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White Privilege in Child Welfare: What Racism Looks Like [chronicleofsocialchange.org]

 

By Dr. Sharon McDaniel, The Chronicle of Social Change, June 23, 2020.

From the moment of their conception, every African American person begins a personal timeline of racism, for their mother experiences racism in that moment — our babies understand and feel in the womb. Our babies also die in the womb. U.S. Newsreported that babies born to Black women are more than three times as likely as babies born to White women to die of preterm birth-related issues.

For Black and Brown people, racism is a daily experience; it is not episodic. There is no beginning or ending. There is only intensity. There are times when it is a more subtle microaggression, such as the glance a Black person receives when walking into a store. Then there are times when it is overt or, as was the case for Mr. George Floyd, violent.

More than 25 years ago, a point on my personal timeline of racism presented itself. At the height of the crack epidemic, when the criminal justice system was breaking apart Black families, it created a pipeline to the child welfare system. The racism fueling incarceration for drug use was severe and unrelenting in all Black and Brown communities and had rippling effects. For example, in the late ’80s and early ’90s, the number of children of color coming into foster care more than doubled.

[To read more of this article, please click here.]

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Whatever is done to the Child Welfare system, please let’s not make things worse for the kids just because adults are mad.   Kids always get the short end of every stick every time.  

And  I do need to point out that it was a Democrat who signed the crime bill and made caging people for profit a fashionable epidemic.  It was that same white democrat, Bill Clinton, who  also signed welfare reform, eliminating the new deal poverty safety net program for kids.   

The country is in deep trouble. So many more people are now pushed into poverty and they won’t have the material resources to care for their kids.  This probably should have been considered before such reckless policies to control a virus no more dangerous than influenza were put in place. Now a whole lot more kids are going to be in trouble and it would be a good idea to try to figure out SAFE ways to keep those kids safe and with their parents and not with the state.  The state isn’t gonna have any resources to care for these kids either. I think I saw Idaho using the CARES act money to change regulations for kids coming into DHS - like not needing as many people watching the kids and putting the kids in large group homes - I for one am unhappy that anyone would consider taking kids in mass from their parents because of an economic disaster that reckless politicians created. 

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