This piece arrives at a moment when the legal architecture of racial equity is being dismantled with chilling efficiency, using history not as a museum exhibit but as a mirror held up to current policy. Kahlil Greene argues that the modern retreat into "colorblindness" is not a moral victory but a deliberate act of erasure, one that was already exposed as a failure by John Howard Griffin's radical 1959 experiment. The article's distinctive power lies in its refusal to treat the past as resolved; instead, it frames today's executive orders and corporate retreats from diversity initiatives as a direct continuation of the logic Griffin sought to dismantle.
The Illusion of the Neutral Observer
Greene sets the stage by contrasting current political maneuvers with historical reality. He notes that recent actions by the administration to strip affirmative action requirements build directly on the Supreme Court's 2023 decision, which leaned heavily on the idea of a "colorblind Constitution." Greene writes, "The logic behind all of it is seductive and convenient. The fair, enlightened, modern thing to do is to stop seeing race at all, treat everyone the same, and watch as the problem dissolves." This framing is crucial because it identifies the emotional hook of the policy: it offers a clean, easy solution to a messy, systemic problem.
However, Greene immediately undercuts this comfort by introducing John Howard Griffin, a man who literally chemically altered his body to test that very hypothesis. The author details how Griffin, after regaining sight following years of blindness, concluded that "the only way to learn what was really happening... was to become a Black man himself." This is the piece's central thesis: you cannot understand racism by ignoring race; you must witness it.
The harm lived in how society saw them, and he couldn't change that by deciding not to notice.
The narrative of Griffin's transformation is handled with necessary gravity. Greene describes the physical toll—taking medication for vitiligo, enduring sun lamps, shaving his head—to achieve a look that made him unrecognizable even to himself. This section effectively counters the argument that race is merely a social construct with no material consequence; for Griffin, it became a matter of survival and access. Critics might argue that Griffin's ability to "opt out" of his experiment by washing off the pigment highlights a privilege Black Americans never possessed, a point Greene acknowledges but uses to sharpen the tragedy: "The Black people he had been living with had no such option." This distinction prevents the story from becoming a simple tale of white saviorism and instead centers the permanence of the oppression Griffin only temporarily inhabited.
The Mechanics of Dehumanization
Once Griffin stepped into the world as a Black man, Greene documents the immediate collapse of his humanity in the eyes of others. The author does not shy away from the visceral details: the "hate stare" that left Griffin "sick at heart," the refusal to cash checks, and the sexual predation masked as curiosity by white men on Greyhound buses. Greene writes that in Hattiesburg, "hell could be no lonelier." This specific phrasing is powerful because it moves beyond abstract discrimination to the profound isolation of being unseen as a person.
The article connects this historical trauma to modern dynamics by noting how Griffin's account was only believed when told by a white man. Greene cites historian Nell Irvin Painter, who observed that "the people in power could not hear these claims when they were coming from Black people." This is a devastating critique of the current media and political landscape, where testimony from marginalized groups is often dismissed until validated by a member of the dominant group.
It took Griffin six weeks and a chemically altered body to understand what Black Americans had been telling him all along.
Greene also weaves in the cultural footprint of this story, referencing the 1984 Saturday Night Live sketch "White Like Me," where Eddie Murphy parodied the concept by passing as white. While played for laughs, Greene argues it rested on the same truth: that America is two different countries depending on skin color. This historical thread adds depth without bogging down the narrative, reminding readers that the absurdity of racial hierarchy has been a subject of satire and serious inquiry for decades.
The Cost of Un-Seeing
The final section of the piece delivers its most biting critique of contemporary policy. Greene argues that the "colorblind" argument is not an evolution of civil rights but a regression. He posits that when advocates today insist on ignoring race, they are effectively asking society to "un-see what is in front of it." This reframing is essential for busy readers navigating headlines about executive orders ending diversity programs. It suggests that these policies are not neutral corrections but active choices to ignore the reality of inequality.
Greene writes, "When people refuse to see race, they also lose the ability to see racism." This sentence serves as the moral anchor of the commentary. It implies that the current administration's push toward a merit-based system, stripped of racial context, is fundamentally flawed because it assumes a level playing field that Griffin proved does not exist.
The advocates of colorblindness today are asking the country to do the reverse and un-see what is in front of it, and the cost of that refusal falls hardest on the people they have chosen to stop seeing.
A counterargument worth considering is whether focusing solely on individual acts of racism (like Griffin's experience) distracts from the need for structural economic reform. However, Greene anticipates this by linking the personal horror Griffin felt directly to the institutional barriers he faced—employment, housing, and legal protection. The piece suggests that without acknowledging the racial component, any "merit-based" solution is doomed to replicate existing hierarchies.
Bottom Line
Kahlil Greene's commentary succeeds by using a historical case study to dismantle the seductive simplicity of modern colorblind rhetoric. Its greatest strength is the unflinching demonstration that ignoring race does not eliminate racism; it merely removes the vocabulary needed to address it. The piece's vulnerability lies in its reliance on Griffin's singular perspective, which, while powerful, cannot fully capture the collective resilience and voice of Black communities that existed long before a white man decided to join them in their struggle.
The verdict is clear: as policies shift to erase racial considerations from federal contracting and education, we are not moving toward a post-racial future but repeating the mistakes Griffin identified sixty years ago. The cost of this refusal to see will be paid by those who have always been forced to live with the consequences of being seen only as their skin.