Blackface - Whiteface
#2
Posted 2019-February-14, 04:11
Zelandakh, on 2019-February-14, 03:56, said:
You're polling a bunch of old white people to get their opinion about blackface???
#3
Posted 2019-February-14, 04:58
#4
Posted 2019-February-14, 06:51
I also am not sure of your purpose of the poll. Are you trying to get a definitive answer, or just the temperature of the water cooler? I didn't answer your poll, but if it's not clear what my opinion is, I'm going to quote Winstonm in the APTT:
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I cannot emphasize this enough - skin color is irrelevant. We are all equally human.
#5
Posted 2019-February-14, 10:11
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-14, 04:58, said:
That's the point I was making in my post in the Trump thread. And I answered the poll accordingly.
But I also understand that this attitude is not PC in the current climate. While I don't personally consider the white-as-black person to be racist, I do know that it would be considered inappropriate these days.
And in no case is the black-as-white portrayal a problem. White people do not have a history of discrimination against them, we don't need any protection.
#6
Posted 2019-February-14, 10:48
Comparing Obama to a monkey was racist but comparing Trump to a monkey was not. Why? Long history in the US of comparing black people to monkeys to dehumanize them and justify slavery.
Dressing up in white robes and hood? Racist because people have historicallly donned this outfit and gone out to terrorize minorities.
Blackface for white folks? Racist, because people have historically done this as a way to mock and belittle blacks.
It is of course possible to be oblivious to this history. Some people in Zürich like to dress up as native Americans for parades. To Americans this seems like a racist example of cultural appropriation because there’s some history in the US of white folks dressing up like this and acting out to emphasize how “savage” or “violent” the natives supposedly are. But the Swiss don’t have this history and don’t mean it this way — there are also people wearing Lederhosen in the same parade and there’s no malicious intent. No Nazi uniforms though — they’d be just as horrified to see that as any American, if not more so.
The point is that these things are very dependent on history and to some degree intent. Dressing up as a black celebrity is fine. Painting your face black is racist because of history. That’s not to say that everyone knows this or intends it that way.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#7
Posted 2019-February-14, 12:21
barmar, on 2019-February-14, 10:11, said:
But I also understand that this attitude is not PC in the current climate. While I don't personally consider the white-as-black person to be racist, I do know that it would be considered inappropriate these days.
And in no case is the black-as-white portrayal a problem. White people do not have a history of discrimination against them, we don't need any protection.
If it were as simple as "discrimination", it wouldn't be so appalling. Perhaps many are too young to remember or know about things like this:
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The bodies of George W. Dorsey and his wife, Mae Murray Dorsey, and Roger Malcolm and his wife, Dorothy Malcolm, were left hanging near the Moore’s Ford wooden bridge over the Apalachee River, according to court records.....Bell said the men were bound by rope. George Dorsey, a distinguished veteran who had served in World War II in the Pacific and North Africa, had just returned home to Georgia nine months before the slaying. “The coroner’s report indicates his wife, Mae, was 24 at the time she suffered death by violence,” (attorney) Bell said. “The other gentleman, Roger Malcolm, received a shotgun blast to the face. His wife sustained ghastly wounds and was also assassinated. The victims were shot multiple times with pistols and shotguns. There were gaping wounds, and their flesh was shredded.”
Recently unsealed Grand Jury testimony and still no one tried or convicted.
Or this:
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So, just to get this straight, when we, as white people, smilingly put on black face - no matter the reason - we are codoning the very racial emnity that was the root cause of such abhorent acts.
Just as white supremacy was portrayed in the movie Mississippi Burning, the message of blackface is "I'm better because at least I'm not really black". My response? No, you're not. Not black and definitely not better.
#8
Posted 2019-February-14, 13:21
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#9
Posted 2019-February-15, 18:44
#10
Posted 2019-February-16, 09:56
barmar, on 2019-February-15, 18:44, said:
But don't assume suburban white people as I am have not had experience of racism, I've been racially abused before.
#11
Posted 2019-February-16, 10:47
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-16, 09:56, said:
Does that include a history of people like yourself being mob tortured, shot, stabbed, mutilated, and hanged for no other reason but skin color? I doubt as a white person you've experienced that type of racism.
FWIW, I live in Tulsa, OK, and I've experienced what I believe you are talking about - kind of an anti-white resentment attitude - but it never strikes me as racism but as a response to the history of this area.(Tulsa Race Massacre) In other words, I totally understand why I am viewed as a potential enemy.
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I hope by your post you weren't trying to compare your experiences as equivalent. To me, pleading a reduction of white privilege doesn't count as racism.
#12
Posted 2019-February-16, 12:04
Winstonm, on 2019-February-16, 10:47, said:
FWIW, I live in Tulsa, OK, and I've experienced what I believe you are talking about - kind of an anti-white resentment attitude - but it never strikes me as racism but as a response to the history of this area.(Tulsa Race Massacre) In other words, I totally understand why I am viewed as a potential enemy.
I hope by your post you weren't trying to compare your experiences as equivalent. To me, pleading a reduction of white privilege doesn't count as racism.
Nope, having a mob of far left students and hearing the words "get the £$%^ing yid" then getting mildly physically abused. I have also had a relative who was killed in Israel basically for being Jewish.
For the record I'm an atheist of Jewish roots and was at the time, but was besically stereotyped as a white man with a big beard by the mob.
#13
Posted 2019-February-16, 12:07
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-16, 12:04, said:
For the record I'm an atheist of Jewish roots and was at the time, but was besically stereotyped as a white man with a big beard by the mob.
Thanks. I suspected your post had information left unsaid.
#14
Posted 2019-February-16, 13:40
I am a white male married to a white female but if I were married to a black female and we decided to go to a party, me in blackface and her in whiteface, surely it would be some sort of sendup of something. The fact is that I wouldn't do it. But if I did, it would be some perhaps lame attempt to ridicule those who use blackface thinking that it's clever or whatever it is that they think..
Intent matters, although probably even with the best of intent a person should think at least twice. I looked up a NYT article that discussed the Fred Astaire tribute to Bojangles in Swing Time. Indeed they saw it as a tribute, and I see it that way too, but still I wouldn't do it.
As a child I saw various Charlie Chan movies featuring Warner Roland . Go figure. But at least he was portrayed as a smart investigator. He has his number 1 son and his number 2 son, and I am pretty sure that in at least some episodes he had a black chauffeur or something like that. These portrayals were not so favorable, especially the black role. Maybe I am just making this up, but I recall being offended even as an 9 year old.
Anyway, anyone with half a brain can see why such things are offensive. And if that isn't reason enough, surely it won't do your career any good.
#15
Posted 2019-February-19, 10:33
Cyberyeti, on 2019-February-16, 12:04, said:
For the record I'm an atheist of Jewish roots and was at the time, but was besically stereotyped as a white man with a big beard by the mob.
I've also been lucky that I've never experienced anti-semitism, either. When I was a baby my family moved from a Jewish neighborhood in Brooklyn to a suburban town that was also heavily Jewish. I think I only had one Christian friend when I was growing up (for much of my childhood I thought Catholic == Christian). AFAIR, we didn't ostracize him in any way, it was just more of a curiosity.