White people. They have their missteps, but they're mostly okay.
And that's what our brilliant producer, Meg Cramer, does in this short episode—she gives amazing, priceless advice on how white people can take themselves out of the spotlight, check their privilege, and become better allies in the fight for equality.
Below is the text the email she sent to a white person who wrote in with this question. It's just a rough draft and Meg isn't an expert on allyship, but her advice is PERFECT and should be heard by everybody looking to do better.
Dear Listener,
Meg Cramer, here, one of the producers who works on Another Round. This is a great question, and one that I think about all the time, especially as a white woman producing a show for an intended audience that doesn't include me. I don't have a complete answer, but here are a few things I think about:
I try to take on the work of understanding my own privilege without asking anyone else to explain it or help me feel better about having it. I learned a lot about that from this essay. Sometimes I slip up. Like when I tell people that, even though I'm from the suburbs, I'm not from the rich suburbs. As if it matters that I only have some of the white privilege, not all of it.
Have you ever had a conversation with a feminist man come grinding to a halt because he starts to complain about how feminists use language that excludes men, even the feminist men? ("Not all men...") I have! Being a good ally often means not being included in the conversation, because the conversation isn't about you. It's good to listen. If you feel uncomfortable and excluded because you're white, you should own those feelings.
When there is a conversation happening in the news or on Twitter or among activists or writers that I think is important, I try to find a way to amplify it. Listen and amplify. Listen and amplify. These days, that means that I tell a lot of white people to listen to Another Round. Amplifying the opinions and ideas of other people is a way to participate without taking up space.
In that vein - I talk to other white people about racism. Especially the older people in my family who have an outdated idea of what it means to be progressive.
Lastly: If you feel angry, sad, desperate, and helpless in the face of individual and institutional racism in America, you're not the only one. But that's no excuse for ignorance. You have the whole Internet! The public library system! There are lots of ways to learn. Here are a few places you can go from here:
12 Ways to Be a White Ally to Black People
11 Things White People Can Do to Be Real Anti-Racist Allies
13 Must-Reads For The Black Feminist
Good luck, and thanks so much for listening to Another Round.