NOVEMBER 12, 2021, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A17 Regarding racism, turn to Fredrick Douglass PUBLIC SQUARE welcomes all points of view. Published submissions do not necessarily reflect the views of the Keizertimes The man, the legacy For more than 14 years he styled the look of the Keizertimes and its special sections. Andrew Jackson started his first tour of duty at this newspaper in early 2005, barely out of college, but eager to put his learned skills to work. The Keizertimes may have given Andy a job but he gave the Keizertimes things more valuable than that. At the end of November Andy will close out his long career as graphic designer and production manager for the Keizertimes. He has opened his own design firm in Keizer. His new clients will soon be ecstatic over the work he does for them as our advertis- ing clients here have benefited from his uber-professional and creative work. The Keizertimes and its clients were not the only ones to recognize his talent. The wall behind Andy’s desk at the newspaper office is filled with first place awards for his creativity and graphic work, awarded by members of news- paper associations in many other states across the nation. Normally it would be an embarrassment of riches, but each one was truly earned. It is not just his graphic and production work that means so much to the Keizertimes. He is a faithful and loyal staff member whose personality has touched everyone he worked Editorial beside at the newspaper. Andy had achieved as much as he wanted and it is time to stretch his wings and follow his dream of owning his own company, &Rew Branding and Design. The Keizertimes does not harness any- one. We encourage our team members to follow their dreams and reach for their goals. That said, it will be a melancholy day when Andy leaves the office for the last time. He leaves a legacy that will be hard to match plus he leaves with the affection and respect of his colleagues. Nothing lasts forever and change is good. Andy will be the second long-time Keizertimes employee to leave this year. Yet, this newspaper has a knack for attracting quality talent. Andy may be leaving but he is training his successor, Logan Turbes, who will find his own style of success here. Good luck to all you do, Andrew Jackson. —Lyndon Zaitz By MICHAEL GERSON Among other things, the birth of America was one of history’s greatest acts of hypocrisy. A nation dedicated to the proposition that “all men are created equal” was at the time also a prison for hundreds of thousands. Randomly place a pin on the country’s historical time- line and you are likely to hit some crisis related to this founding defect. In the early days of the republic, it was not uncommon to ask if the American form of government was worth saving. Abolitionists such as William Lloyd Garrison and a young Frederick Douglass regarded the U.S. Constitution as a pro-slavery document. The Constitution, “dripping as it is with human blood,” Garrison proclaimed, was the most “heav- en-daring arrangement ever made by men for the continuance and protection of a system of the most atrocious villainy ever exhibited on earth.” Clearly, critical race theory was not required to raise questions about the systemic nature of American racism. Garrison condemned any participation in the constitutional system, including vot- ing, as a compromise with evil. Some Black leaders of the time found the American experiment so fundamentally corrupt that they advocated Black separatism and the return of Black people to Africa. Uncomfortable conversations about racism are an inbuilt feature of American life. And they have resulted in certain cat- egories of modern thought. First, there are those who believe that, through the cataclysm of the Civil War and the triumph of the civil rights movement, the United States has largely fixed its structural defects. The 14th Amendment, 15th Amendment, Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965, in this view, now provide a relatively level playing field for human accomplishment. Racism has become a matter of individual citizens holding prejudicial views. Therefore, the purpose of historical education is to incul- cate colorblindness. Second, there are those who believe that racism has been baked into American society for hundreds of years and will not be easily removed. The cumulative results of bias, in this view, can be seen in American institutions—housing, jus- tice, lending, policing, education, wealth accumulation—that put many minorities WHEATLAND PUBLISHING CORP. 142 Chemawa Road N, Keizer, Oregon 97303 Phone: 503.390.1051 • www.keizertimes.com PUBLISHER & EDITOR Lyndon Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR Matt Rawlings news@keizertimes.com GENERAL REPORTER Joey Cappelletti editor@keizertimes.com COMMUNITY REPORTER Bee Flint reporter@keizertimes.com ADVERTISING Robin Barney advertising@keizertimes.com PRODUCTION MANAGER & GRAPHIC DESIGNER Andrew Jackson/Logan Turbes graphics@keizertimes.com LEGAL NOTICES legals@keizertimes.com BUSINESS DESK billing@keizertimes.com RECEPTION/SUBSRIPTIONS Michelle Litsey subs@keizertimes.com FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook Instagram Twitter NEW DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION PRICING: $5 per month $60 per year YEARLY PRINT SUBSCRIPTION PRICING: $35 inside Marion County $43 outside Marion County $55 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 POSTMASTER Send address changes to: Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon other VOICES at severe disadvantage from the moment of their birth. Therefore, fighting racism requires a positive effort to expose and undo systemic racism. This is not merely a matter of cultivating certain attitudes; it dictates positive actions against injustice. Third, there are those—mainly in aca- demia but not limited to it—who believe that American democracy and liberal individualism more broadly remain a cover or excuse for racial and economic exploitation. This is not only a critique of American institutions but also of American ideology. A free, equal, demo- cratic society, in this view, is not an ideal that the White majority fails to meet; it is a myth used by the powerful to maintain power. And only the application of greater power to overthrow the existing order is an adequate response. The first view—which seems to be held by many conservative parents—strikes me as badly inadequate. Colorblindness is an important commitment for individuals. It is not a sufficient tool for understand- ing the legacy of racism. I should have been taught as a child (but was not) that my monochrome suburban life was not a natural or neutral condition. It was con- structed by generations of laws and rules that surrounded me with working institu- tions and segregated the community in which I lived. The problem comes when the second and third views get conflated in practice. There are fringe forms of anti-racism that engage in a kind of power game. The purpose is to cultivate guilt and encour- age ritual self-denunciation leading to self-disempowerment—a goal that should override every liberal norm, premise and institution. I don’t see much evidence that this mode of education is widespread in American public schools. But it would be a troubling development. This is not only because it would offend some White parents. It would make genuine historical education about our country’s racial past, and genuine efforts to address ongoing injustices, more difficult. Among the most important questions related to racism were present from the start: Could the deep defects of this coun- try be addressed by the more determined application of American ideals? Or were those ideals merely excuses for exploita- tion and bigotry? The older Douglass answered differ- ently than his younger self. He eventu- ally broke with Garrison over the nature of the Constitution. “Interpreted as it ought to be interpreted,” Douglass said, “the Constitution is a glorious liberty document.” His fight for an anti-slavery Constitution and his embrace of political abolitionism shaped his century. Douglass remains the model for deal- ing with racism—in his righteous anger at systemic corruption in the American experiment, and in his belief in the redeeming power of American ideals and institutions. A sound education will culti- vate both. (Washington Post)