Friday, 29 October 2021

Rutgers Professor: "We got to take white people out"

'We got to take white people out': Rutgers University professor, 41, calls white people 'villains', says 'Critical Race Theory is just the proper teaching of American history' and praises dwindling white birth rates in online discussion

  • Brittney Cooper, 41, said that whiteness 'totally skews our view of everything,' adding that she 'thinks that white people are committed to being villains'
  • She made the shocking comments to The Root Institute's Michael Harriot during an online conference titled Unpacking The Attacks On Critical Race Theory 
  • Cooper also said that 'white people's birth rates are going down' because they can't afford children but was sure to note that 'they kind of deserve it'
  • The Root Institute's description of the conversation called it 'a healthy dose of reality' 
  • Cooper is a professor at Rutgers University where she teaches classes on women's and genders studies

New Jersey professor said that 'we got to take white people out' during a discussion on the national backlash on Critical Race Theory. 

Brittney Cooper, 41, a professor at Rutgers University, made the shocking comment during an online discussion with The Root's Michael Harriot titled Unpacking The Attacks On Critical Race Theory on September 21.

She started by saying on the topic: 'Kids actually can grasp Critical Race Theory because the issue that the right has, is that Critical Race Theory is just the proper teaching of American history.'

She said the accurate portrayal of history was the white people 'didn't discover America' because there were already indigenous people and that they had 'committed acts of violence in order to make yourselves seem superior.' 

Cooper added: 'It's not that white people don't know what they have done,' presumably referencing slavery, which was abolished in 1865 after a nearly 300-year-long stint of being legal.

'They fear that there is no other way to be human than the way in which they are human' noting that whenever she speaks to a white person they write off 'all of this power' as merely a part of 'human nature'.

New Jersey professor Brittney Cooper (pictured) said: 'We got to take these motherf*****s out' when discussing white people and Critical Race Theory (CRT) during an online conference with The Root Institute on September 21

New Jersey professor Brittney Cooper (pictured) said: 'We got to take these motherf*****s out' when discussing white people and Critical Race Theory (CRT) during an online conference with The Root Institute on September 21

Host Michael Harriot (pictured) nodded in agreement throughout the conversation
Cooper (pictured) said that whiteness 'totally skews our view of everything,' adding that she also 'thinks that white people are committed to being villains in the aggregate'

Host Michael Harriot (left) nodded in agreement throughout the conversation as Cooper (right) said that whiteness 'totally skews our view of everything,' adding that she also 'thinks that white people are committed to being villains in the aggregate'

Cooper continued: 'They do this thing where they say that how white people have done humanity - how they have acted as human beings - is the way all of us act. So they think black people are going to get them back. 

'And I wouldn't be mad at the black people who want to get them back but what I believe about black people is that we have seen what a sh** show this iteration of treatment of other human beings means. And my hope is that we would do it differently in the moments when we have some power.' 

During Cooper's response Harriot was seen nodding his head in agreement before asking the Rutgers professor what she thinks the other options are. 

He provided the options as 'they' - presumably lumping all white people together - 'coming around to the majority of human beings on the planet's way of thinking' or 'they say f*** that' because they don't want to relinquish said 'power'.

Cooper called whiteness an 'inconvenient interruption' in history and referenced a 2016 TED Talk where she 'broke down the subject of racism and its passage through the history of America'

Cooper called whiteness an 'inconvenient interruption' in history and referenced a 2016 TED Talk where she 'broke down the subject of racism and its passage through the history of America'

Cooper candidly responded: 'The thing I want to say to you is, "We got to take these motherf*****s out," but like we can't say that,' before noting that she 'doesn't believe in a project of violence'.

CRITICAL RACE THEORY: WHAT DOES IT MEAN?

The fight over critical race theory in schools has escalated in the United States over the last year.

The theory has sparked a fierce nationwide debate in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests around the country over the last year and the introduction of the 1619 Project.

The 1619 Project, which was published by the New York Times in 2019 to mark 400 years since the first enslaved Africans arrived on American shores, reframes American history by 'placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the center of the US narrative'.

The debate surrounding critical race theory regards concerns that some children are being indoctrinated into thinking that white people are inherently racist or sexist.

Those against critical race theory have argued it reduces people to the categories of 'privileged' or 'oppressed' based on their skin color.

Supporters, however, say the theory is vital to eliminating racism because it examines the ways in which race influence American politics, culture and the law.

She shared that she also 'thinks that white people are committed to being villains in the aggregate'.

She added that whiteness 'totally skews our view of everything' and cited a TED Talk she did on the topic back in 2016 titled The Racial Politics Of Time. According to a synopsis the speech 'broke down the subject of racism and its passage through the history of America'.

Cooper - a graduate of Howard University in Washington, DC - went on to elaborate on 'white colonialism' and said it is her job to help 'get to the other side of this very inconvenient apoca(lyptic)-interruption of black and indigenous world-making'.

She then asked: 'Does that give people comfort on the day-to-day when you're just having to deal with white folks and the travesties that they create in the sense that they want to destroy the planet?'

'Nah,' Cooper said in response to her own question.  

'Despite what white people think of themselves they do not define the laws of eternity,' she added when theorizing about when whiteness, which she called an 'inconvenient interruption' in history, will end.

'Their projects are not so sophisticated' she added, noting that she 'showed up' in this point of history 'precisely so that we could help to figure out an end and a way to the other side of this gargantuan historical tragedy that is white supremacy'.

The Root Institute's description of the conversation called it 'a healthy dose of reality'.

The New Jersey professor teaches classes on women's and genders studies and authored three books 'expressing her frustrations, desires and expectations of society as an African American feminist woman,' according to Cooper's website

Cooper is a professor who teaches classes on women's and genders studies at Rutgers University in New Jersey

Cooper is a professor who teaches classes on women's and genders studies at Rutgers University in New Jersey

Rutgers University has yet to comment on Cooper's statements. 

After a look at her social media it is evident that Cooper keeps her personal life out of the public eye. It is unclear if she is in a relationship or has children. 

But she did carve out time in the segment to discuss white people having children. She said: 'White people's birth rates are going down...because they literally cannot afford to put newer generations into the middle class.'

'They kind of deserve it,' she added with a smile.

Cooper ended the segment circling back to CRT, saying that it helps black people 'reclaim our own heritage, our own power, our own sense of the ways that our life-giving strategies'.

'That's why white people are afraid of us,' she said, adding: 'Until they need us.'

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