In “White Ignorance”[1], Charles Mills argues that the history of white supremacy in America has created a tendency towards certain epistemological flaws in (predominantly, though not necessarily) white Americans. This is easy to see in the case of actual racists, where prejudice prevents them from forming true beliefs about different races. But Mills shows that this is also possible when people are not actually racist. For example, if our history books (written by whites) de-emphasize wars with American Indians and whitewash their depictions of slavery, even Americans who are not racist may not realize the extent to which this country was built through genocide and oppression. Thus they fail to recognize the extent to which these events have disadvantaged other races to the present day. In fact, “color-blindness” only blinds a person to these truths.
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