The Daily Signal - Star Parker Shares Why It's 'Not True' That 'America Is Systemically Racist'
Episode Date: June 12, 2020In 1992 Star Parker ran a small publishing business in Los Angeles. Her business was destroyed by riots after four police officers were exonerated of charges after Rodney King's beating. Star Parker,... the president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and a columnist for The Daily Signal, joins the podcast today to talk about why she believes America isn’t racist. We also cover these stories: President Trump says he will boot out Antifa’s takeover of areas of Seattle following the unrest and riots in the wake of George Floyd’s death. U.S. General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has apologized for accompanying President Trump on his walk from the White House to St. John's Church on June 1. The Senate Armed Services Committee has voted to rename military entities with confederate names. The Daily Signal Podcast is available on Ricochet, Apple Podcasts, Pippa, Google Play, or Stitcher. All of our podcasts can be found at DailySignal.com/podcasts. If you like what you hear, please leave a review. You can also leave us a message at 202-608-6205 or write us at letters@dailysignal.com. Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Friday, June 12.
I'm Virginia Allen.
And I'm Rachel Dahl Judis.
Star Parker is the president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and a columnist for the Daily Signal.
She joins me on the podcast to talk about why she believes America isn't inherently racist.
Don't forget.
If you're enjoying this podcast, please be sure to leave a review or a five-star rating on Apple Podcasts and encourage others to subscribe.
Now, under our top news.
President Trump says he will boot out Antifah's takeover of areas of Seattle following the unrest and riots following George Floyd's death.
On Wednesday, Trump tweeted,
Radical left governor Jay Inslee and the mayor of Seattle are being taunted and played at a level that our great country has never seen before.
Take back your city now.
If you don't do it, I will.
This is not a game.
These ugly anarchists must be stopped immediately.
Move fast.
The mayor of Seattle, Jenny Durkin tweeted Wednesday night, replying to Trump's tweet,
Make us all safe. Go back to your bunker. Hashtag Black Lives Matter.
U.S. General Mark Millie, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has apologized for accompanying President Trump on his walk from the White House to St. John's Church on June 1st, where the president posed for photos.
Trump received a great deal of criticism for dispersing people.
peaceful protests in Lafayette Square close to the White House so he could take photos in front of
the historic church, which had been set on fire by rioters earlier that week. In a pre-recorded
speech to graduates of the National Defense University on Thursday, General Milley explained
why he regrets the actions per Tony Doherty. As many of you saw the result of the photograph
of me at Lafayette Square last week, that sparked a national debate about the role of
the military and civil society, I should not have been there. My presence in that moment and
in that environment created a perception of the military involved in domestic politics. As a
commissioned, uniformed officer, it was a mistake that I have learned from, and I sincerely hope
we all can learn from it. We who wear the cloth of our nation come from the people of our nation,
and we must hold dear the principle of an apolitical military.
that is so deeply rooted in the very essence of our republic.
And this is not easy.
It takes time and work and effort.
But it may be the most important thing
each and every one of us does every single day.
The Senate Armed Services Committee has voted to rename military entities
with Confederate names.
Democrat Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts pushed the amendment.
Prior to the amendment's passing,
Trump tweeted that he would veto any NDAA bill
if it included provisions for renaming bases, the Hill reported.
Trump tweeted,
These monumental and very powerful bases have become part of a great American heritage
and a history of winning, victory, and freedom.
He added,
Therefore, my administration will not even consider
the renaming of these magnificent and fabled military installations.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo,
Defense Secretary Mark Esper,
and Attorney General William Barr
announced economic sanctions against leaders of the International Criminal Court on Thursday.
The sanctions have been approved by President Trump in response to officials at the International Criminal Court launching an investigation into possible war crimes and crimes against humanity, which include torture and rape, carried out by American troops and CIA agents in Afghanistan.
But the legitimacy of the International Criminal Court's investigation is being called into question by,
White House leaders, with Mike Pompeo referring to the ICC as a, quote, kangaroo court.
Esper said in his official remarks at the International Criminal Court press conference Thursday,
that, quote, the international criminal court's efforts to investigate and prosecute,
Americans are inconsistent with fundamental principles of international law and the practice of
international courts. And he added, this administration will not allow American citizens
who have served our country to be subjected to illegitimate investigations.
Instead, we expect information about alleged misconduct by our people to be turned over to U.S.
authorities so that we can take the appropriate action, as we have consistently done in the past.
Now stay tuned for my conversation with Star Parker on her perspective of racism in America.
We need standard bears in Washington, D.C.
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That's why the Heritage Foundation started the National Coronavirus Recovery Commission.
The commission's goal is to save lives, but also the livelihood of millions of Americans impacted by this virus.
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released several recommendations to help our nation's leaders navigate us through this crisis
and move toward a recovery. Log on to www.com.com to track the commission's recommendations
and to see what our recovery plan looks like. Again, that's www.com.com. We are joined today on the
Daily Signal podcast by Star Parker. She's the president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education,
and she's also a columnist for the Daily Signal. Star, thank you so much for being on the Daily Signal
Podcast. Well, you're welcome. Thank you for inviting me. Well, it's great to have you on. Really a pleasure.
Well, in a recent column, you had written about how in 1992 you operated a small publishing business
in Los Angeles, which was destroyed as a result of the riots that ensued after four police officers
were quitted of charges of excessive silence in the beating of Rodney King.
So can you tell us how that had an impact on your life?
Well, it changed my life because it propelled me into speaking out on behalf of culture,
on behalf of poverty, on behalf of race-relation issues that surround those three buckets.
Because up until that point, I was like most Americans, and in particular African-American,
that are God fear, church going, that basically stayed silent when it came to issues that
hit the front page.
But because of my background, I just felt compelled to speak out after the 92 Los Angeles
riots, which is the turning point to propel me then to a national spotlight.
See, I hadn't believed all the lies that I was hearing at that time during the riots.
The lies of the left, I called them.
When I was younger and coming of age, similar to what we're seeing happen.
the lives of the youth that are now terrorized in our streets.
I believe the lies that America was stacked against me, that it was inherently racist.
I believe the lie that, you know, my problems were someone else's fault.
I believe the lie that I just didn't have any type of future in America.
And as a result, I got lost, very lost in all types of activities similar to what we
saw, but the last couple of weeks, criminal activity, drug activity, sexual activity.
I was in and out of abortion clinic after clinic.
And it wasn't until a Christian conversion that I changed my life.
I was on welfare when someone finally said, you know,
you don't have to think about yourself in terms that others have dictated.
You don't have to think about yourself in terms of, even though on race matters and what we're hearing today,
that America's racist, they didn't believe all of that.
And they kind of told me that Christ didn't believe all of that.
And, you know, I had done so many things.
and now I'm three and a half years and welfare watching my life just spiral into a little dark hole.
I'm thankful that I didn't get caught for armed robbery and I didn't end the rest of my life at jail.
So I actually listened to them.
I went to their church and I heard the gospel.
I heard that I'm a unique individual made in Christ and that God loved me and he forgave me and he wasn't mad at me.
And he had set a course for me.
And as a result of that, I was able to change my life.
I got a degree in marketing and international business.
I started one, and that's when the Los Angeles riots hit.
And at that point, I was just a comfortable Christian, but I said, you know what, this is not fair, this narrative that so many are caught up in today when I heard the same story 20 years ago.
And as a result of me, not listening any longer look at my life today.
So I just started speaking out.
And over time, after consulting on federal welfare reform in the 90s, I started the organization that I run here in Washington, D.C. today.
Well, thank you so much for sharing that star. Given what you experienced in 1992, what has your
perspective been on the killing of George Floyd, as well as all the protests and riots we have
seen since then? Well, I think that everyone is appalled. I mean, this is the first time that
many of us have experienced watching in live time, in real time, someone's life being taken from
them. And I think that that panic and emotion within all of us would propel some to say, I've got to get out
the streets. I've got a vent. I've got to go and protest. I've got to just do something.
But, you know, the scripture is clear that a soft answer, you know, it just keeps that wrath away.
And what we need to do sometimes is to stop pause and allow for ourselves to get into that
moment and say, what is it that I should be really thinking about for myself? The grief that
each and every one of us uniquely experienced in watching that, that killing in real time was our
own grief. And like any time you have grief, you have to work it through yourself, similar to
if someone loses a child. Well, the child that was lost, the parent's grief is very different from
the grandparents' grief, which is very different from the siblings' grief. And I think as a nation,
we should be pretty impressed with ourselves to say that this was not about race. If it were about
race, we would not have even thought about it, that it would not have impacted us so deeply.
What we saw on the streets was more about power because people were in a moment.
They felt that they had to have an emotional event.
But we as a nation were in COVID-19.
We were supposed to be shut down.
So in my personal humble opinion, I felt that where we should have gone was to our face
instead of to the streets to then create so much more damage against our fellow man.
I wanted to ask, too, how is racism or race relations, given everything you've seen from the time you were growing up to being a young adult to now today,
how would you say it's evolved and what is your perspective on it maybe when you're a younger person to now?
My perspective is that we lost ourselves in the civil rights era after the Civil Rights Act was signed into law.
We as a people should have done what Dr. King asked us to do in his I Have a Dream speech.
And that was to go back into the communities and build.
Because once the Civil Rights Act was signed into law, we should have no longer as a nation thought about race as a special.
interests, thought about race as a collective.
Individually, of course, we're uniquely made, and there's some beauty in all of us,
and ethnicity has that attributes itself.
But when you think about what happened after King, after the riots of the 60s, we politicized
race.
The next thing you know, our nation was moving into only discovering race.
The perception of racism became a business because we started having a firm of action
programs and racial preference programs. And you fast forward that to today, there's just
very few, there are very few discussions that can take place without emphasizing race. So I think
it has hurt us as a nation to keep this heavy emphasis on special interests and ethnicity.
Well, you recently held a virtual conference that gathered around 200 pastors to encourage the
broadest possible intervention on behalf of national peace and reconciliation. I wanted to ask,
What were your takeaways from that event?
The humility of the pastors on the phone to say,
we know that something is inherently wrong in our culture today,
that this is not just race.
We're being told by the mainstream media
and or the activists in the activist organizations.
This is a spiritual problem that's rooted in a moral dilemma,
and we need to be mindful of that.
And so much prayer went forth,
but also decisions to take action.
And so as the center,
for urban renewal and education, urban cure, we are developing out a three-prong program right now
with those pastors, projects that we believe will be able to help turn the tide away from what
we're hearing now, especially from the left, that they're going to go overboard with
this moment in time. You know, they don't let a crisis go to waste, and yet this is a crisis.
This was appalling to watch lifetime killing. But we also know as a people that we are unique
and we need to keep our mindset on that.
We do not need some of what they are saying in the Congress now that they're going to focus
a lot more attention on ethnicity and race.
I mean, it's embarrassing what the governor of Kentucky said that now he's just going
kind of, what, line up all the blacks and give him free health care?
Or is this a special line we all have to get in?
I mean, let's not go that path.
I think that the insistence that this is systemic racism should be questioned.
We're talking about institutions that have.
have a perception of racism, business that has been governing for the last 50 years.
But I think that what we should learn from this moment in time is to get rid of those programs,
not increase their dimensions and their signs.
We'll start in your email announcing this teleconference that you had with the pastors.
You had said, I don't agree that our nation is racist.
That mantra is the poison that entrenches resentment and division among us.
The daily hunt for racism from top to bottom of our nation's institutions have institutionalized
the perception of racism in the post-civil rights era.
And I know you've hit on this briefly a little bit, but can you dive into this perspective
a little bit more on your thoughts here and how to move forward?
Yeah, let's think about what we're being asked to do now as a society because of this
incident that we all will agree should not have happened.
We don't know all of the details.
We will find out all of the details and justice will be served.
This is not the 1950s where you wonder if justice is going to be served.
justice will be served in this particular instance because the apparatus of the state that the
incident occurred in, but as well as the American people are different people now. So let's think about
where we're being taken now in this time. We're having now the educational apparatus, our
institutional education, say, let's do books. Let's have each white person go out and just try to find a
black friend. That, you know, this is offensive that we're going to, now let's think of ways that we can
approach that black person about their life.
I really prefer that my grandchildren are thought of as unique individuals and not someone
seeking them out because of their race to ask them questions that might be embarrassing, that
might have nothing to do with a separated and different culture. The law is clear. Our
Constitution is clear. And we as a people need to get to the place to where we know we're not
colored blind, but where we're equal. And that, I think, has already occurred. When the Civil Rights
Act was signed into law, I think that it offered us an opportunity as American people to be
one, a pluribus unum. But what we know now is there are people who have vested interest in
overturning America. They don't believe that America is inherently good. They don't believe what the
Toadale said about America. They think America is inherently evil. And this founding country that
had slaves have to pay forever. And so in that, they're going to insist to rewrite America.
We're hearing it the rhetoric that we should no longer have police forces. Leave us alone.
I don't know what else to say, but just let's leave us alone. Leave race out of every question.
Let's just move on as individual unique people and let friendships bond and let work relationship.
It's fascinating in work relationships.
People, little two-year-olds, they work with anyone of any ethnicity if they're working on trying to get a truck to run up a hill or they're playing in a playground.
You know, if you're going to have racial insensitivities, they're learned and there's nothing that a society can do to a parent that passes on those types of scourges.
You can't legislate morality.
We can govern behavior through law, but you can't legislate morality.
We're not going to purge our country of every racist cop.
It's just not human nature to be able to say, I can be good all of the time,
and I can assure that no one will ever be a racist.
So I think that the goal for America should be to undo all of the perception of racism business,
including all the affirmative action and racial preference programs,
And then I think that we should just move on individually.
Well, you also recently met with Vice President Mike Pence and other African-American leaders
to discuss how the country can move forward following George Floyd's death.
So is there anything from that meeting that you can share about insights that were discussed
that you're excited about?
Well, I think that Vice President Pence made it clear that the White House is alerted to
ensure that not only justice is served for the family of Mr. Floyd, but also that justice is served
for those that had their property violated and either loss of life during the domestic
terrorism that occurred over the last week, number one. Number two, the Vice President
assured us that we're going to look now at some of the questions.
that stem from the disparities in our society when it comes to our poor.
Because this White House has already been moving toward equalizes the plan feel, if you
will, by focusing attention on the economy, making sure that we reduce regulation and taxes
so that the weakest link, the weakest communities will have flourishing.
And there was some special attention place there as well.
because in the tax bill, a couple of senators put in a unique opportunity zone initiative that allowed for capital to flow into these hard hit zip codes so that business will come in and then jobs will be created and those communities will be turned around.
And interestingly, it worked.
It worked very, very successfully.
Black unemployment rates were lower than ever in our history.
Family life was starting to develop because when people have money in their pocket, they can make decisions for,
their future. So we were already seeing great health coming from the leadership of the Trump
administration. Unfortunately, for COVID, it was an interruption. And now, you know, with the riots,
it's made a little bit more difficult, and it will be a little bit more difficult for those
communities to bounce back. But I'm confident that they will bounce back. Once someone has had a
job, they will get another one. Sir, would you have any advice for white Americans who are concerned
about Mr. Floyd's death and are wondering if there's anything they can do to improve race
relationships in America or something that they can do practically to help their communities.
Well, I think to improve race relations in America, one thing that whites might want to consider
is helping those that are not getting the education that they need in our most distressed
zip codes. And the way they can help is by fighting for money to follow.
children to the school's parents want. We need parental choice. We need educational options.
African-American poor families are begging to get out of these government-funded union-controlled
schools. They're not serving the needs of their children. So that's one place that a society can
help. But when you talk about what can white people do to black, the last thing we need to do
is start looking only at ethnicity and saying, because you're black, I'm going to come up with you
and I'm going to try to make a relationship.
Most Americans are cordial to their neighbors.
They war cross aisles racially and ethnically owned projects at work and other places.
So we need to not buy into the narrative that we're hearing from on high now and even on the Congress and every kind of public place that America is systemically racist.
This is not true.
So what we have to do is not have whites do that.
If they want to help the Floyd family, help them.
You know, we saw that the family.
is in need. They weren't expecting a death. And often when you're not expecting a death of a loved one, you might have to pass the hat. So if someone really feels in their selves that they need to do something, then do something. But this is not corporate action. The grief is your own. The grief is our own. This is not something that we do collectively because what we're doing collectively doesn't work. We see that in government programs. This doesn't work when we think that we can do a one-size-fits-all to build race relationships.
No, if you have friends of other ethnicities, then build a friendship.
But let's not make it a science.
Friendships and relationships are art.
And I think that we should embrace that.
Well, Star, what a wonderful note to end on.
Thank you so much for joining the Daily Signal podcast.
We appreciate having you.
Well, I appreciate being with you.
Thank you.
And that will do it for today's episode.
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