Tim Wise
Tim Wise
================
Full Name and Common Aliases
--------------------------------
Timothy Jay Wise is commonly known as Tim Wise.
Birth and Death Dates
-------------------------
Born: December 22, 1960 (age 62)
Died: Not applicable (still living)
Nationality and Profession(s)
---------------------------------
American
Author, educator, activist, and anti-racist writer
Early Life and Background
-----------------------------
Tim Wise was born on December 22, 1960. Growing up in a relatively affluent family in the Midwest, he developed an awareness of the racial disparities that existed around him. This exposure had a profound impact on his life's work.
As a young man, Wise attended Harvard University, where he earned a Bachelor's degree in Political Science and then went on to earn his Master's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. He later completed his Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee as well.
Major Accomplishments
-------------------------
Throughout his career, Tim Wise has made significant contributions to the realm of anti-racism and social justice. Some of his notable accomplishments include:
Authoring numerous books on topics like racism, privilege, and social change.
Delivering thousands of talks and presentations across the United States and abroad.
Engaging in advocacy work with various organizations focused on combating racism.Notable Works or Actions
-----------------------------
Wise is known for his thought-provoking writings and public speaking engagements. Some of his notable works include:
"White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son" - a memoir that explores the author's experiences as a white person in America.
"Between Barack and a Hard Place: Racism and White Denial" - a book that examines the ways in which racism continues to impact society.Impact and Legacy
----------------------
Tim Wise has had a profound impact on contemporary discussions around racism, privilege, and social change. His work has inspired countless individuals to engage in anti-racist activism and education.
Wise's commitment to challenging systemic racism has led to him being widely quoted or remembered as a leading voice in the field of anti-racism.
Why They Are Widely Quoted or Remembered
--------------------------------------------
Tim Wise is widely quoted or remembered for his thought-provoking insights on topics like:
The complexities of white privilege and its impact on society.
The ways in which racism continues to affect marginalized communities.
Strategies for creating positive change within ourselves and our communities.
Throughout his work, Tim Wise offers a unique blend of personal reflection, academic rigor, and practical advice. His ability to challenge readers' perspectives while offering actionable steps towards social change has cemented his place as one of the most respected voices in the field of anti-racism.
Quotes by Tim Wise
Tim Wise's insights on:

As a writer, there are times when you have something to say, and yet no particular ‘hook’ upon which to hang the missive you are burning to release.

But the right won’t tell us that, because to put the blame where it belongs, on deregulation rather than regulation, on greedy companies and individuals who are of means, rather than poor black and brown people, would hardly serve the right’s goal; namely, the manipulation of our racial anxiety and resentments into a potent political weapon.

Middle-class and more affluent blacks are also disproportionately the targets of subprime mortgage loans, paying much higher rates of interest than comparable white borrowers, and are subjected, according to the available evidence, to racial profiling of all types.

And according to the most recent annual data from 2009, even when a black person has a college degree, he or she is nearly twice as likely as one of us with a degree to be unemployed, while Latinos and Asian Americans with degrees are 40 percent more likely than we are to be out of work, with the same qualifications.

Almost all of those big government programs I just mentioned, which retained such high levels of support from the white masses, had been racially exclusive in design and implementation. In fact, the only way President Roosevelt could get most of the New Deal passed was by capitulating to the racist whims of white Southern senators who insisted that blacks be excluded from most of its benefits.

Additional research tells us that lighter-skinned immigrants, mostly from European nations, earn around 15 percent more than darker-skinned immigrants, even when all their respective qualifications and markers of personal productivity are the same.

And let’s not forget that George Washington “loved the Indians,” according to Glenn Beck,126 never mind that he waged an annihilationist war against them. Indeed, Washington wrote to Major General John Sullivan, imploring him to “lay waste” to all Iroquois settlements, so that their lands may not be “merely overrun but destroyed.”127.

Facts aside though, I can understand why so many of us might be afraid. As we become anxious, uncertain as to our future and where the nation is headed, that anxiety is being fed around every corner by right-wing commentators bent on using that uncertainty to fuel a political movement. The sad truth is, racial resentments are potent motivators in a nation such as ours, and there is no shortage of mouthpieces prepared to use them to their own ends, a subject to which I now turn.

As harsh as it may sound to some of us, Toni Morrison had it right when she suggested, “In this country American means white. Everybody else has to hyphenate.

Even when a white person is closely tied to African Americans, that white person is often living in an entirely different world from that of their friends, though we rarely realize it.