post-modernity and white supremacy

DRAFT

: political unrest in the US 2021

Post-modernity ideas come out of the late 20th-century scholarship amongst academics who were engaged in western philosophy.  In the early 21st century, most people, especially critics, are unaware of the central issues and how they play out in the real world.

For my purposes, post-modernity firstly disputes the Cartesian mind/body split.  Descartes’ notion of knowledge as something that cannot come through sensation (that includes reading) and that knowledge must always be true is rejected by post-modern philosophers.  Descartes was a devout christian and desperately wanted to prove that god exists, so his thoughts on knowledge reflect this stance. 

The second issue that post-modernity takes on is the idea that knowledge must always be true, and that there are absolute truths.  The claim to have universal truth is highly problematic – it might be true at this time and in this place, but it is impossible for humans to predict the future and so it might not be true in a different place or time.  This means that even what humans take as fundamental truths about nature (like gravity) will not hold up through all time and space.  While we like to think that science is indisputable because they use experiments, remember that many scientific ideas have been overturned throughout human history. 

People tend to argue that if there is no truth, then you cannot make a statement that there is no truth and this is misreading what post-modernity is all about, and what claims it is making.  Post-modernity comes from a standpoint that the real problem is not just that truth is unstable but that thinkers in western philosophy see truth as binary.  It either is or is not true.  The post-modern approach would say that there is no binary is or is not, but rather both exist.  People really hate this and usually start yelling about the reality of your death at this point, because it fundamentally upsets the belief system that forms our world, our society and our institutions in the US. 

The US was formed by white christian terrorists and wealthy tax dodgers who attached themselves to christian terrorists to gain power.  The entire western system of binary knowledge embedded in US culture has always broken society between two types of people.  On the one hand, you have the white, moral, intelligent, emotionally controlled, male citizen on the other you have the black, not-white, immoral, stupid and emotionally and physically uncontrolled, non-male.  There is no middle for the white supremacists either you are, or you are not white—[we can think of this in terms of transphobia as well].  The US cultivates identities based on these binary ideas of humanity.  chirstianity cultivates these binary identities as well. 

At the core of the US’s conservative movements, today is the fight to preserve the US as the white christian nation it was started in the 1800s.  Many factors lead up to the current political landscape in which white supremacy is growing more violent and outspoken one factor is that post-modernity is gaining traction in the digital information age.  Digital information exchange has revealed, in real-time, the hidden facets of history and exploded the access to knowledge.

As internet access and communication has expanded the rise in white supremacy has become open knowledge.  The reasons are many and complex, but the violence and cult-like behaviour of white terrorists seems to be linked to post-modern identity crisis.  White supremacy is baked into US culture, the idea that white people are better in all ways is so ubiquitous few white people ever had cause to doubt their superiority.   Christianity is also a crucial cultural force in the US, in which many people believe the bible to be literal history and the ultimate truth.

The post-modern is doubly dangerous to white supremacist christian ideology.  The idea that identity is binary along racial lines is ridiculous in the face of genetic testing and migration patterns.  People are seldom from one “pure” undiluted ethnic stock, and many generations of passing have led people to think of themselves as anglo/saxon whites.  The reality of the enslavement of Black Africans in the US is that many anglo/saxon men raped and impregnated Black African women producing children so that the one-drop rule would exclude probably a quarter of those thinking they were white from the front of the bus. 

Secondly, christian fundamentalism does not hold up well under historical scrutiny.  There is no way to prove that god exists, and there is significant historical evidence to show that the bible is barely accurate historically and that the writings were highly politicized and translations vary wildly.  Saying god must exist because there is a bible is the equivalent of saying elves exist because there is a Lord of the Rings.  The moral authority that christian fundamentalism clings rests on the existence of god and the truth of the bible, in the post-modern era, this is a difficult position to maintain.

The growth in the cult of Tang and Qanon has several factors, but I think it is important to remember how threatened these ideologies are.  Important because when people are faced with the reality that most of the things they believe are incorrect, especially their idea of self, and are raised in a non-self reflective rugged individual culture, they become violent.  If you want to fight white supremacy, you need to understand how traumatic having your entire life of believes disproven is.  Not so we can feel sorry for the white supremacists, but so we can realize how dangerous they are. 

There is a reason why people abuse, torture and kill others beyond money or sex, and that is control.  People who find their entire world view disrupted will find themselves losing control.  This reaction could be small, like being a white woman on the street yelling at Black people for no good reason.  The reaction could be invisible but harmful, like denying someone a job or calling the police anonymously.  The reaction can also be catastrophic, like murdering a man for jogging down the street, blowing up a building or trying to take over the government.

The Hybrid Self: Beyond Intersectionality- Draft

Today white supremacy is becoming a visible spectacle that seeks to silence and destroy in the last ditch effort to colonize the U.S. fully.  White supremacists groups have become bolder in recent months with the election of the 45th president.  While some well-meaning liberal white people are proclaiming shock and awe at the killings, rapes, and harassment, non-whites face if you are a person of color you know that this hate has been festering ever since the founders landed in the U.S..  If you are indigenous or black, you know too well the history and current situations have involved murder, rape, forced sterilization, and general terrorist tactics.

Brilliant people of color like Kimberly Crenshaw[1] has argued that one way to have a more nuanced and productive conversation about our social ills is to use the filter of intersectionality.  Social problems are rooted in identity politics and that we need to understand that people take on multiple identities in the course of their day.  One can be poor, and white, and a man, and someone with a college degree, and someone who is a homosexual.  None of the identity categories fully describe the person, and we much understand all categories to solve problems.  While Crenshaw is correct, she also misses a micro reality.  Humans are hybrids; you cannot section identity into neat parcels that equate with one social group.  The intersectional model still relies on binary categories because it assumes some biological binaries.  What is whiteness, what is a woman, what is sexuality are categories we never question, and we assume that people can fit nicely within these categories?  Lots of work is being done in the black community to fight back against white supremacy, to expose the brilliance and beauty that lies at the heart of blackness.  This work is absolutely necessary.  At the same time, it seems that we need to attack the premise of white superiority, the ideation of white supremacy also.  Liberation from oppression involves an examination of how whiteness is simulacra just as much as any racial category, and that most of our ideas about whiteness are propaganda.

The realities of DNA:

One of the biggest problems with the notion of white supremacy is that there is a purity of ancestry that makes white people superior to everyone else and that the “naturally more intelligent, resourceful, and ethical” characteristics associated with white skin have not through breeding diluted with color.  History shows that white supremacy is not a reality.  Black people, Asian people, Native and Arab people have contributed in significant ways to philosophy, medicine, architecture, science, religion, and the arts.  Perhaps, more importantly, the idea of purity can also be easily undone with a simple DNA test.

For all intensive purposes, I am a white person.  I was raised to believe my family on both sides (paternal and maternal) were white and had always been a mixture of various Anglo/Saxon peoples.  I discovered 8 or more years ago that my father’s family was not pure Anglo/Saxon.  There had always been talk of how my great-grandmother on my father’s side was Native American.  The family name Noe does appear on the Dawes Roll, so that makes sense.  My father tanned very easily and he attributed that to this woman with purportedly one-quarter Cherokee blood.  The reality is that the family through my grandfather is also mixed.  I come from a small group that is considered a tri-racial isolate.  A group that some ancestors immigrated to North America in the late 1600’s, then moved to what is now Kentucky and had children with sub-Saharan Africans and Native Americans.  The Melungeons stayed in the Appalachia mountains from Kentucky to what is not West Virginia and tried to pretend they were a Portuguese or Native American mixture.

When I thought about the large lips and the inherited condition of lactose intolerance that plagues me, the comments about my skull from hairdressers it made perfect sense that our family was part of the tri-racial isolates.  Our family cooked and ate the food that blacks southerners pioneered, played the instruments that sub-Saharan Africans brought from their homeland like the banjo.  They firmly denied any black ancestry and talk of grandmother’s mixed mother were quickly squashed even with talk of the Iberian peninsula as an explanation for the ability of family members to tan readily to a color not achievable with pure Anglo/Irish heritage that the family wanted desperately to mimic.  Except of course for those of us grandchildren with the MC1R gene who are pale and practically allergic to the sun.  I was not shocked by the revelations from my study of my father’s genealogy.  The story of the Melungeons aligns perfectly with tall tales about the family told at reunions and weddings or funerals.  It allowed my generation to blend in perfectly as white.  Yes, my family told me I was Anglo/Irish/Cherokee, but no one said anything about black people being part of our family story.  So we were white enough.  Except that we were children of children of poor Appalachian farmers and coal miners whose aunt always had well water, whose relatives are in a family cemetery going back to the 1800’s in central West Virginia.

Two years ago I decided to have my DNA tested through National Geographic’s human genome mapping project.  I was interested in what would be revealed but disappointed it would only be my maternal line.  I thought it would also be a cool way to contribute to the history of humans in a very permanent way since I don’t have children to leave behind my genetic code.  I prepared for some boring stuff.  My mother insisted that her mother was “pure English” and her father was “pure French,” going so far to talk about the things from England that my grandmother had from her mother.  I thought maybe the French ancestry would be interesting, but instead, I’d learn about the maternal line so just a bunch of poor English people who ended up in Newfoundland Canada via Cape Breton Island, and Nova Scotia.  So I was surprised to find out that my “pure English” grandmother was indeed not so “pure”  not only was she Irish (which I already knew because her last name was Hynes which is an Irish surname) but was Southern European, Eastern European and much to my surprise X2A haplogroup.  This meant that on my maternal side one was a first nation woman whose ancestry goes back to before any other indigenous occupants of North America.  These people did not cross the Bering Straight and were in North America before any white settlers/pioneers/colonialist set foot on the continent. This means that my maternal line includes Mi’kmaq’s.  My cousins and aunts and uncles disparage the “drunk Indians” fairly regularly without realizing that the family was actually part of the “drunk Indians” group who manage to fit in with whites, especially my mother’s generation and mine who also have the MC1R gene.

I am white skinned.  I am the whitest white, I beat everyone I know regarding pale white skin.  I have gray eyes.  My family raised me as if my pale skin meant I was white and not black and not native American.  I am passing.  When people met me, they think my whole family must be recent Irish immigrants, because they don’t know more people in Scotland have red hair than Ireland by population percentage.   They assume I must be Anglo/Saxon and because of the ideas about red hair being a trait of Vikings and because I am well educated having attended three separate graduate programs in three different subjects in two different states and two countries.  My poverty has never made me feel all that special for being white,  I have studied colonialization, I have read and written about Fanon.  I felt like part of that oppressed group regarding poverty and somewhat because of the cruelty to you if you have MC1R presenting hair.  While people eroticised me I was also a sexual threat, “red heads will give you diarrhea.”   The reality is that I am a hybrid.  My ancestors came from many different lands and cultures and blended into what people now assume is white, but the evidence is clear there is no “purity” to our whiteness.  We are hybrids.  And DNA evidence is exposing the truth that most people sanctioned as white in our society and many who hold deep hatred towards non-whites are also hybrids.  The rape of millions of black women led to many pregnancies that they carried to term, and the whiter children were often taken into the master’s, or the rapists, household, never to know about their black mother.  Black people also mixed with white people willingly and as a combined result of up to 12% of the white population in some places is mixed.[2]

There is no binary 

We are all hybrids of cultures and religions and languages there is nothing “pure” about 80% of the humans existing on the planet at this time.  Even before colonization by Anglo/Saxons became the hip thing to do in the late 1600’s there were people from the East sailing to the Near East; there were people from the African continent sailing to South America and across the Mediterranean as well as the Indian Ocean.  People have been moving around this planet and mating with people from outside their designated “race” for most of human history.  Our Neanderthal ancestors mixed with other groups until they physically were no longer identifiable.  I explain these things to white people, and they get very uncomfortable, they are convinced that their parents or grandparents would know the truth about their heritage and never lie about their ancestor’s complexion.

“I wonder if people who hate/fear/discriminate against/harm transgender/gender-queer/non-binary people realize: …

  1. That the attempt to make their own pain and victimhood “pure” enough that they think have a right to engage in bigotry unassailed by the sting of implication only makes clear the depth of their inhumanity and hypocrisy, and sheds light on why ideology > identity.
  2. That the very basis of their argument *relies* on virulently oppressive and violently anti-human white supremacist capitalist imperialist non-disabled patriarchy rather than defies it.[3]

 

Asks the writer who goes by the moniker of Son of Baldwin[4] wrote on his Facebook timeline.

Son of Baldwin has gained attention recently in response to criticism of his questioning of if it is worth risking your own life to save someone who openly hates you, and works to destroy you and your community every day.  He was responding to the fact that a black lesbian woman had saved the life of a Republican senator who called himself David Duke Lite, the Klan grand wizard David Duke in case you are unfamiliar.  This man, Sen. Steve Scalise is a known white supremacist who actively sought to ban same-sex marriage in his state of Louisiana, was saved, ironically, by a black lesbian.[5]  Crystal Griner is a U.S. special agent assigned to protect members of the government.  She knew who this man was and how much he hated most of her existence, yet she saved him.  Many hailed her as a true ethical hero, who saved the life of a man who in private calls for her to be enslaved or killed.  Baldwin questions if that is a good tactic, to place yourself in the line of fire to protect someone who actively works to mark your life as unworthy of any salvation.  Son of Baldwin thoughtfully reminds us that:

For centuries, black people have been regarded as sub-human workhorses whose entire purpose is to serve white people’s whimsies.

For centuries, queer people have been regarded as sub-human degenerates whose whole existence was an anathema to cisgender heterosexual people’s off-hand sensibilities.

And what our — black/queer people — response to that has been, largely, is to attempt to be a more moral species of being than those who dehumanize us.[6]

 

As Son of Baldwin points out black people are not monolithic in identity, there are queer black people; there are non-binary gendered black people.  This leads us to the realization that binary categories of identity are inadequate.  One is not simply white or black, within those divisions are a myriad of identities.  Some people are cisgendered, some people are Muslim, some people are bound to wheelchairs, some people are parents, some people are mentally ill and all these people can have any color skin.  Identity does not function as a singular intersection of binary opposites; rather it is a fluid concept that morphs depending on when and where you are at.  The fact that colorism within the black community exists also shows that there are different ways to be black in the world.  Colorism, the preference for light skin and Caucasian phenotypes, works more against black women than black men.  “Gendered colorism can be particularly damaging among women with dark complexions, as society tends to reward those who look more Eurocentric.”[7]

Thus there is not one black identity, but this also means there is not one white identity and many who think they are “pure” whites are in fact mixed.  This is particularly true in the Southern U.S. where enslavement and rape produced many hybrid children some who would go on to “pass” into whiteness.  Even Southern culture itself which is held up as a white enterprise is also a hybrid.  Southern foods like peanuts, okra, and watermelon are all things that the triangular trade of enslaved people brought to the South.

Culinary historian and author Jessica Harris says food traditions hold symbols and meaning that serve as a historical roadmap. For decades she has used an image of okra on her business cards as a symbol of her family’s African roots and her own connection to the continent’s cuisine. But as the green, finger-shaped vegetable pops up on menus across the United States as an emblem of Southern American cooking, the true narrative of the plant is at risk of disappearing…[8]

 

Southern music, especially Appalachian Bluegrass and Jazz are hybrids of sub-Saharan African music with instruments that the enslaved people made, like banjos.

In the United States, the dominant forms of contemporary American music and vernacular dance are also derived from America’s African-based slave legacy. This has occurred despite the fact that drums, the rhythmic foundation of African music and dance, were outlawed in many slave communities in the United States.[9]

 

Vernacular dances such as jigs, shuffles, breakdowns, shake-downs, and backsteps, as well as the strut, the ring shout, and other religious expressions, were danced to the accompaniment of these drum-less rhythms and to the fiddle, the banjo, bows, gourds, bells, and other hand or feet instruments—all New World African inventions by enslaved Africans.[10]

 

While many, especially white people, identify Southern U.S. culture with whiteness, this is not true; it is a hybrid of Sub-Saharan African, Spanish, French, English and Native Indigenous practices which have fused together and informed one another.  When you understand the history of how the U.S. came into existence you realize that it was not a matter of transference of English culture which grew, but a blending of English culture with the other cultures that colonialism transferred with the indigenous cultures that were already there.  The results are identities and practices which are neither black nor white, native or imported but are rather both and neither at the same time; they are hybrid.

 

Binary identity can be politically useful for drawing attention to those who are forced to the margins and live under a dominant white patriarchy, but they often fail to create change because they are rooted in a myth and not a reality of lived experience.  As Bell Hooks remind us:

The postmodern critique of “identity,” though relevant for renewed black liberation struggle, is often posed in ways that are problematic. Given a pervasive politic of white supremacy which seeks to prevent the formation of radical black subjectivity, we cannot cavalierly dismiss a concern with identity politics. Any critic exploring the radical potential of postmodernism as it relates to racial difference and racial domination would need to consider the implications of a critique of identity for oppressed groups.[11]

 

Binary identity comes from notions of essentialism, still present in the ideas of intersectionality.  That is binary identities rely on the idea that there is something inborn and unchanging about identity which makes it who you are.  Intersectionality exploded the idea that we are never just one identity, that there is not one way to be black.  However, it does not interrogate the reality that there is no pure racial category and no essential way to be raced.  Instead, race, like all our categories of identity are never pure but are always hybrid, and are always shifting and mutating as time passes.

The critique of essentialism encouraged by postmodernist thought is useful for African Americans concerned with reformulating outmoded notions of identity. We have too long had imposed upon us, both from the outside and the inside, a narrow constricting notion of blackness. Postmodern critiques of essentialism which challenge notions of universality and static overdetermined identity within mass culture and mass consciousness can open up new possibilities for the construction of the self and the assertion of agency.[12]

 

In 2017 we must start to take an honest look at the problems binary identity has created and look for what is common about oppression to find more liberatory ways of being.

 

 

[1] Crenshaw, “Mapping the Margins.”

[2] WadeDec. 18, 2014, and Pm, “Genetic Study Reveals Surprising Ancestry of Many Americans.”

[3] “Facebook.”

[4] “Who Is Son Of Baldwin And Why We Should Listen Up?”

[5] “A Queer Black Woman Saved Homophobic/Racist Congressman Steve Scalise’s Life – AFROPUNK.”

[6] Baldwin, “Let Them Fucking Die.”

[7] Hall, “No Longer Invisible,” 3.

[8] Pinchin, March 1, and 2014, “How Slaves Shaped American Cooking.”

[9] “America’s Cultural Roots Traced to Enslaved African Ancestors.”

[10] Ibid.

[11] Hooks, “Postmodern Blackness.”

[12] Ibid.

better news today: thanks NFL team for stepping up

In Case, you haven’t heard yet The NFL drafted its first openly gay player today.  Who was also the first openly gay college player.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/early-lead/wp/2014/05/10/michael-sam-decision-day-arrives-at-nfl-draft/

This is a remarkable story and gives hope that the bigots are losing the fight in the United States even if the laws and ignorant have not all caught up with what is increasingly a majority public opinion.  We have seen queer rights starting to take off again, as they did in the mid 1980’s when many of my close friends were first openly talking about their non-normative sexual preferences.

Everyone should read Foucault’s History of Sexuality to see how the repression of sexuality, of which the suppression and oppression of queer sexualities, plays a tragic role.  People have died, been killed by strangers, dragged behind pick up trucks, been burnt alive in nightclubs just because their sexual choices did not match Calvinistic puritanical ideals of sexuality which included that one should only have sex to procreate, sex is dirty, and masturbation is a sin worthy of eternal damnation in a fiery pit of hell for eternity.  I could go on about how very psychotic view is, given that we are embodied and sexual creatures by design.  Sex is necessary for the survival of the species, but that doesn’t mean sex that cannot lead to procreation is a sin against nature since we know that non-human animals have a very wide variety of non-reproductive as well as reproductive mating habits.  But I digress.

This young man is a pioneer in queer history,  but he is equally a pioneer in U.S. black history.  That he is black is not remarkable for anyone who plays in professional sports especially in the NFL or the NBA, but that he is an openly gay football player who is black is amazing from the perspective of someone who is focused in part on the intersections of race/class/gender.  This young man is providing an opportunity for conversations to be had about the problems within the black population regarding support for queer people.

It astounds me that blacks cannot see the similarities in oppressing people because of who they choose to sleep with or how they decide to have an orgasm and oppressing black people because of the colour of their skin, or hair texture, or facial features.  Black people have been killed by random strangers, drug behind picks up trucks, and burnt alive in public spaces and their homes merely because they have black skin, or too many African relatives (the one drop rule and issues of passing).  Maybe some people believe in capital punishment for some violent crimes,  but it seems that your sexual desires (unless it harms someone as in cases of rape or molestation or perhaps passing STD’s to unwitting strangers) should not be a death sentence.  Being black or queer does not determine your worth as a human, your intelligence, your ability to love or feel pain or make the right choices in life.

I suppose this seems like more hopeful news than talking about the Clipper scandal which only points out what black people always knew; there are some serious bigots out there who are racists.   My thoughts on that were echoed perfectly by the Daily Show with Jon Stuart.  Daily Show on the Clippers  Yes the incident makes visible evidence of new forms of slavery present in 2014, the prison system is yet another.  Maybe this will help people realize that contrary to what many of my white students seem to tell me, racism is a serious problem in the U.S. today.  Education is the key to opening minds and hearts.

 

 

Macklemore, Hip-Hop and tolerance of homosexuals

Commercial hip-hop pro-gay tolerance song?

I have about a 40-minute commute going and coming from work.  I listen to a lot of music, and I do listen to the top 40 radio.  I heard this song a few days ago while driving and started to think about the impact of a hip-hop pro-homosexual tolerance.  I did not know at the time the song was sung by Macklemore.  His certainly does not sound like a white Irish guy from Seattle of all places – a place usually associated with grunge and relatively white compared to New York or La or Chicago.

Learning that Macklemore is a white man from Seattle should not be that surprising in that it is a rap song about supporting homosexual tolerance.  The black community has always seemed to have more issues regarding homosexuality.  Partially due to southern religious influence, partly to do with maintaining hyper-masculine persona, and partly because of the desire to have a hyper-masculine persona for a white audience (not wanting to appear weak or afraid, hyper-heterosexual) black as a demographic have largely shunned homosexuals.

The song nominated for a 2013 BET best “Impact  Track”  He won best group that year as well.  This year he was given multiple Grammys for “Best New Rap Artist” and “Best Rap Album” for “The Heist”.  According to the LA Times,

 “The controversy was immediate. The indie Seattle duo’s early wins sparked a trending topic on Twitter as outraged hip-hop purists and critics admonished voters for picking the pair’s work over albums from Drake, Kanye West, Jay Z and Lamar.”

In addition, to his win the rap category at the Grammy Awards, he also won “Song of The Year” for his song Same Love.

I find it, while not overly significant, interesting that Macklemore is a white male who is in what is still considered a black genre.  Perhaps that is one reason he felt able to speak out about the Homophobic hatred found in some rap/hip-hop music.  I am a little sad there is not a loud debate about women in rap/hip-hop music imagery and lyrics.  

I think that it is important to make the links between degradation of homosexuals and the degradation of women, especially in terms of the black experience in the United States.  Homosexuals are mainly denigrated in terms of the males being too much like females because they allow themselves to be penetrated and/or wear “women’s” clothes and makeup.  The question I ask is:  do you hate women that much that the lowest thing for a man to be is more or too much like a woman????

Black men have historically been feminized the United States.  Enslavement, minstrel theater, sexual violation and castration connected to lynching,  even the discourse concerning their hyper-sexuality are a feminizing phenomenon.  [See Eric Lott’s Love and Theft for a fascinating historical analysis of this process].  Racism continues to feminize black men in the United States.  Black men are represented less adequate as men because they are not as smart as white men, and not as able to provide for their families as white men.  It is perhaps this feminization which pushes rap/hip-hop artists to project a persona of hyper-violent, woman abusing masculinity.

If we want to make a difference as humans, we must question concepts concerning identities that rely on negative stereotypes and violence to perpetuate themselves.  I am glad that Macklemore spoke out of this problem, but it’s not just blacks or hip-hop rap fans that hold homophobic or sexist attitudes that are reflected in music and imagery outside of hip-hop and rap categories.  And we must break down the divisive categories that perpetuate this thinking.  I firmly believe this is the heart of conscious raising, and something entirely influenced by Fanon.  Fanon was an existentialist who hung around intellectual philosophy circles with the likes of Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone De Beauvoir.  Fanon took seriously existentialist revolutionary ethics which emphasized the notion that we are all condemned to the same fate as humans which is the fact that we must make choices and that we will eventually die.  The process of categorizing humans through binary oppositional units like gay – straight, man – woman, black – white.  Is problematic in that it has historically been used as a discursive process in which one side is seen as “naturally better, more virtuous, smarter, braver, stronger that the other.

When we closely inspect humanity we find a significant divergence in terms of size, shape, skin/hair types, formation of genitalia, and ability across all of these categories that we think of as fixed stereotypes.  Boxing people into these kinds limit their ability to be something other than a stereotype.  At the same time, we are limiting our freedom to be something other than a stereotype.  Bigotry of all types is based on insecurity.  Those who are often the most vocal in their bigotry are the most afraid that they will be judged negatively if people knew who they really were.  Individuals who are secure and have self-love, do not feel the need to, but other people down is a power trip which locks both sides into a distracting battle.  We are all suffering. Maybe if we respected each other and were kinder to each other, we could end some of that suffering.

The denial of Racialized social realities has real consequences

http://www.cnn.com/2014/02/06/justice/florida-loud-music-murder-trial/

Did Jordan Davis have a weapon? Attorneys spar in loud music murder trial

It’s not a real victory because the jury that convicted Dunn, 47, didn’t convict him for killing the 17-year-old Davis. They convicted him of almost killing Davis’ three friends who were riding in the Dodge Durango with him. They found Dunn guilty of three counts of second-degree attempted murder and one count of shooting deadly missiles. Each attempted murder count carries a minimum sentence of 20 years.

This case has similar overtones to the Travon Martin case with the accused (George Zimmerman) was acquitted of shooting an unarmed black teenager.  The defendant (Dunn) claimed that Davis had a visible weapon and was justified regarding using self-defense.  It is evident that Dunn was afraid of young black men.  The issue lies on whether Dunn or Zimmerman was justified in their vaguely paranoid fear of young black men.  The answer is clearly that these young black men were killed by guns and were unarmed themselves.  So concerning rightfully believing their lives were in jeopardy neither defendant can show just cause.  That these young men are dead is because these men were completely wrong about how dangerous they were.

These defendants are not alone in the fear of young black men.  Look at the statistics in terms of incarceration and race and we see that some who lack critical insight into the United States justice system, economic system, education system, and political system could say that so many black men are in prison today because they are dangerous.  The stereotypes of the lecherous, dangerous, criminal black man stretch in the United States back to the begins of Jim Crow in the late 1700’s.  Popular media then included the Minstrel Show,  cartoons, novels, advertising and a little latter photography.  Popular media today has many more outlets but still the major players in news coverage perpetuate the discourse of dangerous young black men, blacks themselves perpetuated this stereotype in various musical genera.  If you never talk to black people, never lived in a predominantly poor black neighborhood you could easily believe the hype.

It is not surprising that people like Dunn and Zimmerman still have an ignorant, irrational fear of young black men.  The political media and legal climate in this country makes sure to perpetuate these ideas.  Consider the controversy over the black NFL player who acted like a “Thug” when he bragged after the opposing player refused to shake his hand after the game.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/earl-ofari-hutchinson/richard-shermans-rant-aga_b_4638270.html 

In fact two predictable things happened with him in the aftermath of the interview. The stereotypes flew fast and furious. Sherman was of course a “thug,” “dirtbag,” scum,” and “disgrace.” But make no mistake those were the genteel ones. The boing chorus heaped on him the racist favorites, “gorilla,” “ape,” “monkey,” and “animal. ” All the epithets were amply punctuated with the N-word.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson notes the predictable aftermath concerning how these two opposing players were described in the media frenzy that ensued.

My students sometimes say they don’t think about colour (only those privileged by whiteness say this) and that racism is not a problem anymore.  That is easy to say if you are not forced to think about your skin colour every day of the week because of your daily interaction with people who often only possess a negative stereotype to give them an idea of who you are.  Cops do not follow White people in the same ways black people in the United States are followed.  They are not followed around in stores when they shop: they are not shot for playing their music: they are not denied jobs only because of their skin colour: they are not economically disadvantaged by their skin colour.

I believe the dream of Fanon was a world in which did not matter so that the oppressed who are representative of all categories of gender, race, and class can work together to make the world a better place for everyone, not the privileged few.  We cannot come close to a “post-racial” world until we start to address these issues head on and talk about them in public as well as private.

black skin black mask

I’ve heard that the way to get your stuff out there is to blog.  Currently, I’m trying to pass my qualifying exams for a Ph.D. and my dissertation title is “Black Skin Black Masks.”  I am not sure what I will get out of this blogging experience, but maybe some people will be able to provide some critical comments and share insights, or maybe some people will be able to learn something new.

I – as the title of my blog suggests- am an early example of a racial hybrid.  My last name, family history and some genetic markings point to the mixed ethnic background of my “white” family on my father’s side who were present in North Carolina by 1732 (ish)  and were most likely poor Irish immigrants who had worked as domestic workers and farmers with English employers.  The family converted at some point to Protestantism my father’s mother was Southern Baptist, but her family was German, and I do not know what religion my Grandfather’s family practices as he died before I was born and no one ever spoke of the history of the family regarding religious practices.  My uncle Bill, who compiled the family history in terms of names and places of birth going back 5 generations, once told me that my Great Grandmother was half Cherokee, and indeed, her ancestors are found on the infamous Dawes Roles (while what he did to Native Americans during his lifetime was hideous he did provide valuable genealogical accounts and documentation which has served many).

The important thing is that my family never talked about having this unique biological background of three races, now termed Melungeon.  My Father’s mother always bristled when my uncle reminded her she was part Native American.  The other thing that urges me towards this research is my unusual coloring in that I have naturally red hair, gray eyes, and freckles.  Laugh if you need to but as a child I was bullied because of my hair and skin.  For that reason, I have a little insight on what it means to be degraded for the appearance of your genetics over which you have no control of changing and which is of little significance to your worth as a person.  A friend of mine thinks my next work should be about Gingers…. who knows.