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THE BO(U)LDER QUESTION: Racial Justice

The May 25 death of George Floyd, a Black man in police custody, set off international protests, community conversations and, perhaps, individual examination of conscience about racial justice in America. We asked members of the 天美传媒 community: Will you share your reflections on George Floyd鈥檚 death, the aftermath or any aspect of racial justice?

Lala Tanmoy Das 鈥12聽is an M.D.-Ph.D. student in a program offered by Weill Cornell Medicine, Rockefeller University and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.

Lala Tanmoy Das '12At our first lab meeting since the COVID-19 lockdowns were lifted, I sensed unease. After taking a seat at a large table, I noticed that no one seemed to want to sit next to me. As more people shuffled in, most of my labmates huddled on the opposite side of the table. Someone mentioned the 鈥渒ung flu.鈥 Another labmate 鈥渏oked鈥 that Asians really ought to be wearing masks, especially in small gatherings such as lab meetings. It took me a few moments to realize that 鈥 as the only Asian person in the room 鈥 they were likely talking about me. I know I should have been wearing a mask, but I wasn't the only person in the room without one.

A few days before that, I was sitting in the building鈥檚 atrium with a Black colleague discussing an experimental method when a scientist from another lab joined us. Upon noticing my colleague鈥檚 Black Lives Matter pin, the scientist said, 鈥淵ou really ought to keep your politics at home.鈥 We were both taken aback. Our visitor went on to declare that looting is not the right solution to George Floyd鈥檚 killing, that people need to get jobs instead of protesting all day and that Black people shouldn鈥檛 be so angry all the time. We sat there, appalled, but didn鈥檛 say anything.

On another occasion, a former co-worker asked me 鈥 as an immigrant 鈥 how I felt about President Donald Trump鈥檚 immigration bans. I said I wished immigrants weren鈥檛 constantly viewed as a threat to the economy because we have so much to offer, particularly in niche work sectors. The person鈥檚 response was along the lines of, 鈥淎t least Silicon Valley will be less of a 鈥榖rown town鈥 and give others a chance.鈥 I laughed but felt seriously uncomfortable.

Why didn鈥檛 I speak up? Because I feared repercussions 鈥 and I鈥檓 sure I鈥檓 not alone in feeling that way. On the rare occasions when I have voiced my concern about racist comments, I鈥檝e been told I am 鈥渢oo much of a social justice warrior.鈥 I鈥檓 at a precarious point in my training, because I鈥檓 currently doing lab rotations, and I will settle on a Ph.D. adviser next year. Strained relationships with my colleagues may make it harder to find a permanent lab, or they may lead to poor letters of recommendation or lost authorship opportunities.

Yet racist comments, no matter how funny some people may think they are, should not be normalized and tolerated. I feel deeply unsettled that in the current political environment, some people 鈥 including some scientists 鈥 think it鈥檚 OK to say these things. And I wish early-career scientists like me felt more comfortable questioning them.

It will take action at all rungs of scientific institutions 鈥 from deans鈥 offices down to individual labs 鈥 to change the climate. We need more than a few hours of mandated online bias training to really mobilize a shift. Universities need to create safe spaces to discuss racial issues and microaggressions head-on 鈥 for example, by developing seminar series or journal clubs to educate the community about problems and to generate solutions. And science itself needs a culture change. We should commit to holding one another accountable for problematic behavior. When issues arise, institutions should have a clear procedure for filing grievances.

And, more broadly, there should be open and honest dialogue about the culture of intimidation and hierarchy in science. Universities and labs should seek actionable ways to flatten research team structures so that early-career scientists can feel empowered to speak up against problematic behavior.

Change is hard and takes time. Talking about racism with your colleagues is even harder. Mopping up centuries of racism that have percolated into everyday parlance will take a long time. However, science thrives when there are alternate perspectives. Now more than ever, we must acknowledge that and champion a culture of positive change.

From Science, July 17, 2020, Vol. 369, Issue 6501, page 342. DOI: 10.1126/science.369.6501.342.聽Reprinted with permission from the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

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