1) It thrives off attention: The KKK has very little power. It doesn't do very much anymore, and even in this rally, it appears that there were only a few members present. The truth is that the Klan only has power because we provide it by paying attention to its actions. The group is like a grease fire: The more water you put on it, the more it grows. If you starve the fire of oxygen, though, it eventually dies out. The Klan must be starved of attention, and then it will go away. It only remains relevant because we allow it to.
2) The KKK distracts us from real racism: While Ole Miss can proudly brag about how it ran the KKK off campus, school administrators haven't dealt with the fact that the university doesn't hire very many African American professors and doesn't graduate black athletes at a high rate. But it is not alone in its campus segregation. According to a survey we conducted on YourBlackWorld, more than one-third of black college students have never had a black professor, and more than 60 percent of them have only had one. That should embarrass our universities and be the source of absolute outrage among African American students. Rather than fighting against Klan members they will probably never see again, Ole Miss students should focus on dealing with their professors. Also, we are allowing the campus to brag about something that is not worth bragging about. For campus administrators to fight against the KKK and simultaneously support systemic racism via the lack of campus diversity is like saying, "I am completely against rape, but I plan to molest you every single day."
3) The KKK has freedom of speech just like everyone else: Whether we like it or not, the KKK has liberties. As long as it is not encouraging people to kill African Americans, it is protected by the Constitution. I want to protect the Klan's right to speak, because that also gives me the right to speak. The last thing we want is to live in a country where the government decides whose opinions should be heard. The Klan has a right to exist.
I don't support the KKK, but I also have major problems with Ole Miss. The university was built on a foundation of racism, and it is not being very progressive in terms of fighting it. In order for us to combat racism in America, we must be intelligent about our targets. The KKK should not be a meaningful part of that dialogue.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is a Professor at Syracuse University. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here. 


Comments: (28)
Add a comment
By: Bwpapoose43b on 11/25/2009 1:16PM
If a person dressed in the sheets of the KKK walked into a store, what do you do? Shoot first or hold a conversation with him about his views?
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: sherridina on 11/25/2009 3:54PM
It all the depends on the community. If it is New York City, or most big or mid-sized cities, they should be treated like a joke. However, in some places they do have alot of power.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Ed Wise on 11/25/2009 5:35PM
Man I stopped worrying about the Klan after I was part of a group of people in Washington DC 1983 who kicked the snot out of a bunch of Klansmen who attempted to hold a march in DC. Those punks were even afraid to wear their robes, but we know who they were because no one in DC wore flannel shirts and blue jeans. Heck I even got a few hits on their grand dragon. The Klan is nothing but a bunch of boys, many with less than a high school education, trying to find a place in our present society. I agree with Dr. Boyce, ignore the cock roaches and let's focus on the real instruments of racism in America.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: monique on 11/25/2009 9:19PM
I love how people will fight against the klan, but their campuses won't hire any black professors or admit black students.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: randysrt10@aol.com on 12/01/2009 1:12PM
The NAACP is the new Klan a bunch of hood rats living off the Blacks......
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: crbrown on 12/06/2009 3:02PM
to"the kool jt"you are 100%right i know public school teachers,police,sherriffs,a doctor,4 lawers,and even 1 state rep there are onely chosen few of us who know we will be back in charge we have one thing blacks dont "brains"
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: drvdfsd on 1/16/2010 5:20AM
╭⌒╮WELCOME
-----http://www.vipshops.org~ ¤ ╭⌒╮ ╭⌒╮
╭⌒╭⌒╮╭⌒╮~╭⌒╮
,)))),'')~~ ,''~)
╱◥█◣ ╱◥█◣
|田|田||田|田|
╬╬╬╬╬╬╬╬╬╬╬╬╬╬ http://www.vipshops.org
╬╬╬ http://www.vipshops.org ╬╬╬
╰══════════════╯
#$$$$$$dfd
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Aly on 2/08/2011 11:17AM
As a white student who couldn't care less about race, I do find it extremely sad and counterproductive to see comments from people who flatly refuse to "cope/Work with white people". That is hardly a useful thing to be doing if we want to finally stop having race barriers. I have a had a black college professor, and it shocked me....because the first thing out of his mouth was along the lines of how we were probably staring at him for being black. WRONG. First of all, I was staring trying figure out his age (he is in his early 70's, but extremely fit and looks like he's in his early 40's), secondly, HE'S the PROFESSOR, who else am I supposed to look at in the room?! I agree that ignoring such ignorance as represented by the KKK is probably the best route, I have enough stupid people to deal with in my day, but being proud and of your race and heritage is entirely different than walking around with a chip on your shoulder because of it. I understand that life can't be easy for some people of color, but life isn't easy for all white people either. My dream in life is to become a teacher, and perhaps at some point an administrator who will have influence over who is hired to teach my students. I can promise you that race, gender, etc will not play any part in my decisions. I don't care who or "what" you are, I care about how well you can do your job.
Reply to this Comment | Report This