An honor student with a 3.7 GPA
Accepted into college on a full ride scholarship
A volunteer with over 600 service hours
A devoted member of his church
A loyal friend and loving son
An innocent teenage boy
But Black skin, skittle, iced tea, a hoodie and an armed bigoted vigilante neighborhood watchman deemed him a 'threat to the community'
And his mother is now mourning his death
Showing posts with label African-American issues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African-American issues. Show all posts
Sunday, July 14, 2013
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Voting Rights Act Messed With By Roberts KKKourt
I'm still too pissed off about this to even write about what happened to the Voting Rights Act right now after a busy, roller coaster emotion filled news day yesterday and prepping for a road trip to Denver for a family reunion.
This cartoon pretty much expresses how I feel about the VRA and Uncle Ruckus, er Thomas making the unjust ruling happen.
Labels:
African-American issues,
cartoons,
SCOTUS,
Supreme Court,
voting rights
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Why The Unacceptable Levels Of Anti-Trans Violence Aimed At Us?
I'm also praying along with the DC trans community and her sisters around the world for Bree's swift recovery from her injuries.
Someone asked in the comments on my Facebook page why we African-American transwomen (along with our trans Latina sisters) are facing unacceptable levels of anti-trans violence, and I submit it's multiple factors playing into this.
*The anti-trans hate speech regurgitated by TERF's, conservative religious groups and Fox Noise.
*The meme injected into American society since slavery that a Black life isn't worth that much or as important as a white one and a trans life is even less important.
*The lack of visibility and respect for trans people of color inside and outside our community.
*The outright media disrespect for Black trans women as exemplified by the Cleveland Plain Dealer's journalistic hate crime aimed at Cemia Acoff.
*Black trans women getting killed or having anti-trans violence aimed at them and the perps either never getting arrested for it or when they do, getting little or no jail time for it or getting acquitted.
If you don't think that DC cop Kenneth Furr getting off for discharging his service revolver at three transwomen didn't play into this or the fact that I as of yet can't hit Bing or Google and find any information about Gary Niles Montgomery's trial for killing Deoni Jones, you are sadly naive.
There's a perception that it's open season on Black transwomen in DC and beyond, and too many people and our legacy orgs have been cricket chirping silent about it. Time for that sorry dynamic to change ASAP.
Bottom line is that the POTUS and FLOTUS need to know about it. The Congressional Black Caucus. The NAACP. The Urban League. Our national, state and local politicians. Every organization in Black America and our people need to be aware that Black trans women are catching hell besides TPOCC and the National Black Justice Coalition. Why? Because Black trans issues are Black community and Black LGBT issues. What affects us also affects the entire African-American community and vice versa.
And yes, Black SGL community, let me repeat what I just said in that last sentence in terms of Black trans community issues being Black LGBT issues because some of your Black trans sisters also intersect and interact with the LGB and same gender loving end of the community.
Black LGB community, you will also need to do your part as well of being standup allies for us just as we are for you instead of elements of you trying to suck up to the Gay, Inc power structure that hates you just as much as they hate us.
And my beautiful Black transsisters, yes I understand your concerns, but visibility is what will ultimately stop this wave of anti-trans violence directed at us, not hiding in the closet and cowering in fear. That's what the haters want so they can deny we exist.
It's nation time, Black trans women. It's us being out, proud and open about our lives that will eventually stem the tide of anti-trans violence along with us interacting with all the communities we intersect and interact with.
We Black trans women have to come to grips with the fact we are walking targets for anti-female violence and sexual assault. We must be hyper vigilant about our surroundings and the situations we potentially end up in. One small lapse in that vigilance can result in us being seriously injured or having our names read at the next Transgender Day of Remembrance memorial ceremony.
We have had three African-American trans women killed this year and all were under age 30. There is a pattern of anti-trans violence and disrespect in DC that Earline Budd alluded to that has existed since the mid 90's. That's gotta end.
What also has to end is nobody caring about a Black trans woman unless they need her in a photo to prove their organization is diverse or they want to use us as bargaining chips to pass GL rights only legislation.
I can write about what happens to African-American trans women every day, but if you aren't sharing my TransGriot posts or talking about it, the news doesn't get disseminated. To borrow a slogan from the ACT-UP era, Silence=Death
Your votes also put those national, state and local politicians in office. Let them and the folks in these organizations know this is an unacceptable situation and ask them what concrete steps will they be taking to help stem the tide of anti-trans violence aimed at African-American trans women. If they try to spin their way out of it, don't accept that.
I want you 40 and under African-descended transwomen to not only enjoy your lives, but know what it's like to get to my age so you can be mentors to the next generation of trans women.
It's why I want to do my part to ensure the unacceptable levels of anti-trans violence aimed at African-American trans women in DC and elsewhere in this country ends as expeditiously as possible.
Monday, June 17, 2013
Washington Watch-Racism And Lack Of Diversity In The LGBT Community
The TVOne Washington Watch Sunday show hosted by Roland Martin is a nice alternative to Meet the Press and other Sunday conservafool dominated fare. This particular show was broadcast back on March 11, but needs to be seen in light of recent rainbow tinged bigotry eruptions in the wake of the marriage equality legislative failure in Illinois.
My ascot wearing Houston homeboy had as guests on this Washington Watch episode to discuss the topic Rev. Dr. Darlene Nipper, the deputy executive director of the national Gay And Lesbian Task Force, Cleo Manago, CEO and founder of Black Men's Xchange; and Earl Fowlkes, president and CEO of the Center for Black Equity to tackle the topic of racism and lack of diversity in the LGBT community.
Friday, May 24, 2013
NCCU Opens Second LGBT Student Center On An HBCU Campus
On April 9 NCCU opened their LGBT Student Resource Center, located in G-64 of the Alphonso Elder Student Union.
n addition to making NCCU the second HBCU to have a dedicated LGBT center on campus, it has the distinction of being the first to do so on a North Carolina based HBCU campus.
The center is supported by Creating Open Lives For Real Success (C.O.L.O.R.S.) and Dominating Overly Motivated Studs (D.O.M.S.) and overseen by Director of Student Life Assessment and C.O.L.O.R.S. advisor Tia Doxey.
Ihe NCCU LGBT Student Center is open Monday through Friday from 9 AM-5 PM. It is designed so students can connect with other members of the local LGBT community and learn about their culture and identity. The research center contains resources students cn take advantage of such as an LGBT support network, the LGBT lecture series, educational and social programming and a library stocked with LGBT themed materials.
Doxey gave the credit for attaining the space for the new center to Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs and
Doxey's five year plan for growing the center includes getting permanent staff, offering more programming, reaching out to more NCCU faculty and staff, working with the school to create an inclusive environment for LGBT students on campus and eventually moving into a larger space.
Congratulations NCCU. May the center grow and prosper to where you'll need that expanded space sooner rather than later.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
What Would Spelman College Do In This Trans Feminine Student Situation?
“Schools should be focused on building our next generation of leaders, not discriminating against them." Calliope Wong
I had an interesting conversation with Samantha Master the other day about getting HBCU's to recognize that Black TBLG students exist. HBCU law schools are ahead of the game when it comes to having non discrimination policies that included gender identity and expression but the HBCU main campuses that host these law schools surprisingly don't.
We discussed how it would be in their best short and long term interests to ensure their campuses were open, inclusive and affirming places for TBLG students and they needed to get busy enacting policies and procedures to make that happen. And yes, as a group they also needed to improve on the sorry situation of having only one of the 105 HBCU's (Bowie State University) having a dedicated LGBT center on campus.
Our conversation turned to transteen Calliope Wong and her recently being turned down twice by Smith College for enrollment while hypocritically allowing transmen to matriculate on campus if they transition after they have been admitted. Smith College according to Dean of Admissions Debra Shaver and HuffPo Gay Voices has put together a committee to look at the issues that affect trans applicants.
The Smith committee will begin its work at the start of the 2013-14 academic year in September and includes students. The students involved on this committee have indicated that Smith would stop using the gender marker on FAFSA applications when evaluating trans students for admission.
While I hope the situation at Smith is substantive change and has a positive resolution for future trans applicants to the college, mine and Samantha's HBCU centric discussion put me in 'What if?' hard solid thinking mode.
What would happen if you flipped the racial script and instead of Calliope Wong, had a bright African-American trans feminine student named Kendra Nicole Williams in this mix?
Kendra wants to attend the elite African-American women's HBCU Spelman College because it's her dream school and applies. She transitioned at age 14 and has a supportive family who helped her live her trans teen feminine life. Kendra excelled academically in her high school and has begun the process of changing her identity documents.
But because her family doesn't have a spare $20K in the bank genital surgery is out of the question right now because they see it as a bigger priority to use whatever extra money they have to help Kendra get the quality college education she needs.
How would Spelman handle that situation I just outlined? Would Kendra be accepted into the Spelman Class of 2017 with open arms or would they fumble the ball just as badly as Smith did?
Atlanta based Spelman, which was founded in 1881, is one of the oldest historically Black women's colleges in the nation. I chose Spelman for this thought exercise because it is analogous in its elite status to Smith. in addition to it being among the nation's top ten best women's colleges as ranked by Forbes magazine, it has prestigious notable alumni and faculty.
For the sake of this exercise in hard solid thinking, let's assume Spelman fumbled the ball and refused to admit Kendra for the same reason Smith did. It denied admission to Kendra based on a mismatched FAFSA gender code. How much media negativity do you think Spelman would get right now because of that decision?
I submit it would be ten times worse than what Smith got.
In those media stories roasting Spelman over the coals you would see the ''Blacks are more homophobic' meme repeatedly come up in whatever stores they chose to write about it in addition to pointing out they are across the street from all-male Morehouse College and talking about its homophobic fails over the years.
The mainstream media seems to take perverse pleasure in flipping the journalistic middle finger at POC trans women, and you can bet their penchant for doing so would come into play here.
Don't even get me started about the Black gossip blogosphere and the transphobic ignorance they gleefully display on a regular basis. You can count on a few hip hop formatted radio station morning shows jumping into this transphobic media mix and yours truly having to spend a few weeks putting some outlets on blast for the negative and sensationalistic reporting that some newspapers of record would aim at Kendra just for grins in addition to asking Spelman what's up with not admitting Kendra?
And to tweak the hard solid thinking on trans issues still further, what if the Kendra student in my earlier example was a cis female who enrolls and a year later transitions to male? I have heard of this situation occurring at Smith and other Seven Sisters institutions but haven't heard if it has occurred at Spelman yet.
What would Spelman do when (not if) that happens? Do they have non-discrimination policies and support structures in place to make it a welcoming environment for that now transmasculine student?
So let's end the 'What If' exercise for now and move on to the known quantities about Spelman. Beverly Daniel Tatum, the current Spelman president has a well earned reputation of being a supportive ally on the SGL issues. Spelman has been ahead of the curve in terms of being a role model for HBCU's that embrace tackling LGBT issues.
In addition to Spelman having AFREKETE, the highly regarded LGBT and ally organization on its campus, it was the host campus for the groundbreaking Audre Lorde Historically Black College and University Summit on April 29, 2011. The one day summit was spearheaded by Dr. Beverly Guy-Sheftall, the founding director of the Women’s Research and Resource Center, attended by representatives of nine HBCU campuses from across the nation and was enthusiastically supported by President Tatum.
It focused on LGBT issues within African-American and HBCU communities and included a session on LGBT organizing paneled by the Human Rights Campaign's Deputy Director for Diversity Donna Payne and National Black Justice Coalition CEO Sharon J. Lettman-Hicks.
But I don't know as of yet what President Tatum's stances are concerning trans issues and I would love to have that conversation with her. Spelman despite being the undisputed leader on LGBT issues in HBCU collegiate world still as of this writing doesn't have a dedicated LGBT resource center on its campus like Bowie State does..
I believe that in my earlier example, based on the groundbreaking work that Spelman is already doing that my fictional trans student Kendra would be admitted. She might have a few issues she'd have to deal with like what would happen if she wanted to pledge one of the Divine Nine sororities on campus or the possibility of somebody transphobically tripping in the dorms because of her pre-operative status, but in terms of getting a quality education in an HBCU setting as a trans student, she'd probably be in the best place for it on paper.
Trans students will bring some issues to the table that may seems daunting to a women's college but are manageable with thoughtful preparation, clear enforced policies and procedures, and established support systems. Most importantly, they have administrations that make it crystal clear discrimination aimed at trans and SGL students will not be tolerated.
What I said to close out my 'HBCU's Better Recognize Black TBLG Students Exist' post still applies a year later.
HBCU's need to send the unmistakable message to their faculty, current and future students, alumni, and the communities they serve that discrimination against LGBT students on HBCU campuses will not be tolerated. HBCU's need to show they have inclusive and welcoming campuses, and they are willing to include LGBT students in their ongoing missions to uplift the race through educational achievement.
I believe that Spelman and the other Black HBCU women's colleges such as Bennett are taking what happened recently at Smith as a cautionary tale. I hope they are engaging in hard solid thinking to avoid the public relations nightmare Smith fell into because of the lack of admissions procedures and policies in place for trans feminine students.
Based on the work they've already done, I'm confident Spelman will be prepared for the inevitable day when a Black trans woman comes application in hand to fulfill her dream of getting an education on their distinguished HBCU campus and become one of the exceptional Black women Spelman College has produced for over a century.
I had an interesting conversation with Samantha Master the other day about getting HBCU's to recognize that Black TBLG students exist. HBCU law schools are ahead of the game when it comes to having non discrimination policies that included gender identity and expression but the HBCU main campuses that host these law schools surprisingly don't.
We discussed how it would be in their best short and long term interests to ensure their campuses were open, inclusive and affirming places for TBLG students and they needed to get busy enacting policies and procedures to make that happen. And yes, as a group they also needed to improve on the sorry situation of having only one of the 105 HBCU's (Bowie State University) having a dedicated LGBT center on campus.
Our conversation turned to transteen Calliope Wong and her recently being turned down twice by Smith College for enrollment while hypocritically allowing transmen to matriculate on campus if they transition after they have been admitted. Smith College according to Dean of Admissions Debra Shaver and HuffPo Gay Voices has put together a committee to look at the issues that affect trans applicants.
The Smith committee will begin its work at the start of the 2013-14 academic year in September and includes students. The students involved on this committee have indicated that Smith would stop using the gender marker on FAFSA applications when evaluating trans students for admission.
While I hope the situation at Smith is substantive change and has a positive resolution for future trans applicants to the college, mine and Samantha's HBCU centric discussion put me in 'What if?' hard solid thinking mode.
Kendra wants to attend the elite African-American women's HBCU Spelman College because it's her dream school and applies. She transitioned at age 14 and has a supportive family who helped her live her trans teen feminine life. Kendra excelled academically in her high school and has begun the process of changing her identity documents.
But because her family doesn't have a spare $20K in the bank genital surgery is out of the question right now because they see it as a bigger priority to use whatever extra money they have to help Kendra get the quality college education she needs.
How would Spelman handle that situation I just outlined? Would Kendra be accepted into the Spelman Class of 2017 with open arms or would they fumble the ball just as badly as Smith did?
Atlanta based Spelman, which was founded in 1881, is one of the oldest historically Black women's colleges in the nation. I chose Spelman for this thought exercise because it is analogous in its elite status to Smith. in addition to it being among the nation's top ten best women's colleges as ranked by Forbes magazine, it has prestigious notable alumni and faculty.
For the sake of this exercise in hard solid thinking, let's assume Spelman fumbled the ball and refused to admit Kendra for the same reason Smith did. It denied admission to Kendra based on a mismatched FAFSA gender code. How much media negativity do you think Spelman would get right now because of that decision?
I submit it would be ten times worse than what Smith got.
In those media stories roasting Spelman over the coals you would see the ''Blacks are more homophobic' meme repeatedly come up in whatever stores they chose to write about it in addition to pointing out they are across the street from all-male Morehouse College and talking about its homophobic fails over the years.
The mainstream media seems to take perverse pleasure in flipping the journalistic middle finger at POC trans women, and you can bet their penchant for doing so would come into play here.
Don't even get me started about the Black gossip blogosphere and the transphobic ignorance they gleefully display on a regular basis. You can count on a few hip hop formatted radio station morning shows jumping into this transphobic media mix and yours truly having to spend a few weeks putting some outlets on blast for the negative and sensationalistic reporting that some newspapers of record would aim at Kendra just for grins in addition to asking Spelman what's up with not admitting Kendra?
And to tweak the hard solid thinking on trans issues still further, what if the Kendra student in my earlier example was a cis female who enrolls and a year later transitions to male? I have heard of this situation occurring at Smith and other Seven Sisters institutions but haven't heard if it has occurred at Spelman yet.
What would Spelman do when (not if) that happens? Do they have non-discrimination policies and support structures in place to make it a welcoming environment for that now transmasculine student?
So let's end the 'What If' exercise for now and move on to the known quantities about Spelman. Beverly Daniel Tatum, the current Spelman president has a well earned reputation of being a supportive ally on the SGL issues. Spelman has been ahead of the curve in terms of being a role model for HBCU's that embrace tackling LGBT issues.
In addition to Spelman having AFREKETE, the highly regarded LGBT and ally organization on its campus, it was the host campus for the groundbreaking Audre Lorde Historically Black College and University Summit on April 29, 2011. The one day summit was spearheaded by Dr. Beverly Guy-Sheftall, the founding director of the Women’s Research and Resource Center, attended by representatives of nine HBCU campuses from across the nation and was enthusiastically supported by President Tatum.
It focused on LGBT issues within African-American and HBCU communities and included a session on LGBT organizing paneled by the Human Rights Campaign's Deputy Director for Diversity Donna Payne and National Black Justice Coalition CEO Sharon J. Lettman-Hicks.
But I don't know as of yet what President Tatum's stances are concerning trans issues and I would love to have that conversation with her. Spelman despite being the undisputed leader on LGBT issues in HBCU collegiate world still as of this writing doesn't have a dedicated LGBT resource center on its campus like Bowie State does..
I believe that in my earlier example, based on the groundbreaking work that Spelman is already doing that my fictional trans student Kendra would be admitted. She might have a few issues she'd have to deal with like what would happen if she wanted to pledge one of the Divine Nine sororities on campus or the possibility of somebody transphobically tripping in the dorms because of her pre-operative status, but in terms of getting a quality education in an HBCU setting as a trans student, she'd probably be in the best place for it on paper.
Trans students will bring some issues to the table that may seems daunting to a women's college but are manageable with thoughtful preparation, clear enforced policies and procedures, and established support systems. Most importantly, they have administrations that make it crystal clear discrimination aimed at trans and SGL students will not be tolerated.
HBCU's need to send the unmistakable message to their faculty, current and future students, alumni, and the communities they serve that discrimination against LGBT students on HBCU campuses will not be tolerated. HBCU's need to show they have inclusive and welcoming campuses, and they are willing to include LGBT students in their ongoing missions to uplift the race through educational achievement.
I believe that Spelman and the other Black HBCU women's colleges such as Bennett are taking what happened recently at Smith as a cautionary tale. I hope they are engaging in hard solid thinking to avoid the public relations nightmare Smith fell into because of the lack of admissions procedures and policies in place for trans feminine students.
Based on the work they've already done, I'm confident Spelman will be prepared for the inevitable day when a Black trans woman comes application in hand to fulfill her dream of getting an education on their distinguished HBCU campus and become one of the exceptional Black women Spelman College has produced for over a century.
Labels:
African-American issues,
colleges,
education,
HBCU,
HBCU's,
transteens
Tuesday, May 07, 2013
Ce Ce Acoff Case Links
Ce Ce Acoff's funeral was yesterday, and as you know I've been on this story since I first got the word about our fallen transsister and how she has been grossly disrespected by the Cleveland media.
I'm going to make it easy for you to follow the TransGriot coverage of this ongoing story by putting the links to the posts I've already written here.
Another Black Transwoman Dies And Is Dissed In The Local Media
Three More April African-American Transwoman Deaths
Acoff Murder Updates
CeCe Acoff Rally Today At 3 PM
Rally For CeCe Acoff
Y'all Must Think We're Stupid Cleveland Plain Dealer
Arrest Made In Acoff Case
Why The Negative Plain Dealer Coverage May Result In Cemia NOT Getting Justice
I'm going to make it easy for you to follow the TransGriot coverage of this ongoing story by putting the links to the posts I've already written here.
Another Black Transwoman Dies And Is Dissed In The Local Media
Three More April African-American Transwoman Deaths
Acoff Murder Updates
CeCe Acoff Rally Today At 3 PM
Rally For CeCe Acoff
Y'all Must Think We're Stupid Cleveland Plain Dealer
Arrest Made In Acoff Case
Why The Negative Plain Dealer Coverage May Result In Cemia NOT Getting Justice
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
Black In America-Who Is Black In America?
I know many people in the African-American community have had lukewarm reactions (myself included) about the CNN 'Black In America' series hosted by Soledad O'Brien.
After having a chat with Niece (AKA Dr. Kaila A. Story) I'm going to give it another chance in this episode that features the research of Dr. Yaba Blay. In its latest incarnation that debuts on December 9, they will tackle the topic of colorism in our community.
What makes someone Black in America? Is it skin color? History? Culture? All of the above?
It's also an issue that Soledad has personal expecience with because she has a Black Cuban mother and claims both her Black and Latina heritage.
The latest episode of the Black In America series will tackle that topic starting at 8 PM ET/7 PM CT.
After having a chat with Niece (AKA Dr. Kaila A. Story) I'm going to give it another chance in this episode that features the research of Dr. Yaba Blay. In its latest incarnation that debuts on December 9, they will tackle the topic of colorism in our community.
What makes someone Black in America? Is it skin color? History? Culture? All of the above?
It's also an issue that Soledad has personal expecience with because she has a Black Cuban mother and claims both her Black and Latina heritage.
The latest episode of the Black In America series will tackle that topic starting at 8 PM ET/7 PM CT.
Labels:
African-American issues,
Black In America,
CNN,
colorism
Friday, June 03, 2011
What's In A Name?
I don't read Essence very often and so I am a little late to the following story, but it still needs to be discussed. In March, Essence published a satirical piece by Siebra Muhammad in March that declared that a judge had decided to make it illegal for Black women to name their children because of the propensity of supposedly ridiculous names. The following is a small snippet of the piece in question.
In a decision that’s expected to send shockwaves through the African-American community—and yet, give much relief to teachers everywhere—a federal judge ruled today that black women no longer have independent naming rights for their children. Too many black children—and many adults—bear names that border on not even being words, he said.What constitutes a sensible name? Though this article is satire and no legal judgement has been declared, Black names have come under criticism in the mainstream. Black names are an attempt to reclaim what has been lost. The children of the diaspora have the names of our slave owners and anglicized first names, and this is a direct result of a complete and utter loss of our culture. To then turn around and demonize attempts to create names that reflect this loss is racist, and in the case of ridicule by other Blacks represents internalized racism.
“I am simply tired of these ridiculous names black women are giving their children,” said U.S. Federal Judge Ryan Cabrera before rendering his decision. “Someone had to put a stop to it.”
The rule applies to all black women, but Cabrera singled out impoverished mothers.
“They are the worst perpetrators,” he said. “They put in apostrophes where none are needed. They think a ‘Q’ is a must. There was a time when Shaniqua and Tawanda were names you dreaded. Now, if you’re a black girl, you hope you get a name as sensible as one of those.”
Few stepped forward to defend black women—and black women themselves seemed relieved.
“It’s so hard to keep coming up with something unique,” said Uneeqqi Jenkins, 22, an African-American mother of seven who survives on public assistance. Her children are named Daryl, Q’Antity, Uhlleejsha, Cray-Ig, Fellisittee, Tay’Sh’awn and Day’Shawndra.
Beginning in one week, at least three white people must agree with the name before a black mother can name her child.
“Hopefully we can see a lot more black children with sensible names like Jake and Connor,” Cabrera said. (continue reading)
To be honest, I have not always felt that way about these names. I thought about them as ghetto names that were far beneath me. I even used to call Black women whom I deemed to be of low class Shenequas, that is until one day I said this and the White people around me nodded their head in approval. I wanted a separation between this Black woman and myself because I looked upon her as making it harder for me to make it through my day, rather than targeting the real problem - Whiteness. These names are an attempt to reclaim what was taken from us and it is specifically because they spring from Blacks that they are ridiculed.
Each name has a cultural background and yet we do not have a problem with names like Connor, Dimitri, Alannah, Antonio, Robert, though they mark culture just as surely as Kwame and LaShawn. By encouraging us to hate and ridicule these names, Whiteness is attempting to discipline and shame Blacks, though this is not a phenomenon unique to us. During the heyday of Ellis Island, people would often emerge to find their names changed by agents who were not patient with immigrants. They were poor, and in many cases certainly not understood to be White, though they would be deemed so today. If we look at the history of many people in the public eye the one trend that we can easily see is that if their names are deemed to ethnic they are changed. Just as Frederic Austerlitz Jr. was deemed better than Fred Astaire, even a name is bland as George Michael, is understood to be better than Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou. Whiteness today is still conditional upon no obvious displays of culture, though some cultures are understood be better than others.
There is a cost beyond ridicule to having a Black name. It has been proven repeatedly that given the choice between an anglicized name on a resume and an ethnic name, that employers will choose to interview the person with the anglicized name, even in cases where the resumes have similar education and employment history. There is also a stigma of poverty attached to the name. The more that a person of colour is able to conform to Whiteness, the greater chance they have of financial success. A Black name is considered by many to be an albatross. Instead on focusing on these names, we should be turning our attention to why these names bring about such ire. The urge discipline and shame someone into conforming never comes from a place of helpfulness, rather it arises from a desire to ensure that there is someone lower on the pyramid of hierarchy than you.
Labels:
African diaspora,
African-American issues,
culture
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