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Race and IdentityI'm going to chicken out and not comment on this one for a minuteSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 7, 2007 - 12:37pm.
on Race and Identity And a particularly trenchant bit of cowardice it is, given the closing paragraph. Roots of Latino/black anger THE ACRIMONIOUS relationship between Latinos and African Americans in Los Angeles is growing hard to ignore. Although last weekend's black-versus-Latino race riot at Chino state prison is unfortunately not an aberration, the Dec. 15 murder in the Harbor Gateway neighborhood of Cheryl Green, a 14-year-old African American, allegedly by members of a Latino gang, was shocking. Yet there was nothing really new about it. Rather, the murder was a manifestation of an increasingly common trend: Latino ethnic cleansing of African Americans from multiracial neighborhoods. Just last August, federal prosecutors convicted four Latino gang members of engaging in a six-year conspiracy to assault and murder African Americans in Highland Park. During the trial, prosecutors demonstrated that African American residents (with no gang ties at all) were being terrorized in an effort to force them out of a neighborhood now perceived as Latino. You cannot escape mine baleful eye by switching newspapersSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 6, 2007 - 11:43am.
on Race and Identity Looks like they're wrapping up the Being a Black Man series at the Washington Post. We got an article posed like 9:30 last night, and four scheduled for Sunday...three of which are retrospectives. Orlando is in the mix. He's kind of playing off the two non-retrospectives that sound kind of hopeful [P6: the previous word is subject to later editing], but all you really need to know about what he says is this:
Spare me. That's all that EVER strikes him. He walked through the door with his preconceptions. Yeah, I got more. I might write it up, since I intend to get to the others. But he's not saying anything he hasn't always said. To ask that question means you're grimySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 6, 2007 - 10:01am.
on Race and Identity
Race Discrimination Case Added to Docket The Supreme Court yesterday added seven cases to its docket, including a discrimination case in which a Coca-Cola bottling company fired a black employee. The lawsuit involves allegations that a supervisor of employee Stephen Peters was motivated by racial bias and influenced a human resources manager to fire the worker. Coca-Cola fired Peters for insubordination after he refused a request to work on a weekend during his scheduled days off. This is the real reason I don't watch Fox.Submitted by Prometheus 6 on January 5, 2007 - 8:44pm.
on Media | Race and Identity via Steve Gilliard A whiter shade of guile
I have to share thisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 5, 2007 - 2:51pm.
on Race and Identity Yeah, yeah, I'm the Black partisan, but invisible Mexicans out to intentionally do something or other? The groundwater has been contaminated with peyote juice. It's all I can think of to explain it. Get readySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 5, 2007 - 9:53am.
on Race and Identity
I thought about this, because it WILL recur. I suggest some long-term research. There should be a whole bag of articles ready for publication in August, about the psychological significance of masking, how masks let people give vent to buried beliefs and feelings. How dressing up as Mace Windu is different than dressing up as Stepin Fetchit for white folks...nevermind shit like this:
Focus on the Halloween dress-up, how the incidences are increasing. To hell with any suggestion that they are only becoming more visible...frankly, since everyone knows he truth, you're not looking for understanding. Your goal is the manipulation of perception. Campus Racism Online One Saturday night this fall, two college students went to a party. At 9:22 p.m. somebody took a picture. Eventually, everyone got tired and went to bed. That would have been that–an ordinary Whitman College frat party in ordinary Walla Walla, Wash.–had Natalie Knott, a Whitman senior who wasn't invited to the party, not discovered the 9:22 p.m. photo two weeks later on the social networking website Facebook.com. In the photo, two Sigma Chi frat brothers, both white, are smiling ear to ear. They're also covered in thick black paint, evoking a minstrel show. Get 'em! Rowf! Rowl-rowf!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on January 5, 2007 - 7:30am.
on Race and Identity Orlando Patterson's Myopia, Part I Patterson declares that Black folk have overcome the institutional-power dimension of the race problem, but have failed to integrate into White cultural life because of continued residential segregation. I want to focus here on Patterson's institutional-integration claim; I'll deal in another post with his residential-segregation claim. Patterson raves that the United States is a “global model” for the “diversity of its elite [and] the participation of blacks and other minorities in its great corporations and its public cultural life.”...I fear that Professor Patterson may be suffering from a bout of myopia. The very methodology by which he seeks to establish his premise reveals its vacuity. Dear people who want to villify Black folks and offer nothing newSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 4, 2007 - 8:11am.
on Race and Identity It's not working like it used to.
The WSJ tries to calm the massesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 4, 2007 - 6:44am.
on Politics | Race and Identity This probably isn't the part of the article that makes their readers feel all warm inside.
Rep. Clyburn could not have said anything that I can relate to more. And you know that old saw about greatness being thrust upon you? It's true sometimes.
Clyburn Leads Southern Blacks' Ascent To Top Posts in Congress WASHINGTON -- In this time of change in Congress, Rep. James Clyburn, a minister's son from South Carolina, takes his place tomorrow as the House Majority Whip -- the No. 3 Democratic post and highest ever held by an African-American from a Southern district. The 66-year-old Mr. Clyburn, who was 25 before the Voting Rights Act was enacted, symbolizes the rise of a set of Southern black lawmakers, shaped by the region and with a distinctive approach to politics separate from that of black leaders representing urban Northern districts. I'm not the only one who has seen itSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 3, 2007 - 7:35pm.
on Race and Identity
Ask a serious questionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 3, 2007 - 7:03pm.
on Politics | Race and Identity ...get a serious answer.
If you listed to the Senator's speeches you will see a common theme. He runs sequetially through the various sufferage movements the nation has endured as though each came to a clean, elegant closure. He tells mainstream folks the serious problems are over and it's all a matter of incremental adjustments. When Libertarians Clash, or somethingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 2, 2007 - 11:06am.
on Race and Identity Links everywhere to everything that contributed to the psychic gestalt that generated the post, in the order I read them (which is why tabbed browsing is now de rigeur).
BullshitSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 2, 2007 - 7:12am.
on Race and Identity The Black American Problem THIS, Oliver, is acting white. Orlando: Study some historySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 1, 2007 - 12:17pm.
on Culture wars | Economics | Race and Identity There's a lot more at play than just wanting or not wanting to be around white folks. But there's always been a lot of projection in Black Conservative-speak.
The Hidden Cost of Being African American African Americans often seem cut off from the economic mainstream. They face higher risks of poverty, joblessness and incarceration than their fellow citizens do. Community organizing, civil rights legislation, landmark court decisions and rising education have advanced the cause of racial equality. Overt bigotry has been banished from public places, and polls show that whites harbor fewer prejudices than they used to. But these improvements have not been enough. How can disadvantage persist so long after most laws, minds and practices have changed? Thomas M. Shapiro argues in this sober and authoritative book that we should look to disparities of wealth for the answer. Whites are wealthier than African Americans, and whites' wealth advantage is much bigger than their advantages in either income or education (the point of Shapiro's earlier study, Black Wealth/White Wealth, co-authored with Melvin Oliver). Whites start out ahead because they inherit more from their parents, and America's racially segregated housing markets boost whites' home equities, while depressing those of African-American families. Shapiro, a professor of sociology at Brandeis, takes readers through the implications of these inequities and concludes that African Americans will not gain significant ground in the wealth divide until inheritance and housing policies change. Folks are really trying to sneak shit inSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 1, 2007 - 12:01pm.
on Economics | Race and Identity Seems someone was fishing for support for Orlando at Brad DeLong's joint.
Ignore that WSJ link...here's one that works. Still avoiding the central issueSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on January 1, 2007 - 11:39am.
on Race and Identity In On having the courage of one's convictions, I wrote
Well, it's happened again with his accusation that Black people are to blame for segregation. There's not much out there on either; maybe because it all came during the height of Saternalia, maybe because the soup was too thin to feed on. It was this or the one about the hustlerSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 31, 2006 - 12:57pm.
on Culture wars | Race and Identity
The Hard Core Of Cool Years ago on a summer day, I was driving along the Detroit riverfront and saw a black man strolling down a wide downtown sidewalk. Long, lithe and fluid as the river by his side, the man seemed to be gliding. Bareheaded, he wore a white, ankle-skimming djellaba from some sultry, equatorial nation. Yet something whispered that he was African American, something about his utter nonchalance as his garment whipped in the breeze and insinuated itself around his calves. Trust me: He couldn't have been hotter -- or have seemed more chilled out. Cool. Over the years, I've seen plenty of striking men. But when someone mentions "cool," I hearken back to that strolling stranger. It wasn't his distinctive garb that burned his image into memory but his confidence. Flanked by skyscrapers and businessmen, he wore his exotic ensemble with such authority, the sweating corporate types around him seemed out of place. Confidence is cool's most essential element. Perhaps that's why black men -- for whom the appearance of assurance can be a matter of life or death -- so often radiate it. Perhaps that's why in the United States, where men as different as Frank Sinatra, Joe Namath, Bruce Lee, Sean Connery, Benicio Del Toro and Johnny Depp have been deemed cool, black men remain cool's most imitated, consistent arbiters. I mean, there's cool -- and then there's brothercool. When the Civil War finally ends it will be by attritionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 31, 2006 - 12:00pm.
on Culture wars | Race and Identity
Hispanic Teenagers Join Southern Mainstream PEARSON, Ga. — The buzzer blares and the students pour into the hallways — bubble gum snapping, locker doors slamming — as the young man of the moment saunters through the admiring crowd at Atkinson County High School. He is thin and wiry with a whisper of a mustache and a taste for enormous Hollywood-style sunglasses. Like most popular boys, he receives flurries of party invitations and whispered confidences from pretty girls. Like other students, he juggles homework and dreams of becoming a singing sensation. In fact, in this tiny town, the most remarkable thing about him is his name, Frankie Ruiz. In October, Frankie and a classmate, Kristen Galarza, made local history when they were named homecoming king and queen, the first time Hispanics won both titles in the same year. The coronation stirred astonishment, jubilation and some outrage in this Southern town, which is being transformed by Latino migration and is still struggling to adapt to its evolving ethnic identity. Good luck, seriouslySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 31, 2006 - 11:32am.
on Race and Identity
With Nonprofit, Martin Luther King III Pursues a Separate Dream ATLANTA -- Even as Coretta Scott King mourned the death of her husband, within days of his assassination, she set out to continue the work of Martin Luther King Jr. Orlando Patterson blames Black people for segregationSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 30, 2006 - 3:45am.
on Race and Identity I kid you not. It's another one of those TimesSelect pieces, titled The Last Race Problem, and all I can say is, the boy done sold all the way out.
So why is it that we have this consistent association of Black Americans with the undeserving poor?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on December 29, 2006 - 3:07pm.
on Economics | Media | Race and Identity Part two the excerpt from The Eisenhower Foundation's forum on poverty, inequality and race. The title of the post speaks for itself. Let's see why Prof. Patterson's patrons are buggingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 29, 2006 - 3:02pm.
on Economics | Media | Race and Identity The Eisenhower Foundation had an excellent forum on poverty, inequality and race recently. I caught it on C-SPAN and was basically pleased. The Foundation has the video online , parsed into nice, presenter-sized packets. I saw one in particular I thought it would be good to share; I thought it would be good to watch while holding both What Black Men Think (with the goddamn autoplay music on the goddamn MySpace page) and Orlando Patterson's latest in mind. I'm using my video because I think it's of better quality. First the documentation, then the explanation. Question: Shall we continue to honor traitors?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on December 28, 2006 - 11:47am.
on Race and Identity Texas: Panel Will Study Confederate Statues The president of the University of Texas at Austin, William Powers Jr., left, said he planned to form an advisory committee to study whether something should be done about the numerous campus statues honoring the Confederacy. The statues have become a topic of debate among students, professors and administrators. They include four bronze figures on the campus South Mall honoring Confederate leaders like Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee. Mr. Powers said he planned to appoint a committee of advisers early next year, probably including faculty members and students. “The whole range of options is on the table,” he said. “A lot of students, and especially minority students, have raised concerns. And those are understandable and legitimate concerns. On the other hand, the statues have been here for a long time, and that’s something we have to take into account as well.” On having the courage of one's convictionsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 28, 2006 - 10:06am.
on Race and Identity Following referrals and such, I noticed something about the reaction to Orlando Patterson's latest effort. Everyone, with only three exceptions I can find, ducked. And I'm one of the exceptions. That op-ed fell into three parts. The first is an introduction that invoked the difference between authenticity and sincerity that listed putative problems he asserts are related when seen through that lens (though, it seems, at no other time). The second is an attack on Implicit Association Tests using the most strident, emotionally evocative language one can muster over a data gathering technique. The language Patterson used made it clear the problem is the conclusions points toward a personal component in racial bias that individuals can take responsibility for. The third section philosophically supports the "disparate impact" test for racism
...though that test has been specifically repudiated in court. Finding part one to be empty and part three to be bullshit, my own response targeted part two. Anyone who read the thing can see the was the point of the op-ed. Every other response stopped as soon as the race issue was engaged. Everyone else talks about "authenticity vs sincerity" as though that were the point of the article. And so another encoded debate becomes current, and we find a new way to talk about things without saying a damn thing, another debate we can resolve without coming anywhere near the issues that raised the question. Bah. Unapologetic IVSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 27, 2006 - 2:02pm.
on Race and Identity In a recent online conversation, a guy said to me There is no one, simple, answer to all the things that plague blacks. But most white people are sure that racism is just one of them, and not the greatest of them. If you, as a black person, cannot concede (stipulate to?) that, then there is actually nothing to discuss. You can imagine after my response the gentleman decided there's nothing to discuss. And it's not like I was rude, either. I just recognize how humans work; anything you yield before entering a discussion you never get back. And there's one whole hell of a lot of...how did Prof. Patterson put it...tacit agreements in that statement. The next argument would be, “you should deal with your most important problems before you ask me to look at racism as a possible obstacle to you.” Sad but trueSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 26, 2006 - 1:22pm.
on Culture wars | Economics | Race and Identity I saw this headline ...and thought, "yeah." And it's not just immigrants with wrong ideas. Black folks, in general, do not like to serve Black folks. Orlando Patterson's inner self is overratedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 26, 2006 - 7:58am.
on People of the Word | Race and Identity "[TS] Our Overrated Inner Self" is quite a piece of work. I'm going to skip the first three paragraphs...it's all set-up, and reading it feels like playing hopscotch. I'll visit the first paragraph briefly toward the end mo my little screed. Apologies to the jailbait; I don't know if y'all still play that game. Anyway, the meat (such as it is) of the article
Stop. "Belittle" is a peculiar word for a sociologist to apply to data. The gift of harmonySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 25, 2006 - 7:33am.
on Race and Identity Covert, Michigan: A History in Black and White All Things Considered, December 24, 2006 · On the Midwestern frontier in the 1860s, the settlers of Covert, Mich., lived as peers, friends and sometimes even kin. What makes the story unusual is that they were both black and white. The graveyard is eloquent testimony to their remarkable lives. There are hardscrabble pioneers and a lumberman whose tombstone has been cast from a tree trunk. The cemetery is one of very few in the country where black and white Civil War veterans lie together. It's the sense of shared fate that attracted historian Anna-Lisa Cox to Covert. For more than a decade, she traced the tales of the town's pioneers. Earlier this year, she published a book on the subject. The gift of claritySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on December 25, 2006 - 7:11am.
on Race and Identity
You got a feed reader?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on December 22, 2006 - 3:15pm.
on Media | Politics | Race and Identity If so, hit this link and subscribe to NPR: African-American Roundtable. Roundtable: Victimization, Bush on Iraq and Politics News & Notes, December 21, 2006 · Today's roundtable panel discusses victimization, President Bush's latest public remarks about Iraq, Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-OH) leadership of the House Ethics Committee and the Federal Election Commission's prediction that the 2008 presidential race could cost candidates $1 billion. |
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