In the wake of the racist mass shooting carried out in Buffalo, New York, over the weekend, I’ve been thinking about the tantrum Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas threw during Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation hearings in March.
Specifically, I’ve thought about the bizarre point at which Cruz railed against Ibram X. Kendi’s book “Antiracist Baby,” alleging the book — which had nothing to do with Jackson — unfairly demonized white babies as racist. This was a deliberately dim summary of a book meant to discourage racist views at a young age.
As a country, we should be holding congressional hearings about white parenthood and young white men’s susceptibility to extremist violence.
But white children deserve a more promising, less stupid future than the ones conservatives like Cruz are looking to give them. And 10 people killed, allegedly by an 18-year-old white nationalist who believes in the deluded “great replacement theory,” is all the evidence one needs to prove white people shouldn’t spurn methods that might make them more effective parents in a world rife with racism.
And, in fact, the spike in sales of “Antiracist Baby” following Cruz’ diatribe seems to indicate that there is an appetite for antiracist teachings among some white parents — not just because they will make the world better, but because they will make their children better, too. White parents who share this belief need to be more vocal in denouncing the massacre in Buffalo, and highlighting its relationship to the current crises afflicting white parents and kids.
To be clear: By “crises,” I’m referring to the obsession some parents have shown with censoring history about racial inequality, along with the inability of some white people to deter their children from embracing white nationalist views. Both are obstacles to living happily and peacefully in a multiracial democracy.
As a country, we should be holding congressional hearings about white parenthood and young white men’s susceptibility to extremist violence. We should be commissioning studies and hosting symposiums on the inheritance of white racism, not unlike the ways the U.S. government has sought to diagnose maladies in Black culture and Black families in the past.








