He says that he wants to protect his daughter from the black racism such as characterized the Waukesha massacre and the Brooklyn subway shooting.
I think Ken sounds like a racist, but maybe I don't understand racism. I read another article recently in which another father experienced very similar concerns with his daughter, but apparently this father is not a racist because he's an "antiracist."
The major difference is that Ken is white, but the other father is black, and the races of the dolls was different:
Self-described “anti-racist scholar” and author Ibram X. Kendi reportedly grew concerned about white supremacy when he noticed his daughter developed “an attachment” to a white doll, according to a column from the Los Angeles Times.It seems that whether a set of attitudes is racist or not depends on the race of the person who holds them and not on the attitudes themselves. That's a very interesting cultural strategy, I suppose, but it is itself obviously racist.
Kendi is slated to release a new book in mid-June titled “How to Raise an Antiracist,” according to the publisher Penguin Random House. A Los Angeles Times columnist reported that in the book, Kendi claims he began thinking about white supremacy and kids after his one-year-old daughter took a liking to a blonde-haired, blue-eyed doll.
“[Kendi] began to think about what it would take to help [his daughter] grow up without the pervasive ‘smog’ of white supremacy surrounding her,” the column reads.
The Los Angeles Times columnist proceeded to tie Kendi’s new book on raising anti-racist kids to the Buffalo shooting committed by an 18-year-old inspired by racism.
Postscript: Ken is fictional. Does that make a difference?