[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 19, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H1850-H1851]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE WRETCHED STATE OF RACIAL RELATIONS IN AMERICA TODAY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from Florida (Mr.
Grayson) for 30 minutes.
Mr. GRAYSON. Mr. Speaker, I would like to discuss something that may
not otherwise be discussed this year in this Congress: the wretched
state of racial relations in America today.
We passed a bill here about a month ago in the House of
Representatives to eliminate the term ``Oriental'' from the law books.
I submit that eliminating a term does not eliminate the racism that
embodies that term, and I think it is about time that we recognize what
this problem is, the fact that it still festers in America, and give
some thought to what we can do about it.
I want to begin by relating two stories, both from my home State of
Florida. The first one involves a 16-year-old girl. She was White. She
had an encounter with police officers who were also White. She lived on
the Atlantic Coast, which is largely White, and I heard about this from
a friend of a friend.
What happened to her is that her parents got a call from the police
officers late one night. They didn't tell her why they were calling,
but they said: You have to come to this location. We need to talk to
you about your daughter. She is here with us.
The mother went to that location, spoke to the White police officers.
They informed her that her daughter had been drinking in a car with her
boyfriend, and they needed to take her home. She was shaken up a bit,
so was the daughter, but everybody ended that night alive.
Now I want to tell you a different story. It didn't end so nicely.
This was on the Gulf Coast, the coast of Florida that is heavily
African American; and on the Gulf Coast one night there was a theme
park, you could call it a fairgrounds, that was open to all students
without having to pay. They could go on the rides, enjoy themselves one
day each year. This is done in Tampa.
Now, teenagers being teenagers, some of them got a little bit out of
hand. Many African Americans frequent that area, and they were out in
force that night at the fairgrounds. There was a great deal of friction
that night between the White police force and the African American
teenagers who were there that night.
Some of them actually started running around, might have bumped into
a few other people as they were running around. Someone started to
scream. You will notice that apart from that physical contact, nothing
I described is actually against the law, like, for instance, drinking
in a car with your boyfriend when you are 16 years old.
A number of them, about a hundred African American youths, were
arrested that night 2 years ago in Tampa. The White police officers
insisted that they strip to the waist. That apparently was for the
purpose, in the minds of the police officers, to see whether they had
gang colors on their bodies--at least, that is what they said.
Now, one of them, Andrew Joseph III, actually hadn't done any of that
running around, any of that screaming, any of that casual bumping. He
hadn't done any of that, but he saw his classmates being arrested. He
came to see what was going on. He saw that one of them had his hat fall
off his head. He went over and he picked it up. The officer said: I
didn't say you could do that.
They arrested him for picking up his friend's hat. They took Andrew
Joseph, a 14-year-old boy, 2 miles away from the fairgrounds, and they
pushed him out of the police car and said: You are on your own.
A 14-year-old boy who has parents who were reachable by a telephone,
they pushed him out in a neighborhood he had never seen before, never
been to before, had no idea where he was. He remembered that his father
was going to pick him up at the fairgrounds. He felt pretty shaken up
because he had just been arrested and was told to strip to the waist
and, frankly, felt humiliated.
He found his way, as best he could, back to the fairgrounds 2 miles
away. He didn't call his parents because, frankly, he was scared,
embarrassed, didn't want them to know. He almost got as far as the
fairgrounds. He tried to cross the interstate highway to get to the
fairgrounds. In the midst of traffic in both directions, he was struck
by
[[Page H1851]]
a car and died right on the spot, immediately.
One 16-year-old girl, White, alive today; one 14-year-old boy,
African American, dead.
This is his picture, Andrew Joseph III. This is what this boy looked
like. He was a good student, quite an athlete, had a wonderful future
ahead of him. But not being White, his parents didn't get a call that
night to say to come pick him up.
I submit to you, this is not just one person's tragedy. It is not
just the tragedy of these parents standing at his gravesite. It is the
tragedy of America. We persist in being a country of sometimes casual
racism, racism that sometimes goes unnoticed.
If you say a bad word that begins with the letter N and there happens
to be a recording device nearby, you will certainly be scolded and to
some degree held accountable, that much is true. But institutionalized
racism, racial profiling, redlining is not treated the same way because
it is just too hard. It is much like the concept that, if we close our
eyes to it, it will somehow disappear. A 1-year-old, maybe a 2-year-old
might think that way, but a country of 330 million, why do we ever
think that way?
Now, I wish I could tell you that the story somehow had a happy
ending. It doesn't. This kind of institutionalized racism goes on
today. I asked the FBI to investigate whether there is racial profiling
by the police force in Tampa. They are thinking about it. I don't know
if they are going to say yes or they are going to say no. I can't tell
for sure. That is their decision, not mine.
I remember when I was a boy, a great man said he hoped to see a day
in America where his four children were judged not by the color of
their skin but by their character. I submit to you, this boy was judged
by the color of his skin, and he is not the only one.
We live in an America today, a country where 29 percent of White
adults have college degrees; 18 percent of African Americans have
college degrees. If Andrew Joseph III had lived, then his chance of
getting a college degree would have been stunted, perhaps even
forbidden, by the color of his skin.
Now, if he had lived, whether or not he had gone to college, he would
have grown up in a country where African Americans like him have an
average household income of $37,000. Whites have an average income of
$57,000. The color of his skin, you could say, if he lived, would have
cost him $20,000 a year. That is our new poll tax, $20,000 a year.
If he had managed to get across that highway--I imagine him being
picked up safely by his father that night, whom you see here on my
right--then, as an African American male, his life expectancy would
have been 73 years. The life expectancy of White males in this country,
including me, is 78 years. Now, it is a great tragedy--a great, great
tragedy--that we stole 50 years of life from this one boy, but how much
greater tragedy is it that we steal 5 years of life from 40 million?
We are in danger at this point of becoming a society that is not
colorblind, not blind to color, but, rather, a country that is blind to
racism. There is an easy way to end this problem. It is called doing
something about it. It is called pulling ourselves together in the same
way that we began to do in the 1960s: acknowledging these differences,
and then remedying them.
I well recall that in the current Presidential election, the former
Governor of my State, Jeb Bush, spent $125 million on his campaign and
got four votes--four votes, convention votes. But I remember that it
never came up that Jeb Bush wiped out, destroyed, eliminated, blew up
affirmative action in my State of Florida--and now it is gone.
So the question before us is, writ small: How do we acknowledge that
Black lives matter? How do we acknowledge that a terrible tragedy took
place here and robbed this good young man of his life? And, writ large,
what do we finally do--finally, finally, finally--50 years after the
civil rights movement began, to end inequality in this country, end it?
It starts with justice, and it ends with equality. Not just the
pablum of equality of opportunity, that buzz phrase that we use in
order to solve our consciences, but, rather, the equality of results:
an America where an African American boy is just as likely to go to
college as a White boy; an America where an African American is just as
likely to earn as much money as a White, and, for God's sake, an
African American can live as long as a White man does.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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