In this Book

The State You See: How Government Visibility Creates Political Distrust and Racial Inequality

Book
Aaron J. Rosenthal
2023
summary

The State You See uncovers a racial gap in the way the American government appears in people’s lives. It makes it clear that public policy changes over the last fifty years have driven all Americans to distrust the government that they see in their lives, even though Americans of different races are not seeing the same kind of government.

For white people, these policy changes have involved a rising number of generous benefits submerged within America’s tax code, which taken together cost the government more than Social Security and Medicare combined. Political attention focused on this has helped make welfare and taxes more visible representations of government for white Americans. As a result, white people are left with the misperception that government does nothing for them, apart from take their tax money to spend on welfare. Distrust of government is the result. For people of color, distrust is also rampant but for different reasons. Over the last fifty years, America has witnessed increasingly overbearing policing and swelling incarceration numbers. These changes have disproportionately impacted communities of color, helping to make the criminal legal system a unique visible manifestation of government in these communities.

While distrust of government emerges in both cases, these different roots lead to different consequences. White people are mobilized into politics by their distrust, feeling that they must speak up in order to reclaim their misspent tax dollars. In contrast, people of color are pushed away from government due to a belief that engaging in American elections will yield the same kind of unresponsiveness and violence that comes from interactions with the police. The result is a perpetuation of the same kind of racial inequality that has always been present in American democracy. The State You See is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding how the American government engages in subtle forms of discrimination and how it continues to uphold racial inequality in the present day.

Table of Contents

Cover in The State You See

Half Title Page

pp. i

Title Page

pp. iii

Copyright

pp. iv

Dedication

pp. v

Contents

pp. vi-vii

List of Illustrations

pp. viii-ix

List of Tables

pp. x-xii

Acknowledgments

pp. xiii-xv

One. Introduction

pp. 1-29

Two. Taxes and Welfare

pp. 30-56

Three. Police as the Face of Government

pp. 57-81

Four. Visible in All the Wrong Places

pp. 82-107

Five. Invisibility and Membership

pp. 108-135

Six. Black Lives Matter

pp. 136-156

Seven. The Politics of Visibility and Prospects for Change

pp. 157-169

Appendixes

pp. 170-171

Appendix A: Interview Protocol and Postinterview Survey

pp. 172-180

Appendix B: Ethnographic Research Details

pp. 181-182

Appendix C: Interview Information

pp. 183-187

Appendix D: Dataset Information and Question Wording

pp. 188-200

Appendix E: Full Table Results

pp. 201-214

Notes

pp. 215-229

References

pp. 230-254

Index

pp. 255-262

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