The huge gap between Blacks and Whites about whether O. J. Simpson
was guilty of killing his wife and a companion was in many ways
expected. But subsequent polls, ranging from whether race played a part
in the slow federal response to Hurricane Katrina to, more recently,
was radio shock jock Don Imus’ firing fair and whether baseball slugger
Barry Bonds should break Hank Aaron’s major league record of 755 home
runs, exposes a racial gulf wider than the Atlantic Ocean. A poll
by ESPN/ABC News found more than twice as many Black fans as Whites are
likely to be pulling for Bonds to break the mark (74 percent to 28
percent). More than three-fourths of Whites – 76 percent – think Bonds
used steroids, compared to only 37 percent of African-Americans. A
sports fan observed on one sports blog: “If there is racism involving
Barry Bond’s chase for 758, it cuts both ways. Is it that a majority of
white people are coming down on Barry bonds because he is black? Or is
it that a majority of black people don’t find fault with a fellow black
person?” Complicating matters on both sides of the divide, there are many reasons to dislike Bonds that have nothing to do with race. “Away
from AT&T Park, Bonds is viewed mostly as a pariah, someone who has
tainted the game and made its most sacred statistic meaningless,” wrote
Tim Dahlberg, a columnist for the Associated Press. He explained,
“People liked Henry Aaron. They still do. Bonds, by contrast, wasn’t a
popular player even before his body grew large, his head ballooned to
cartoonish size and his home runs started splashing in McCovey Cove.
From the beginning of his career, he treated fans and the media with
contempt, and they responded with growing contempt for him.” Speaking
of contempt, there was nothing like the contempt shown for Don Imus
after he expressed contempt for the predominantly Black Rutgers
University basketball team, calling the players “nappy-headed hos.” The
radio shock jock was fired by CBS, the distributor of his syndicated
radio program, and MSNBC, the cable channel that simulcasts the show. There
was a general consensus that Imus got what he deserved. Or, was there a
consensus? A survey by the Pew Center for the People & the Press
found that a majority of people – 53 percent of Whites and 61 percent
of Blacks – felt that the Imus punishment was appropriate;
approximately twice as many Whites as Blacks believe his punishment was
too tough (35 percent to 18 percent). For me, the most shocking
racial comparison was the response to Hurricane Katrina. Both Don Imus
and Barry Bonds could be written off as creeps. But with Katrina, we
were talking about the national disaster. Yet, Blacks and Whites failed
to see eye-to-eye on Hurricane Katriana. According to a CNN/USA
Today poll, a majority of African-Americans – six in 10 – said the
federal government was slow to rescue New Orleans residents because
many of them were Black. However, only one in eight Whites shared that
view. The highly-publicized O.J. Simpson murder trial in 1996 was
the mother of all racial divides. A CNN/USA Today Poll showed that 62
percent of African-Americans agreed with the jury’s decision to acquit
Simpson. But only 20 percent of Whites thought the jury was right to
acquit the former football star. A 2001 Gallup Poll put all of
the polls in context: “Nearly half of whites and two-thirds of blacks
think that race relations will always be a problem in this country.” It will certainly remain a problem if Whites and Blacks continue to look at major issues through their own racial lenses. But there is some good news buried under all of those polls. The
Gallup survey reported, “When asked whether relations between blacks
and whites have improved, remained the same, or gotten worse over the
past year, similar proportions of blacks (33 percent) and whites (29
percent) say that relations have improved.” The ESPN/ABC Barry
Bonds poll provide further cause for optimism. Younger Whites are 15
points more likely than older Whites to recognize Bonds as the home run
king and feel that he deserves to be in the Hall of Fame. Now, if they could only get the old heads to catch up.
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