Droopy wrote: If racism is anything, it is racial consciousness; it is a focus and preoccupation with "race" and the choice to overlay all other aspects of human relationships with the template of race and to interact with people of other ethnic backgrounds, not as unique individuals, but as representatives of a racial collective.
Droopy----
Prior to June 8, 1978, would the LDS Church ordain a man of black African heritage to the priesthood by judging him as a unique individual and based on his own personal worthiness? Or would the Church view him as a representative of a racial collective?
Prior to June 8, 1978, the Church viewed men of black African descent in precisely the same way they would have viewed white males of Finnish descent had the priesthood ban been centered in their lineage: as individuals partaking of that lineage through descent from the original progenitors of that lineage.
Using your implied logic here, all males under the age 21 who are not allowed to consume alcoholic beverages are not unique individuals but part of a collective in which all members share the same intrinsic attributes (all males under the are of 21 who can't legally drink are known and understood as human beings fundamentally by this shared collective identity).
Your (attempted) sophistry here tries to conflate a central attribute shared among disparate, unique individuals with a collective perception of them as a mass, and no two concepts could be farther apart. There is, at least, no logical reason why black people cannot all be unique individuals and at the same time, share similar or identical attributes (such as dark skin, a certain hair texture, musculature, and so on), just as there is no reason to believe that white people cannot all be unique individuals and share any number of unifying traits.
The restriction on priesthood is, whatever else it is, nothing more than a specific, discreet aspect of the lineage through which most black Africans descended and has no relevance to their being unique individuals in any other sense.
A
collective mentality toward black people (of both the non-Left and the Left) is a completely different creature. Race consciousness (like its close siblings on the Left (and the non-Left), class consciousness, gender consciousness, and ethnic consciousness) look at human beings, not as unique individuals, but as homogenous, lumpen masses all sharing similar
underlying, innate characteristics as a collective. The collective moves, thinks, perceives, speaks, dresses, relates, votes, and in general behaves as a collective entity. Blacks, Jews, Asians, proletarians, white males, bourgeois middle class, homosexuals, "the rich," "the poor," etc., all are seen, understood, and related to only as members of the identity group to which they belong.
The restriction on priesthood was something, indeed,
imposed upon black people because of their lineage, as a group. But this does not imply a collective perception of blacks anymore than restriction of piloting a space shuttle implies that all people restricted from so doing are seen in as faceless members of a mass and not as unique individuals.
One must be
qualified to pilot a space shuttle. Those not so qualified are logically just as unique and just as much individuals as those who are chosen to do so. The fact that they share one defining characteristic in this narrow sense - not being qualified to pilot a space shuttle - in no sense removes any individuality or uniqueness from them in any other way.
If one is convinced, as I am, that the original ban, as well as its ultimate end, were both imposed and foreseen by the Lord, then the reason blacks were for so long
unqualified in a lineal sense to receive the priesthood, while opaque at the moment (along with a number of other mysteries of the specific conditions of mortality for each of us), can be negotiated in humility and faith without rolling over and wagging our tales for Babylon and its heady pseudo-moralism known traditionally as "political correctness."