President Obama made it perfectly clear why he got more than a little emotional when he announced his My Brother's Keeper initiative. He was one of those brothers who but for his initiative, luck, and a good support system could have easily slid into the spiral of poverty, drugs, violence, and possibly jail or an early grave. That spiral has trapped slammed countless other poor minority and especially black males. Obama challenged government, corporations and foundations to kick in millions in funds and resources to deal with the minority male crisis. While he also challenged minority males to take responsibility for their lives, he recognized that no matter how motivated an at risk male is that won't demolish the rock like institutional and societal barriers that confront black males. The biggest of all is the staggering jobless rate among young black males, and much more.
They are not just jobless; they are also in mortal danger of
becoming job untouchables. Their Great Depression unemployment rate did not budge even during
the Clinton-era economic boom in the 1990s, the unemployment rate for young
black males was double, and in some parts of the country triple, that of white
males. Discrimination, racial profiling, failing public schools, and broken homes
are the easy answers to try and explain the high unemployment numbers.
But that's not the total answer. During the past decade, the
relentless cutbacks in state and federal job training and skills programs, the
brutal competition for low and semi-skilled service and retail jobs from
immigrants, and the refusal of many employers to hire those with criminal
records have sledgehammered black communities. In the late 1990s, long before
the big run up in black unemployment, the California Assembly Commission on the
Status of the African-American Males reported that four out of ten felons
entering California prisons are young black males. That number is repeated in
other states. Despite the slight tick up in the number of black two-parent
households, less than half of lower income black males under age twenty-one
still live in two parent households.
The negative racial typing has also spilled over into school discipline. Studies show that though blacks make up less than twenty percent of public school students, they comprise nearly one out of three students kicked out of the nation's public schools.
But there's another reason for the endemic joblessness among the brothers and the attendant spin-off problems of crime, drugs, and violence from the forced idleness and hopelessness that conservatives and far too many others delight in victim blaming black males are loath to admit. While it's true that many employers refuse to hire them because of racial fear and ignorance, the unstated but real perception is that many young black males are inherent drive-by-shooters, gang bangers, drug dealers, are lazy, have foul attitudes, are chronic underachievers, and eternal menaces to society. When some young blacks turned to gangs, guns and drugs and terrorized their communities this seemed to confirm their worst fears.
The explosion of gangsta rap and the spate of Hollywood violence
themed ghetto films have convinced even more Americans that the thug lifestyle
is the black lifestyle. It makes little difference whether a young black is a
Rhodes Scholar, National Science medal winner or junior achievement candidate,
he could easily be tagged as a gangster. The gunning down of Trayvon Martin and
Jordan Davis were blatant examples of how stereotypes and negative typecasting
of young black males can have deadly consequences.
In the past few years, a rogue's list of rappers have been assaulted, murdered
or run afoul of the law. They revel in the bad actor lifestyle and play hard on
the us-versus-them volcanic rage of many young blacks. They reap a king's
ransom from exploiting the violent, outlaw image of black life. Some young
black men reinforce the damaging racial stereotypes by aping and exulting the thuggish
bluster and behavior of gangster rappers. This further confirms the lurking
suspicion among some employers that all young blacks must be criminal and
derelict, and that it's risky business to hire them.
Obama's public challenge to foundations, government and business to do more to
end discrimination and create more job and training opportunities for young
minority and black males is a good start. But the barriers that Obama spoke of
won't fall until Americans see the brothers that Obama urges the nation to keep
out of harm's way are worthy to be kept and not brothers to be scorned.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is a frequent MSNBC contributor. He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on American Urban Radio Network. He is the host of the weekly Hutchinson Report on KTYM 1460 AM Radio Los Angeles and KPFK-Radio and the Pacifica Network. Follow Earl Ofari Hutchinson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/earlhutchinson