It’s Time to Advance Public Policies and Transform an Economic System Built on Violence and Inequality

This is a personal perspective from an employee at B Lab, the nonprofit behind Certified B Corporations. In this series, we invite individual B Lab employees to share their experiences, inspiration, hopes, and challenges as they work toward a more inclusive and regenerative world. This post includes excerpts of a B Lab Voices article by Jodeen Olguín-Tayler, Head of Partnerships and Strategic Growth, B Lab Global.

There has been no shortage of tests. Black people have been dying from racial inequality in health care, the school-to-prison pipeline, the disproportionate vulnerability to the coronavirus and suffering unequal economic impacts from the COVID-19 crisis. These are not accidents. These are all symptoms of another deadly illness.

These violent symptoms point to an illness that has gripped this country since its birth and has been embedded into its very DNA. The murders of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and Tony McDade are painfully visible manifestations of this epidemic. This illness is around us — impacting us differently, yet none of us are free from it. For those of us who can’t ignore the symptoms, we need all people to see them as parts of the same sickness: White Supremacy.

Jodeen Olguín-Tayler, Head of Partnerships and Strategic Growth, B Lab Global, and her son.

What many of those protesting are asking is that we don’t ignore the sickness that choked Geogre’s breath from his body, nor deny the illness that allowed three other officers to stand by watching. We need action against the contagion released with the tweets of public officials escalating the violence. And, if you are angry at these actions, please also grieve about the silence of neighbors and family — because that, too, tests positive.

As a Chicana woman, I’m painfully familiar with both the brutal racism enacted on my people, and with the policing of White identity that results in a more privileged position for those — like myself — who are People of Color with light-colored skin. This other type of policing is yet another force meant to divide us from each other. Which is why, when my tías and primos in New Mexico and my brother in São Paulo, Brasil, tell me that while a COVID-19 vaccine might save the lives of those with money and proximity to Whiteness, together we bear the suffocating experience that this, too, will be a resource kept from the Black and Brown majorities in our communities.

I tested positive for COVID-19 in March, and felt the panic that grips you when your lungs are starved from oxygen. I now fear for my Chicano-Korean son, as attacks on Asian-American communities escalate because of the racists who labeled coronavirus a “Chinese virus.” As White men with guns demand business as usual in the face of over 66% of coronavirus deaths being suffered by People of Color, it is all too clear that White Supremacy is both business as usual and a violent epidemic attacking us.

As our Black sisters and brothers suffer on both the frontlines of police brutality, while bearing the refusal of health care systems to value Black lives, and an economic system built on the enslavement and elimination of Black and Brown bodies, we know there will be no vaccine for White Supremacy. And any inequitable and insufficient “fixes” to address these ills will keep the system of White Supremacy firmly in place, failing to transform and heal the systems that privilege White bodies and White lives.

As we build momentum for the many public policy changes that will be needed to address this epidemic, we can learn from the work of racial justice public policy organizations like Demos, the Haas Institute, and the Movement for Black Lives’ policy platform. These groups apply the principle of “targeted universalism” to their public policy development and design. Targeted universalism is the principle that in order to benefit all people, public policies must be designed and implemented in ways that improve the outcomes, lives and impacts on those who are most vulnerable and most impacted by any system.

A vaccine for the coronavirus will not cure this other sickness. We cannot support a return to a “great America” that never was. We — all of us — desperately need a new normal: one that enables a future where all our children are safe, where Black Lives matter and are celebrated, where we have an inclusive, equitable economy designed to meet human needs and ensure the dignity of all people.

This article was originally published by B Lab.

B the Change gathers and shares the voices from within the movement of people using business as a force for good and the community of Certified B Corporations. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the nonprofit B Lab.


Anti-Racism Must Guide Our Work to Fight the White Supremacy Epidemic was originally published in B The Change on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


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