November 20, 2019 Page 9 Opinion articles do not necessarily represent the views of the Portland Observer. We welcome reader essays, photos and story ideas. Submit to news@portlandobserver.com. O PINION Death and Dying as a Black Studies Professor The toxicity of racism at Portland State e than J ohnson While some might think it hyperbole to begin a paper claiming a relationship between death and dying and be- ing a tenured professor at a large public university, I think it is a valid claim. It is just a fact that many of the Black people, most of them men and some of whom were and are my friends, at Portland State are sick, dying or dead. After the PSU Board of Trust- ees, an unelected group of over- whelmingly white men, voted to arm PSU security, the first person campus police shot and killed was Jason Washington, a Black per- son, married and a father of two. A fight broke out in front of a bar on campus and he was carrying a gun which he was permitted to car- ry. It fell out in the fight and when he tried to grab it the cops shot and killed him. As is usually the case, the rule of impunity prevailed here and no one was held accountable in any substantive way. The struggle against arming the police force was strong and overwhelmingly stu- dents and faculty expressed they did not want an armed police force on campus. We already have one, the Portland Police Bureau, who have a long history of killing Black and poor people with impunity. I have taught in the Black Stud- ies Department for 15 years at PSU. One of the courses I teach is called Racism. For years I have used a video in this class called Unnatural Causes, which has a sec- tion in it called “When the Bough Breaks.” This part of the documen- tary makes the case that racism not only maintains inequality across institutions, it also makes us sick. The literature is well established here with many peer reviewed ar- ticles demonstrating how the stress of daily racism gets into our bodies and over works us causing break- by downs in our hearts, reproductive systems and other areas of our bod- ies. I remember one young Black women student realizing after see- ing the video that if she wanted to have children she should have them young because if she did not, the compounded stress of racism on her reproductive system could very likely en- danger her child. This is pre- meditated murder. Mainstream white society has the facts to show that racism makes us sick and causes premature death, but does nothing to change the conditions. A very frustrating part about this is we Black people can sometimes and often do blame ourselves for our failing physical and/or mental health. However, as When I first arrived to PSU, I was hired to fill the position of a young Black man from South Af- rica. As I understood it, he was popular among his students. The then chair of the Black Studies De- partment did not recommend him for tenure. When I walked into his office, which became mine, what I could not take my eyes off of was a plaster sculpture of a white man almost life size with a removable stick up his butt. I didn’t know what to think when I saw this and it quickly disappeared. In hindsight, what it probably indicated was his upfront resistance to anti-Black racism, which was why he was pop- ular with his students. The chair of the department who did not support his tenure and rarely uttered the struggle just to walk the streets of Portland. The Portland metro area is the whitest large city in America, which is no accident. Oregon is the only state in the Union to have in its original constitution of 1857 an exclusion clause that made it illegal for Black and other people of col- or to live here. Today, Oregon has the highest pushout/dropout rate in the country for Black high school students, most of whom live in the Portland area. Furthermore, the homicide and incarceration rates in the Portland area are higher than national averages for Black peo- ple. The original state constitution of exclusion helped pave the way for a white homeland, and while removed from the constitution in 1926, the injustice is nevertheless I argue, as Vargas does, that the immediate death by police/vigilantes and/or the slow death by sickness and stress are interconnected. Anti-Black racism justifies them as the fault of Black people who are deemed criminal, lazy and without restraint. Joao Acosta Vargas shows in his article “The Liberation Imperative of Black Genocide,” it is society built on white supremacy and an- ti-blackness that must be held ac- countable. Jason Washington’s death is, as are the hundreds of others that hap- pen each year at the hands of the police, understood among many Black people as the state’s intent to keep Black people down. More subtle forms, while not always causing death, do cause suffering and remain much easier for main- stream/white society to exculpate themselves from and us to blame ourselves for or to just remain con- fused. I argue, as Vargas does, that the immediate death by police/vigilan- tes and/or the slow death by sick- ness and stress are interconnected. Anti-Black racism justifies them as the fault of Black people who are deemed criminal, lazy and without restraint. Letter to the Editor On Post Office Jobs Thanks for printing Keith Combs commentary (“Honor Veterans and Protect the Postal Service”, Nov. 13 issue). Another critical service that the USPS provides veterans is delivery of pharmaceuticals. The Vet- erans Administration ships all their medications through the postal ser- vice. And finally, your readers should know that the postal service has provided a pathway to living wage jobs for hundreds of thousands of Af- rican Americans (21% of the USPS workforce), many of them veterans. Jamie Partridge, retired letter carrier from northeast Portland word racism or white supremacy was probably threatened by a col- league who called out anti-Black racism regularly. Several years ago, a colleague of mine informed me that the professor died of a heart attack. He was just 50 years old. Could it be that the stresses of coming to PSU and working in a Black Studies Department that did not support him and where he was one of the few voices speaking out against white supremacy contribut- ed to his death? Or was it because he had poor eating habits and did not exercise enough? Like my colleague who died prematurely, I imagine he was much like me. When I first moved to Portland from Oakland, Calif., a city that continues to be majority non-white, I was and continue to still with us in spirit. More than ironically, Portland and much of Oregon benefits from having a reputation as one of the most politically progressive plac- es in the whole country. I joking- ly tell my students you can smoke weed here legally, ride your bike with thousands of other mostly white people naked (Portland has a naked bike ride every year) and Oregon has its own public de- fender specifically hired to protect animals, something which Black people do not have. More serious- ly, Portland also has a politically progressive reputation for having a descent public transportation system, probably one of the most extensive bike path systems in the country and a no growth boundary to prevent sprawl. Oregon, which is much whiter than Portland, also has one of the most accessi- ble voting processes in the coun- try. However, as I and others have pointed out these policies are due to the city and state being so white. Without a large non-white popula- tion, struggles over transportation, housing, schools, voting and other public services don’t confront re- sistance because these institutions generally serve the majority white population. White middle-class people in particular in the Portland area don’t have to share buses and housing with Black people because of our small numbers, so they fund their public transportation system, libraries and schools. Someone who I considered my friend used to be the coordinator for what is called the Multicul- tural Center at PSU. Much of the student activities on campus that serve non-white students come out of this center. An African, he was very supportive of the Black Studies Department. He regularly made his space available for the department to conduct what we call the Black Bag Speaker Se- ries. This event invites people and organizations doing work that fo- cuses on Black life locally and na- tionally to share their efforts with students and faculty. The topics include police brutality, art, music, literature, health, gender, immi- gration, sexuality and many other issues. It was the only Black-cen- tered forum on campus, but nev- er received institutional funding from PSU. My friend collaborated with me often to share expenses to help run the event. My friend also supported the Muslim students on campus for which I am sure many were not happy. He opened the Multicultural Center’s doors to the Muslim students on campus to hold prayer in the main room of the center on Fridays. I remember C ontinued on p age 12