snip...
French, who is white, went viral last week after his appearance on a podcast called the Fifth Column. Asked if he considers himself a conservative, he answered in the affirmative, but then went on to describe how, despite that political affiliation, he has "Absolutely changed in my perception of the lingering severity of race problems in this country." This sudden enlightenment fell on him, he explained, after he adopted a child from Ethiopia.
"This might sound super nave, but when we adopted our youngest daughter, I did not have in my mind that she was going to come to my community and have a substantially different experience as a child than my two older kids. But by golly, she had a substantially different experience. There was not a school that she went to where she was not called the N-word repeatedly."
He went on to tell a story about a time the abuse went beyond language. "There was a point," he said, "where I picked her up after a high school football game " this was in Nashville at a game at Montgomery Bell Academy, one of the highest end schools in all of middle Tennessee. This is a very wealthy school. We went to pick her up and she was shaking, and her friend, who was a Latina, was shaking as well and it was like, 'What happened?' And she said, 'A truck full of guys was screaming the N-word at us and drove straight for us and they just swerved away at the very last second.'"
French said that raising this African child caused him to realize, "all of a sudden," that he had "been in a bubble and that my white, educated, upper-middle class bubble in the South had really, intentionally, screened out racism."