#1402 Racism or Classism? Caste Explains that it is Both (Repost)
Best of the Left - Leftist Perspectives on Progressive Politics, News, Culture, Economics and Democracy
Jay Tomlinson
4.5 • 3.4K Ratings
🗓️ 31 December 2021
⏱️ 90 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Original Air Date 3/6/2021
Today we take a look at the origins of race and the building of a caste system in the US based largely on the lessons from Isabel Wilkerson, author of "Caste: The Origins of our Discontent"
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SHOW NOTES
Ch. 1: John Biewen: The lie that invented racism - TED - Air Date 11-1-20
To understand and eradicate racist thinking, start at the beginning. That's what journalist and documentarian John Biewen did, leading to a trove of surprising and thought-provoking information on the "origins" of race.
Ch. 2: Made in America (Seeing White, Part 3) - Scene on Radio - Air Date 3-16-17
Chattel slavery in the US, with its distinctive · and strikingly cruel · laws and structures, took shape over many decades in colonial America. The innovations that built American slavery are inseparable from the construction of Whiteness as we know it.
Ch. 3: The Invention of Race - Throughline - Air Date 11-19-20
During a time when race-based science and the eugenics movement were becoming mainstream, anthropologist Franz Boas actively sought to prove that race was a social construct, not a biological fact.
Ch. 4: Caste in America with Isabel Wilkerson - Why Is This Happening? with Chris Hayes - Air Date 8-11-20
Does the United States have a caste system? In her research on the Jim Crow South, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist/author Isabel Wilkerson found that the word ·racism· fell far short in capturing the depth and totality of oppression people existed under
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Isabel Wilkerson says racism is an insufficient term for the systemic oppression of Black people in America. Instead, she prefers to refer to America as having a "caste" system.
This brief video presents three of Theodore W. Allen’s theses related to the invention of the “white race” and his important analysis of the white supremacy’s role in beating back struggles from below in three great crises in U.S. history.
A new way of thinking about race and class with Isabel Wilkerson.
MEMBERS-ONLY BONUS CLIP(S)
Ch. 8: The Invention of Race Part 2 - Throughline - Air Date 11-19-20
During a time when race-based science and the eugenics movement were becoming mainstream, anthropologist Franz Boas actively sought to prove that race was a social construct, not a biological fact.
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Isabel Wilkerson says racism is an insufficient term for the systemic oppression of Black people in America. Instead, she prefers to refer to America as having a "caste" system.
VOICEMAILS
Ch. 10: Thoughts on the bonus material - Kim from Montana
FINAL COMMENTS
Ch. 11: Final comments
MUSIC (Blue Dot Sessions):
- Opening Theme: Loving Acoustic Instrumental by John Douglas Orr
- Voicemail Music: Low Key Lost Feeling Electro by Alex Stinnent
- Closing Music: Upbeat Laid Back Indie Rock by Alex Stinnent
SHOW IMAGE:
Description: Black chalkboard background with the word "CASTE" written in white
Produced by Jay! Tomlinson
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the Best of Left Podcast. I am coming to you from way back on Christmas Eve as I prepare to |
| 0:05.6 | shut this whole operation down for the year. I have an excellent rerun episode for you. The third of three that you've been visited by during our hiatus. |
| 0:14.5 | And it's it's an excellent one. I really recommend that you listen to it whether you heard the first time around or not. |
| 0:21.6 | First though, I got thinking about New Years because we've been in a series of years |
| 0:27.4 | when each year seems to be worse than the one that preceded it. Which always seems surprising. You know, 2016 seems like |
| 0:37.4 | the lowest of the low only to then realize when 2017 came along. No, this is going to keep getting worse |
| 0:46.0 | for a while now, I think. And then and that continued. Of course, all the way through 2020, which was the real |
| 0:53.4 | capital, capper. And so I got thinking back on 2021 to realize that even though we're still in the middle of a pandemic. |
| 1:03.2 | And we had a literal armed attempted coup in our country. This year still wasn't as bad as the last one. |
| 1:13.5 | And so it's like the first year and you know, five or six years that lived up to the hope of the end of 2020. |
| 1:22.8 | But it also means that our baseline is incredibly low and we should not necessarily expect for things to |
| 1:30.2 | continue trending upward. You know, I got thinking about the phenomenon that are right on the brink of hitting the mainstream. |
| 1:39.2 | Deep fakes in the news and media, printable guns, that sort of thing. |
| 1:45.1 | So while on one hand, I am sort of glad to see 2021 go. |
| 1:49.8 | So on the other, I do have some concerns about what lie ahead. So I don't know who knows. |
| 1:57.3 | We may be we may be looking back nostalgicly on 2021 a little while from now. |
| 2:04.0 | Anyway, I don't have any particularly pithy connective tissue between those ideas and today's episode topic. |
| 2:12.8 | Other than looking back on 2021, this was I think one of the most insightful series of thoughts |
| 2:19.2 | that I had clarified for me. For many years there was a debate raging on the left |
| 2:26.9 | between the concerns of anti-racists and the concerns of economically focused leftists who seem to have the idea that |
| 2:39.1 | if we get rid of capitalism then racism will just disappear or something. I'm not sure what they think. |
| 2:44.8 | Anyway, the idea of caste is sort of the unified theory of oppression in America and something that I think everyone needs to understand. |
... |
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