Showing posts with label black culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black culture. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 03, 2020

White Supremacy

Dave Chappelle as a white “privileged” man

Recently listened to Rush Limbaugh debating the trio from the Breakfast Club about the recent racial turmoil created by the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Most of the arguments therein proffered by the Breakfast Club trio centered around the use of the terms “white supremacy” and the almost synonym “white privilege.” Basically, white supremacy was defined as slavery, segregation and a society built around laws made by white people for white people.

Now, to this listener, this term is a political bludgeon meant to shut up debate. Why?  Well, slavery has not existed in this country for 158 years. Yes, it’s legacy did exist for 100 years in Jim Crow laws and then secretion ... but I have seen the last of these inequities, segregation, disappear in my lifetime. Is there any part of our society wherein blacks are not represented in the same (or greater) proportion then they are in the general population (around 12%)?

This leaves “laws created by whites for whites.” Now, I can’t think of any specific ones, but I will confess that some laws may be disproportionally applied.

But, kind reader, I actually think this “white supremacy” term refers to white culture ... which is clearly distinct from black culture. It is obvious to anyone with a pulse that this bright line does exist and is getting much more attention. I am not trying to disparage black culture. In fact, if anything, white America has been embracing black culture enthusiastically in recent years ... just like, as I remember it, blacks embraced white culture during the middle of the last century (the “Harlem Renaisance”).

How will this cultural divide resolve itself? This question I leave with you, kind readers, to resolve.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Dreams


I just ran across a 56-minute video of Barack Obama discussing his book, "Dreams from My Father," at the Cambridge Public Library in September of 1995 ... see: Video. Please watch it ... it is a worthy hour investment. This reference also contains a video of a discussion of this Obama lecture as it relates to Frank Marshall Davis being a father figure for Obama (the first video). I recommend that you watch the second video first and then, if interested, go back and watch the first one second to see if you can agree with its observations.

But it is the second video that is most important in my mind as it gave me a few insights into this man's being ... a man who has been at the helm of our country for the last seven years. Here are a few of my thoughts that I derived from his lecture:

- I now believe that Obama did in fact write this book ... as opposed to the rumor that it was ghost written. He may have had lots of editorial assistance ... but it was clearly an Obama original.

- Obama was then an older student at Harvard Law School ... after he had been a community organizer in Chicago and traveled to Africa. Perhaps this added to his gravitas and helped propel him to edit the Harvard Law Review without the usual requisite law writings.

- I also now believe that Obama is brighter and more articulate than I have given him credit for in the past ... not as articulate as those who lade his Teleprompter, but certainly glib and perspicacious.

- It also seems obvious that Obama is a complex and layered personality ... much more layered and hidden today than he was back in 1995 ... possibly a product of the many handlers that have shaped his political career during the ensuing 20 years.

- To me it is also obvious that race has been the idee fixe in most of Obama's political decisions during his presidency ... driven by the kind of incidents to which he relates in the book passage he reads in this lecture. This obsession seems the basis of many of Obama's poor presidential decisions.

- At one point in the video Q and A, Obama makes the point that white America today lives in a mainly black culture. I concur, but feel forced to add that, up until about 1960, the opposite was true. It was the final liberation of American blacks that more balanced justice  ... but also flipped our culture ... not always for the betterment of our society