The Purging of Black Officials Makes Latent Racism Official Policy

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An NAACP flyer campaigning for the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill, which passed the U.S. House of Representatives in 1922, but was filibustered to defeat in the Senate. Dyer, the NAACP, and freedom fighters around the country, like Flossie Baily, struggled for years to get the Dyer and other anti-lynching bills passed, to no avail. Today there is still no U.S. law specifically against lynching. In 2005, eighty of the 100 U.S. Senators voted for a resolution to apologize to victims' families and the country for their failure to outlaw lynching. Courtesy of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Some Exhibits to Come – One Hundred Years of Jim Crow
Mammy Statue JC Museum Ferris
Bibliography – One Hundred Years Of Jim Crow
Claude, age 23, just months before his 1930 murder. Courtesy of Faith Deeter.
Freedom’s Heroes During Jim Crow: Flossie Bailey and the Deeters
Souvenir Portrait of the Lynching of Abram Smith and Thomas Shipp, August 7, 1930, by studio photographer Lawrence Beitler. Courtesy of the Indiana Hisorical Society.
An Iconic Lynching in the North
Lynching Quilt
Claxton Dekle – Prosperous Farmer, Husband & Father of Two
Ancient manuscripts about mathematics and astronomy from Timbuktu, Mali
Some Exhibits to Come – African Peoples Before Captivity
Shackles for Adults & Children from the Henrietta Marie
Some Exhibits to Come – The Middle Passage
Slaveship Stowage Plan
What I Saw Aboard a Slave Ship in 1829
Arno Michaels
Life After Hate: A Former White Power Leader Redeems Himself

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By Erin Aubry Kaplan, Capital & Main

President Trump’s firings send a clear message that white mediocrity is always preferable to Black achievement.

Pete Hegseth speaking into a microphone
Pete Hegseth was a TV personality before becoming Secretary of Defense (Pete HegsethCC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons)

Back in 1986, when I was a first-year graduate student in theater arts at UCLA, a white professor called me into his office to break some bad news: The term paper I’d turned in wasn’t mine, he said. It was plagiarized. I was astonished. Of course the paper was mine. I had an undergraduate degree in English and had spent years writing term papers. I knew how to construct theses, build arguments, footnote and cite sources. And — quite unlike my fellow students — I liked the course and had participated enthusiastically in class discussions, something the professor seemed to genuinely appreciate. I assumed we had an understanding.

As it turns out, there was no “we.” Following his bombshell accusation, the professor told me only that “you don’t speak well” and couldn’t possibly have produced something so coherent. That was it. The way he said “you” repeatedly and pointedly, made it clear that he meant not just me, but all people like me. I realized that to him Black people could never ultimately measure up, even when they did. He had no proof of any plagiarism but he didn’t need any: He just knew. Here was racism in all its profound stupidity being expressed by a very educated man, at what was considered a liberal institution. I was thoroughly rattled but not surprised. Such overt bigotry that happened everywhere was the kind of bump in the road to justice that had been experienced by generations of Black people before me. I just happened to run into one now.    

In 2025, the overt racism of the Trump administration is not just another bump in the road; it’s trying to end that road for good. The effort started on Trump’s day one executive orders eliminating diversity, equity and inclusion programs, and soon after, with the help of Elon Musk and DOGE, he began firing or forcing out Black people from government jobs, from career employees to agency heads to high-profile appointees. Among those summarily dismissed were the chairman  of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., and Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, who was fired with a two-sentence email so terse that at first she thought it could be fake. Many who were replaced saw their jobs filled by white people with far less expertise or relevant experience.

This wasn’t the usual cleaning house that comes with a new administration, or about making government more efficient. What we may be reluctant to acknowledge even now is that these brutal dismissals are an expression of  deep-rooted antiblackness that says Black people are never qualified to hold the jobs they have, whatever their actual qualifications. Unlike my professor 40 years ago, Trump and his minions are not remotely conscientious or empathetic (when I got up the courage to tell my professor his baseless accusation felt racist, he looked shocked, then uncomfortable). But the antiblack spirit is the same. And in the Trump era, it’s taking over at the highest levels of power. 

Continue reading to see how this takeover is spreading.

Some Black Americans gained–and lost–political roles during Reconstruction.

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