might be the last Christmas for your 97-year-old grandma?) 

But in light of the protests, many are doubling down with racially insensitive comments and reaction memes: MLK protested , these are just thugs looting on the streets.” “All lives matter.” “No white person alive today ever owned a slave. No Black person alive today was ever a slave.” “Candace Owens says we shouldn’t be mourning George Floyd because he was far from the perfect victim .” “What about Black-on-Black crime?” 

You were silent before, but the stakes feel higher now. You’re probably more well acquainted with recent victims of police brutality, knowing them by their full names and back stories: George Floyd . Breonna Taylor . Elijah McClain. Ahmaud Arbery . Tamir Rice . Rayshard Brooks . Atatiana Jefferson . The list goes on and on with a sickening constancy. Just as soon as you commit one person’s face and name to memory, it seems like another incident committed by the police makes headlines.

If you feel compelled to speak up and call out racism when you see it, especially among those you’re close to, you’re hardly alone right now, said Elizabeth McCorvey, a clinical social worker and therapist who offers anti-racism courses in Hendersonville, North Carolina. 

“Sometimes speaking up isn’t even about educating the other person so much as it is standing up for your own morals and ethics,” McCorvey said. “It’s saying: Whether or not I change their mind, I refuse to let this happen without saying something. I will always accept the invitation to stand up for what is right.” 

White people need to normalize checking each other when they see racism. Even the most politically sanitized quote cards shared at the height of the protests drove that point home: As we’ve seen, protesting is vital and effective , but there’s also a need to address hatred in your own inner circle, with your own people.

There’s nothing fun about “getting into it” with your family, but calling out implicit bias and racism is one of the most important things you can do as an ally. And this isn’t your standard family disagreement: You can’t “agree to disagree” that Black lives matter.

Many of these debates are happening on Facebook : Because of the pandemic, we’re all sitting around on our phones, reacting to updates about anti-racism protests in real time. People you never would have thought had hard-line beliefs about oppression or the Black experience are revealing a lot of interesting thoughts. 

Some of those views are problematic. That raises the question: If someone close to you posts something racially insensitive or factually inaccurate on social media, what should you do? Do you have a moral obligation to call it out?

The long and short of it is yes, you do, said Jacqueline Battalora , an attorney, professor of sociology at Saint Xavier University in Chicago, Illinois, and the author of “Birth of a White Nation: The Invention of White People and Its Relevance Today.”

“Because Facebook is such a public platform, even if among ‘friends,’ it is important to point out when something is problematic,” she said. “Failing to do so can be affirmation by silence. You don’t have to do it directly; you can indicate that you are happy to talk offline.”

You won’t change everyone’s mind, but you can plant some seeds of thought about how race operates in our country. Below, experts including Battalora and McCorvey offer advice on the best tactic to take with these uncomfortable conversations. 

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Illustration by Isabella Carapella/HuffPost
Do you have an obligation to call out casual racism on social media? The long and short of it is yes, experts say.

Accept that addressing it will likely be uncomfortable.

It’s easy to get worked up: You value your friend or family member’s opinion and it’s painful to see them be so dismissive of Black people’s generational trauma and current experiences: “How could they watch that video all 8 minutes and 46 seconds and not come away with the same unshakeable belief that things need to change?”

It hurts to see them miss the mark. Truth-telling can hurt, too; no one wants to draw battle lines or be divisive with people they love, but sometimes it’s necessary. Bringing this topic up or objecting to things said can absolutely change lives for the better. 

“You may be potentially saving a Black or brown person from having to risk further traumatization, and you’re letting the people in your life know where you stand and what your commitment to equity is,” McCorvey said. 

“The responsibility for dismantling systems of oppression has been on the shoulders of Black and brown people for a very long time but we can’t do it alone,” she explained.

Don’t shy away from intervening and objecting when you see racism, whether on Facebook or offline. As Paul Kivel  explained in “Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Social Justice ,” notice code words for race, and the implications of the policies, patterns and comments that are being expressed or supported.

Notice how racism is denied, minimized and justified, even by your family. If someone says, “All lives matter,” break down what that statement gets wrong: There is nothing in the BLM statement that insinuates other lives don’t matter.  All lives do matter, but as this moment shows, collectively, we need to do a much better job of protecting the Black lives in our community.

“Being someone who is against white solidarity and anti-racist means that when you see racism, you have to call it out. And call it out. And call it out. And call it out, even when you’re tired,” McCorvey said. 

Understand why your white friends or relatives get defensive when you point out blatant or systemic racism: You’re breaking white solidarity.  

When you first hear about the concept of “white solidarity” and the need to break rank from it, it can sound a little weird: After all, you’re not part of some vast white person conspiracy to screw over Black people. You didn’t rally with white nationalists in Charlottesville  in 2017. You strive to treat people of all races and ethnicities equally and you’re definitely not a racist. 

But as sociologist Robin DiAngelo explains in “White Fragility,” that’s just not how racism works today: It’s systemic and operates quietly. You can be a good person while still reaping the benefits of a deeply racist society, one that favors whiteness. And if you really give it some thought, you’re probably more unconsciously biased than you realize: Racism exists on a spectrum and we all have unconscious and learned racist behaviors and beliefs.

As DiAngelo explains, white solidarity protects those beliefs: Think about all the times you’ve shrugged it off when someone made a racist joke about a Black classmate when they’d left the room. The times an elderly person said a racial slur and you overlooked it because “that was just their generation.” The times you and friends unconsciously grabbed your purses or darted across the street when you saw a Black man approaching. Think about how it happened and how you never thought about it ever again.

When you break white solidarity with your family or friends on Facebook or elsewhere you’re probing and questioning that kind of behavior. It’s unnerving to the other person because they, like all of us, have been taught that only “bad” people can be racist . By calling it out, you’re disturbing their peace and their ability to go on thinking of themselves as non-racist. Avoidance or ignoring comments is exactly why white supremacy still has such a hold in our country today, anti-racist organizer Clare Bayard  said. 

“White people are born and trained to be its primary defenders,” she said in a 2016 interview. “That is what our role is supposed to be, whether we are active advocates or whether we’re complicit through silence or passivity. If we’re not moving against white supremacy, we are moving with it. We are supporting it.” 

By objecting to casual racism and talking about your own racial biases, you’re modeling for them how a “good” person can still have racial biases and that it’s possible to address those by becoming more racially conscious. Point the finger inward and take ownership of your mistakes when pointing out white supremacy. 

By seeing your example (whether you’re replying or sharing some other experience about race on your personal page), your loved one may swing from being totally offended to begrudgingly (and hopefully later, non-begrudgingly!) appreciative.

Accept that you might not change their mind, but you will get them thinking.

When you try to break white solidarity, you’re showing integrity and doing the hard work but you won’t win over everyone right away or maybe ever, McCorvey said. That cherished older neighbor from your hometown probably won’t join a march with you, but by offering a counterargument to the “Black-on-Black crime ” talking point meme she shared, you’ve given her some racial awareness she may have been blind to living in her suburban bubble.

“Every time you continue to engage with them, you’re planting seeds for thought,” the therapist said. “You might never see the fruits of your labor, but if she chooses to read the article, she might think twice next time she hits the ‘retweet’ button on similar content. That’s progress, too.”

Don’t make it personal.

Be strategic here: Decide what’s important to challenge and what’s not. You don’t want to be troll-ish and reply to everything. You don’t want to hint that your friend is a bigot for their beliefs. You’re not bringing this up to make them feel bad.

Don’t go personal — attack the source of power (systemic racism, police brutality) instead, Battalora said.

“Keep things as factual a possible and try not to let your response focus on an individual,” she said. “I respond in a way that includes me in the social indictment of white structural advantage (‘us white people often ... ’) and I always try to give a historic example to support my point.” 

If they describe the largely peaceful protests as “looting” carried out by “a bunch of thugs,” describe to them what you saw with your own eyes when you went out protesting.

Overall, the most effective way to approach someone is not through shame or with a flood of counter-evidence but through empathy. McCorvey said she often recommends people start the conversation from a place of wanting to learn more: If someone you love posts something racially insensitive, you could say, “I’m surprised to hear you say that. Can you elaborate?” 

Not everyone will want to learn and engage but try to make inroads by leading with things you have in common, she said. If your loved one posted something racist, they’re not going to be so blatant to say, “I hate Black or brown people and I want them to suffer.”

“They might assert that they value all life and think everyone has a right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” McCorvey said. “Well, awesome! You both agree and are on the same page and have somewhere to start.”

From there, talk about how Black Americans’ rights and pursuit of happiness have been severely sidelined by the government long after Emancipation and the end of slavery. (Talk about the Jim Crow era , the prison-industrial complex , redlining , the looming threat of police brutality within Black communities .)  

In other words, meet them where they are right now and nudge them to think beyond their own experiences as a white person. 

“If you can stay curious in the conversation, learn where those viewpoints come from, and understand the experiences they have and why it’s led to the conclusions they’ve come to, you might have a better chance at a meaningful dialogue.” she said.  

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SDI Productions via Getty Images
"Being someone who is against white solidarity and anti-racist means that when you see racism, you have to call it out. And call it out. And call it out. And call it out, even when youre tired," McCorvey said.

Take the conversation offline.

It’s true that the most effective political conversations take place face to face rather than Facebook-to-Facebook, said Tania Israel , a professor at UCSB and the author of “Beyond Your Bubble: How to Connect Across the Political Divide, Skills and Strategies for Conversations that Work.”

Of course, we don’t have much opportunity for those in-person conversations because of social distancing, but you can still text or talk on the phone.

“If you really want to connect, understand, or persuade, the most effective comment is an invitation to set up a time to talk via video or in person and then approach the conversation with curiosity and listening,” Israel told HuffPost.

Think twice before hitting “unfollow” or deleting the person.

There’s nothing wrong with taking breaks from engaging with your friends or family if they’re posting things that are upsetting. But try to reengage and recognize that you can unfollow someone and still commit to having a conversation with them, said George James , a marriage and family therapist and a professor at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.

“You can hold them accountable but you don’t have to cut off from them,” he said. “You can send them a text saying that you didn’t like their post and you thought it was offensive.”

Unfollowing is easy but it’s also a very privileged choice, James said. 

“If every Black person cut off everyone who said or did something racist, where would they live, work or go to worship?” he said. 

Of course, if your relative is posting racially insensitive or dismissive comments on your posts and you’re worried how it will impact friends who are BIPOC, you have a right to tell them you’re moving the conversation to DMs.

Stay hopeful: Seismic change is happening — and you’re definitely not alone in having these conversations. 

The reassuring news is, the public, by and large, is learning and changing from this conversation about race: Since the protests began, U.S. voters’ support for Black Lives Matter has increased nearly as much as it did over the previous two years, The New York Times reported .

Each tough conversation you’re having with your relatives each article you’re sharing on your own page is making a difference, even if you’re not seeing immediate change in your inner circle. And it’s important to remember that challenging racism is never just about the person or persons you’re trying to “change.”

“It’s a process that impacts you and society,” Battalora said. “The engagement shapes our thinking, helps to understand resistance and sources of fear and anxiety, helps to sharpen our thinking, challenges our emotions and body.”

Lean in to your friends who are broaching these tough conversations now, too, said McCorvey.

“You definitely have friends or followers that are dealing with this exact same thing,” she said. “Start an anti-racist book club to increase your education on the topic, get an accountability partner to practice conversing with, and research anti-racist educators that have published work on how to have thoughtful dialogue with challenging people.” (She noted that the organization Showing Up for Racial Justice is a good place to start with all of this .)

Remember that you’re calling out those close to you so a Black person doesn’t have to. 

Going to bat for anti-racism causes and beliefs is exhausting; Black people have known this for generations. It’s so disheartening getting through to white people, some Black people have said they’ve essentially “given up” on talking to their co-workers, neighbors and friends who are white.

As writer Reni Eddo-Lodge  said in a 2017 Guardian piece: “The journey towards understanding structural racism still requires people of color to prioritize white feelings. Even if they can hear you, they’re not really listening. It’s like something happens to the words as they leave our mouths and reach their ears. The words hit a barrier of denial and they don’t get any further.”

Black and brown communities depend on us to stay in the conversation about race: They need you to remind your relative that Candace Owens doesn’t speak for all Black people. To counter the tired “bootstrap narrative”  pushed by conservative radio and TV, to talk about President Donald Trump ’s dangerous track record with people of color

The need you to talk about what it means to be Black in America and, more important, what it means to be white . People of color have historically depended white-on-white conversations happening in the home and still are today, McCorvey said.

“Black Americans need you to have those conversations so we don’t have to,” she said. “The conversations with family might be annoying to you, but they’re traumatizing, harmful and invalidating for me.”

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Before You Go

32 Powerful Signs From Anti-Racism Protests Around The World
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A protester at an anti-racism demonstration in London on June 3 holds a sign that reads: "Our skin is not a weapon." (credit:DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS via Getty Images)
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A demonstrator in Brooklyn, New York, calls for justice for George Floyd and other victims of police violence with a sign that reads: "I understand that I will never understand. However, I stand. #peaceandjustice" (credit:Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
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Breezy Rose of Kansas posted this photo of her husband holding a sign that says "Stop killing us" and her daughter holding a sign that says "Please don't shoot my dad" on Instagram. In the caption, Breezy wrote: "When I tell you I cried after snapping this picture at a rally for George Floyd today, I sobbed. This is our reality. This is reality for every black person in our country. Today I wept for George Floyd, for Breonna Taylor, for Ahmaud Arbery, for Eric Garner, for Sandra Bland, for Tamir Rice and for so many others. Today I wept for my husband having to teach this to our daughter. And today I wept for our daughter, who has to grow up with this fear. Today, we wept. But tomorrow, we fight." (credit:breezyrosef/Instagram )
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Demonstrators march near Lafayette Park across from the White House on June 2 in Washington, D.C. The sign on the left says, "I'd like to speak to the manager of systemic racism, please." The other reads: "Black Lives Matter." (credit:OLIVIER DOULIERY via Getty Images)
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Demonstrators protest police brutality at Bayfront Park in downtown Miami on May 30. The sign reads: "No lives matter til Black lives matter. #saytheirnames"
(credit:ADAM DELGIUDICE via Getty Images)
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Courtney, a nurse, attends a sit-in protest in Saint Paul, Minnesota, on June 2. (She was wearing a mask but removed it for the photo, she said). The sign reads: "What color am I when I save your life? Signed, a Black R.N." (credit:_courtneypaigee_/Instagram)
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Atlanta protester Maya Nicole is working with the organization Millennial Civil Rights on a campaign called #WeSaveUs . Her sign says: "We deserve more than justice. We deserve a better reality." (credit:@mayanicole_/Instagram )
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New York City demonstrators walk from Foley Square past 1 Police Plaza on their way to Washington Square Park for a peaceful moment of reflection for those killed by police. The sign on the left reads: "We pay you to protect us, not kill us." (credit:Ira L. Black - Corbis via Getty Images)
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A woman holds up a sign with the Martin Luther King Jr. quote "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere" during a protest in Manhattan Beach, California, on June 2. (credit:Jay L. Clendenin via Getty Images)
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A man holds up a sign that says "Am I next?" at a Manhattan Beach, California, protest on June 2. (credit:Jay L. Clendenin via Getty Images)
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An NYPD officer walks by a banner reading "Say Their Names" on June 1 in Brooklyn, New York. (credit:Erik McGregor via Getty Images)
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During a June 1 protest near the White House over the death of George Floyd, a demonstrator holds a sign that says: "It could have been my son." (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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Protester holds a sign that says "Indifference is evil" during an anti-racism demonstration in London on June 3. (credit:BEN STANSALL via Getty Images)
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Protesters gather outside the residence of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz on June 1. One man's sign reads: "Video taker: A national hero." (credit:CHANDAN KHANNA via Getty Images)
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On June 1, a protester in Brooklyn, New York, holds a sign that reads: "4 my future Black kids." (credit:Erik McGregor via Getty Images)
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A close-up of a sign that says: "The colour of my skin should not place a target on my back" during a May 31 protest outside Cardiff Castle in Wales. (credit:Matthew Horwood via Getty Images)
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A woman holds a drawing of George Floyd with "I can't breathe" written underneath as thousands of people join a Black Lives Matter march through central London on May 31. (credit:Guy Smallman via Getty Images)
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Protesters hold posters and shout slogans as they march in central London on June 3. The sign in the foreground says: "You have no authority to kill a minority." (credit:TOLGA AKMEN via Getty Images)
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A seated protester holds a sign during a June 2 demonstration in Los Angeles over the death of George Floyd. (credit:KYLE GRILLOT via Getty Images)
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A protester holds up a piece of yellow plastic that reads, "Don't shoot" while participating in a demonstration outside the Forest Hills MBTA Station in Boston on June 2. (credit:Boston Globe via Getty Images)
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In Boyertown, Pennsylvania, a protester holds a sign that says "Charge the other 3," referring to the other three police officers present when their colleague kneeled on George Floyd's neck and killed him. The former officers have since been charged with aiding and abetting. (credit:MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images via Getty Images)
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Demonstrators protesting the death of George Floyd hold up placards near Lafayette Park across from the White House on June 2 in Washington, D.C. The sign in the center reads: "Who do u protect?" (credit:OLIVIER DOULIERY via Getty Images)
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A protester kneels as he holds a placard that says "Stop killer cops!!!!" in front of a row of Army National Guard troops during a June 2 demonstration in Hollywood, California. (credit:AGUSTIN PAULLIER via Getty Images)
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A protester holds a sign that says "Blue Lives Murder" on May 29 in Minneapolis. (credit:Jason Armond via Getty Images)
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In Sydney, protesters prepare to march on Parliament House at the Archibald Fountain in Hyde Park on June 2. The one in the foreground reads: "We're not trying to start a race war. We're trying to end one." (credit:Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
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Protest signs posted outside the U.S. Consulate General in Edinburgh, Scotland, in response to the police killing of George Floyd. One reads: "Stop looting Black lives. End police brutality." (credit:Jane Barlow - PA Images via Getty Images)
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New York protesters take part in a June 1 demonstration in response to the death of George Floyd. The sign on the left reads: "In unity we have strength;" the one on the right reads: "We have suffered enough." (credit:SOPA Images via Getty Images)
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People shout slogans during a June 1 protest at Dam Square in Amsterdam over the death of George Floyd. The banner reads: "Police violence is not an accident." (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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People carry a banner that says "We the people refuse to see cops murder citizens and walk free" as they march to protest the death of George Floyd on May 31 in Portland, Oregon. (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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A woman holds up a sign that says "Our black children need a future" during a May 31 protest outside Cardiff Castle in Wales/ (credit:Matthew Horwood via Getty Images)
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During a Black Lives Matter protest in London's Hyde Park on June 3, a protester holds up a sign that says "White silence = Black death." (credit:Dan Kitwood via Getty Images)
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A protester holds a sign with the names of victims of police brutality during a rally in Coral Gables, Florida, on May 30. (credit:EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI via Getty Images)

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