Politics & Government
Kansans Must Take Stronger Action Against Acts Of Discrimination
Just four years ago, three white southwest Kansas men were arrested by the FBI and charged with domestic terrorism.

By
David Norlin - December 1, 2020
The Kansas Reflector welcomes opinion pieces from writers who share our goal of widening the conversation about how public policies affect the day-to-day lives of people throughout our state. David Norlin is a retired Cloud County Community College teacher, where he was department chairman of Communications/English, specializing in media.
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I am blessed with many Kansas friends. They are mostly open-minded, thoughtful, considerate people. My Kansas hometowns β McCracken, Lawrence, Topeka, Garden City, Concordia and Salina β have all been comfortable, stimulating, welcoming places to live. What could go wrong?
Well, this. We recently have found ourselves confronted with a dawning awareness that even us βnormalβ people may be unwittingly complicit in a long-standing, straight-jacketed social structure that keeps people in their place, whatever that place might be.
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Case in point: Just four years ago, three white southwest Kansas men, calling themselves βThe Crusaders,β were arrested by the FBI and charged with domestic terrorism. Why? They planned to blow up four vehicles filled with explosives at the four corners of a Somali apartment complex in Garden City, creating untold terror, havoc and bloodshed among Somalian meat-packing plant worker refugees. They got 25-30 years in prison.
Four years later, in this election cycle, an ad for First District Congressional candidate Tracey Mann claimed his primary opponent voted to bring Somalis (from a βterrorist countryβ) to Garden City. In so doing, he made terrorists out of potential victims of terrorism. He got two years in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Thus did skin color and religion make Somalis an easy target, using upside-down logic for political gain. This in America, who welcomes its poor, tired, huddled masses yearning to breathe free. And for a better Kansas economy, to boot.
Ijeoma Oluo, in her book, βSo You Want to Talk about Race,β writes that Americans are frightened at the revelation that βAmerica is not and never has been the melting-pot utopiaβ weβve all been taught. But thereβs still an underlying faith, especially among our youth, that America is still a place for people yearning to breathe free.
This was illustrated on Oct. 22, when a Junction City High School student was told by a JCHS employee to remove her Islamic head scarf (hijab). Students promptly demonstrated outside the school to protest religious discrimination. She kept her hijab, but the principal, who βinstructedβ her to write about its βcultural significance,β was suspended for the year by the board.
Hopeful though this is, it will take deep thought and deeper action for us all to act on our dawning awareness that simply condemning acts of discrimination is not enough.
Isabel Wilkerson provides a keen analysis of the problem in her book βCaste.β She studies a worldwide system that creates βuntouchablesβ in India, the United States and other countries that have discovered cheap labor can be dominated and extracted for the benefit of the upper castes, who are by definition white or lighter-skinned.
To use Wilkersonβs analogy, βAmerica is an old house.β That βslight weltβ in the spare bedroom corner plaster, chalked up to idiosyncrasy, over time βbecomes a wave that widens and bulges despite the new roof.β The owner of an old house knows βwhatever is lurking will fester, whether you choose to look or not.β
Ignorance is no protection from the consequences of inaction. Whatever you are wishing away βgnaws at youβ until you gather courage βto face what you would rather not see.β If you are living in it, you either fix what is needed or see the whole structure disintegrate around you, leaving you at the mercy of the elements.
Representative-elect Mannβs ad was designed to trigger emotional reaction, not discussion. Many likely flashed on the movie βBlackhawk Down,β depicting U.S. troops pinned down helplessly in Mogadishu, nearly 30 years ago in Somalia. Those reacting likely gathered little information about the 2016 Garden City refugees, nor saw another film, βStrangers in Town,β about Somalis and other Garden Citiansβ 2019 gatherings and dinner parties that cemented friendships.
Mannβs ad not only plastered over the problem, it created a flimsy foundation for his leadership and our country as a whole. Foundation-destroying dynamite was already planted when Mann pledged fealty to President Donald Trumpβs Sept. 22 Executive Order to cut funding for any diversity program that mentions white privilege or βcritical race theory,β thus chilling efforts to bring us together.
If we are to live in this old house, we need to fix it. The first order of business would be to wake up, think more independently and reach out across ideological chasms. We need to hire, and be, competent carpenters who measure twice, cut once β and donβt encourage existing termites.
Kansans, we are better than this. We must demand awareness, both of ourselves and our representatives, as we repair and improve this House β and Senate β that should shelter us all.
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The Kansas Reflector seeks to increase people's awareness of how decisions made by elected representatives and other public servants affect our day-to-day lives. We hope to empower and inspire greater participation in democracy throughout Kansas.