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DARE TO ASK: Is your welcome mat colorblind?

By Phillip Milano

Question

To white people: Would you invite a black person to your home? Have you? — Frederick, Jacksonville

Replies

I’m a 48-year-old female with children, and all their friends were welcome in my home as long as they behaved. What a weird question. Get over yourself. — Colleen, white, Orange Park

Of course I’ve invited black people to my home. I wish we lived in a world where this question was patently ridiculous. — Jorge, 52, Hispanic, Jacksonville

I don’t like having stupid people over for dinner. They come in all colors. — Georgia, Lodi, Calif.

My guest list for my 11th birthday sleepover consisted of two white girls, the one Hispanic girl in our class and four black girls. It’s called “friendship.” Get familiar with the concept. — A., 38, Kansas City, Mo.

I have many times, but avoid inviting African-Americans who always remind others they are black. For instance, the famous comment “I’m the only black person here.” Like we didn’t notice. Now you’ve made people uncomfortable. That’s not a relaxing evening, and you will not be invited back. — Kristin, 44, Ponte Vedra Beach

Expert says

We’re just glad nobody gets ruffled by these questions.

But if any white people were to get defensive, it might be because they tend to overestimate the amount of true, cross-racial interaction they have, said University of Texas journalism professor Robert Jensen, who studies race and authored “The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege.”

“A lot of white people, intellectually we can say all people are equal, but how much have we really internalized that?” he said.

Cowardice, housing patterns, church habits and other factors have led to ingrained racial segregation, which can be monumental to overcome in one’s personal life, Jensen said.

“You might have black colleagues at work, but your personal world is still overwhelmingly white. We’re in a society that still reflects a white supremacist distribution of wealth and power, as well as our own struggles with internalized racism.”

Non-whites are essentially forced to interact with whites all the time, but for whites, it’s mostly a choice whether to integrate — and therein lies the challenge.

“Moderate white America still finds it uncomfortable to bump up against these realities,” said Jensen, adding that class and culture are huge variables in whether whites accept minorities.

He gave Barack Obama’s election as an example, saying it would have been different had he not been light-skinned, Ivy-educated and “soothing to white people.”

“If he’d framed his politics as based on racial justice, he wouldn’t have gotten elected. Imagine if he had come from a black urban environment, and had a cadence to his speech out of Harlem or the Deep South. Do you think he would’ve gotten elected?”

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