RACISM

How “Not All White People” Became an Assault on All Black People

Unpacking the harm of a seemingly benign phrase

Allison Wiltz
4 min readApr 27, 2022

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Photo by Dmitry Vechorko on Unsplash

When Black people discuss racism, there’s usually at least one commenter who says, “not all White people,” as if they’re telling you something special, something redeeming. White people who use this phrase attempt to undermine a credible claim of racism to lessen it. “A common form of derailment is to dismiss or discredit what someone is trying to say by commenting on how they are saying it.”

Not all White people, not all men, and not all cops are childish deflections from the very real problems our society faces — the good doesn’t redeem the bad. Abolitionists like Anthony Benezet don’t make up for Madame LaLaurie, a White woman so cruel that her behavior disgusted other slaveowners. Unfortunately, the good people in this world don’t make up for the bad, and insisting they do is “gaslighting.”

So, when I wrote a historical article about White people feeding Black babies to alligators in southern swamps, the “not all White people” brigade showed up in an attempt to undermine the story. Using newspaper articles from the Library of Congress, I discovered some stories that, while difficult to read, were essential for historical accuracy. The cruelty I found and reported…

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Allison Wiltz

Black womanist Scholar bylines @ Momentum, Oprah Daily, ZORA, GEN, EIC of Cultured #WEOC Founder allisonthedailywriter.com https://ko-fi.com/allyfromnola