Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Why #teamambernicole Matters And The Silence Of White Women
Another insightful post from Renee, my fave mommy blogger and the editrix of Womanist Musings.
Last week, I wrote about a 14 year old girl named Amber Cole, who became an internet sensation, after a video of her performing oral sex on a boy went viral.There can be no doubt that Cole's life will never be the same and we know that once something goes online, there is no way to stop it from circulating. Every time someone views this video, Cole will be re-victimized. Thankfully, the boys involved in this incident have been arrested.
Amber only consented to performing oral sex to attempt to win back the affections of her ex-boyfriend, she most certainly did not consent to have the act filmed and released on the internet. The boys used Cole. This tells me that Amber has a self esteem problem, and the last thing that you do when someone already has a negative self view, is to shame them into oblivion.
It would be one thing if Amber had consented within the framework of a reciprocal loving relationship, but that is not the case. I don't really find her behaviour all that surprising, when society invests so much time teaching young Black girls that they are without value and not deserving of love. When many heard about this incident or viewed the video, though it constituted child pornography, all they saw was a fast ass little girl and not a reflection of the way in which Black womanhood has been devalued. Since the arrest of the boys involved, some have even gone as far as to claim that Amber should be charged with something herself, as though public shaming has not been more than enough punishment. Amber even had to change her school, and that is only the first example of how this video will follow her through life.
When I wrote about this last week, a commenter brought up the issue of lack of coverage of the incident in the feminist sphere. I know that as bloggers, we have limited resources and we have to make careful consideration over what we bring attention to, but the glaring silence about Amber Cole is painful. Black women have spoken up in droves to claim #teamambercole, as a method of rejecting the slut shaming and the cyber bullying involved in this incident. The silence of our supposed White female activist allies speaks loudly.
Black women have spoken out repeatedly about the various ways in which our stories differ from that of White women and this often reduced to us just being angry. When incidents like this happen and the response from White women is silence, it simply stands as further evidence that when they advocate for women's issues, what they really mean anything that effects them and not us. If women truly mattered, the defense of Amber Cole, would not be left solely for Black women to undertake.
Amber Cole matters because all Black women have at some point been subject to such vile exploitation.
It may not manifest in the same fashion that it did with Cole, but it is an inevitability. To be Black and female is to be constantly under attack. Despite the fact that Black men must negotiate racism, when it comes to gender, there is no doubt that they exist with privilege. Despite the fact that White women must negotiate sexism in our patriarchal world, their racial privilege means that they will never experience it the way that we do, and that in and of itself is privilege - a privilege born of White supremacy. There is not one group that completely understands the plight of the Black female and this is borne out by their lack of confrontation or defense of us when we are in need.
It doesn't matter whether the issue is Amber Cole or Michelle Obama, no one has a vested interest in truly being an ally to us, because that requires confronting privilege. White women's organizing groups make a point of arguing against sexism, even in cases where the woman they are defending is absolutely vile. There is never any shortage of defense for people like Sarah Palin, who is clearly anti-woman because attacking sexism aimed at her is considered necessary to fight patriarchy. This same concept however, is not applicable to Black women, even when they are the victims of clear exploitation.
I am firmly #teamambercole because if Black women don't stand beside her and declare that cyber bullying is absolutely wrong, and that slut shaming a young girl for failing to make a wise decision is indefensible, then no one will. The only people we can reliably count on is each other. I have been told many times since I started Womanist Musings that my approach is divisive, and that I cause harm to the delicate fabric of female solidarity. If being angry at being neglected, when we are so clearly being attacked is considered divisive, then you don't really have a vested interest in women. If you can ignore what happened to Amber Cole, and think it is okay to go about your day without defending a 14 year old girl who was used, but then defend someone like Palin, who has done nothing but harm women, then what are you doing isn't really about advocating on behalf women, but advocating on behalf of White female empowerment.
It seems to that White women want equality with White men, and far too many have decided that the best way to make that happen is to either stand directly on our shoulders, or to hand us over lock stock and barrel to patriarchy as a replacement. You're silence offers Black women up to be abused, exploited and actively oppressed in your staid. We shall not suffer so that you can walk with freedom and we shall not be silent so that your voices and your lives constitute the entirety of the female experience. #teamambercole matters and until you can see why, we have very little to talk about.
Labels:
African American,
feminism,
white privilege,
whiteness
Minnesota Lynx 2011 WNBA Champions
I'm late with this post, but in the midst of the news about the NBA canceling 2011-2012 season games no thanks to the lockout, had to show the WNBA and the Minnesota Lynx some TransGriot love.
I was a proud season ticket holder during the Houston Comets dynasty (sniff sniff) from 1997-2000 when they won four consecutive WNBA titles. The Minnesota Lynx joined the league in 1999 along with the Orlando Miracle as an expansion franchise.
Back in the day we Comet fans would watch our Big Four of Cooper, Swoopes, Thompson and Janeth Arcain blow them out in WNBA basketball mismatches, make jokes about the Minnesota Missing Lynx or as a nod to the then popular game show at the time, call them 'the Weakest Lynx'.
Well, fast forward a decade to the WNBA's 15th season. My beloved Comets, one of the Original Eight WNBA franchises that started play in 1997 have been extinct for several years while the expansion team I gleefully made jokes about while ensconced in my Section 117 Compaq Center aisle seat is still in the league and is now the 2011 WNBA Champion.
And oh yeah, Compaq Center is now the sanctuary of Lakewood Church
Donna Orender, I and other Houston Comets fans are still pissed about how the WNBA handled the situation in 2008, and it's making it hard for me to regain the level of passion I once had for the WNBA.
Putting a new Houston Comets expansion team in the WNBA would be a nice start, but back to discussing 2011 WNBA ball and the new WNBA champs.
The Lynx drafted UConn's Maya Moore with the number one overall pick and rolled to a league best 27-7 record in the always tough WNBA Western Conference
They faced the fourth place San Antonio Silver Stars in the opening round best of three series and won it 2-1 to advance to the Western Conference finals against the Phoenix Mercury, who upset the defending WNBA champion Seattle Storm 2-1. Minnesota swept Phoenix in the Western Conference Finals 2-0 to advance to their first WNBA final against the Atlanta Dream.
The Dream finished third at 20-14 and one game behind the Eastern Conference regular season winners the Indiana Fever and Connecticut Sun. Both teams had identical 21-13 records but Indiana was seeded first due to winning the regular season series against the Sun.
The Angel McCoughtry led Dream got hot in the playoffs. They swept the Connecticut Sun 2-0, won the Eastern Conference title and advanced to the WNBA finals for the second straight year by getting past WNBA MVP Tamika Catchings and her Fever teammates 2-1.
The dream of a WNBA title for the ATL-based WNBA ballers died once again as the Lynx swept the Dream in the best of five WNBA Finals 3-0 with the help of Moore and WNBA Finals MVP Seimone Augustus to claim their first WNBA championship.
Maya Moore was also named WNBA Rookie Of the Year to cap off a marvelous rookie season.
I was a proud season ticket holder during the Houston Comets dynasty (sniff sniff) from 1997-2000 when they won four consecutive WNBA titles. The Minnesota Lynx joined the league in 1999 along with the Orlando Miracle as an expansion franchise.
Back in the day we Comet fans would watch our Big Four of Cooper, Swoopes, Thompson and Janeth Arcain blow them out in WNBA basketball mismatches, make jokes about the Minnesota Missing Lynx or as a nod to the then popular game show at the time, call them 'the Weakest Lynx'.
Well, fast forward a decade to the WNBA's 15th season. My beloved Comets, one of the Original Eight WNBA franchises that started play in 1997 have been extinct for several years while the expansion team I gleefully made jokes about while ensconced in my Section 117 Compaq Center aisle seat is still in the league and is now the 2011 WNBA Champion.
And oh yeah, Compaq Center is now the sanctuary of Lakewood Church
Donna Orender, I and other Houston Comets fans are still pissed about how the WNBA handled the situation in 2008, and it's making it hard for me to regain the level of passion I once had for the WNBA.
Putting a new Houston Comets expansion team in the WNBA would be a nice start, but back to discussing 2011 WNBA ball and the new WNBA champs.
The Lynx drafted UConn's Maya Moore with the number one overall pick and rolled to a league best 27-7 record in the always tough WNBA Western Conference They faced the fourth place San Antonio Silver Stars in the opening round best of three series and won it 2-1 to advance to the Western Conference finals against the Phoenix Mercury, who upset the defending WNBA champion Seattle Storm 2-1. Minnesota swept Phoenix in the Western Conference Finals 2-0 to advance to their first WNBA final against the Atlanta Dream.
The Dream finished third at 20-14 and one game behind the Eastern Conference regular season winners the Indiana Fever and Connecticut Sun. Both teams had identical 21-13 records but Indiana was seeded first due to winning the regular season series against the Sun.
The Angel McCoughtry led Dream got hot in the playoffs. They swept the Connecticut Sun 2-0, won the Eastern Conference title and advanced to the WNBA finals for the second straight year by getting past WNBA MVP Tamika Catchings and her Fever teammates 2-1.The dream of a WNBA title for the ATL-based WNBA ballers died once again as the Lynx swept the Dream in the best of five WNBA Finals 3-0 with the help of Moore and WNBA Finals MVP Seimone Augustus to claim their first WNBA championship.
Maya Moore was also named WNBA Rookie Of the Year to cap off a marvelous rookie season.
Labels:
basketball,
championship,
WNBA,
women's sports
If You Hate Being Called Racist, Conservative White Males...
Stop engaging in the racist behavior in the first place. It's that simple a concept, but your WMP wielding behinds have a hard time grasping that simple fact.
You can whine, gripe and complain all you want, your centuries long reputation of gleefully and murderously at times engaging in suppression and the rolling back of the human rights of anyone who didn't share your ethnicity precedes you.
When you wax poetic about the 'Lost Cause', utter rhetoric about how you want to 'take our country back', pass legislation in the name of a political philosophy that only benefits people like you to roll back the voting and human rights of non whites, scream the 'securing our borders' code word, we non-whites that were on the receiving end of your crap have deja vu moments we don't want to revisit and say to ourselves 'There they go again."
And there's the matter of your beyond over the top vitriolic hatred of President Obama that has you so irrationally blinded with vanilla scented WMP to the point that you are willing to destroy this country just to deny him a second term.
This is the 2K10's. The crap your parents, grandparents and great grandparents perpetrated and got away with isn't going to be tolerated by non-white people any more.
If we're calling you racist, we have a damned good reason for doing so and we don't make that charge lightly despite what they tell you on Fox Noise and 'white wing' talk radio. As long as you keep engaging in the negative and racist behaviors, keep proposing and passing regressive unjust legislation and making boorish and bigoted remarks we're going to keep calling your behinds out on it until you permanently cease and desist with it.
But we non-white Americans won't hold our breath for that day to come any time soon for you conservative white males.
You can whine, gripe and complain all you want, your centuries long reputation of gleefully and murderously at times engaging in suppression and the rolling back of the human rights of anyone who didn't share your ethnicity precedes you.
When you wax poetic about the 'Lost Cause', utter rhetoric about how you want to 'take our country back', pass legislation in the name of a political philosophy that only benefits people like you to roll back the voting and human rights of non whites, scream the 'securing our borders' code word, we non-whites that were on the receiving end of your crap have deja vu moments we don't want to revisit and say to ourselves 'There they go again."
And there's the matter of your beyond over the top vitriolic hatred of President Obama that has you so irrationally blinded with vanilla scented WMP to the point that you are willing to destroy this country just to deny him a second term.
If we're calling you racist, we have a damned good reason for doing so and we don't make that charge lightly despite what they tell you on Fox Noise and 'white wing' talk radio. As long as you keep engaging in the negative and racist behaviors, keep proposing and passing regressive unjust legislation and making boorish and bigoted remarks we're going to keep calling your behinds out on it until you permanently cease and desist with it.
But we non-white Americans won't hold our breath for that day to come any time soon for you conservative white males.
It's Miss Major's Birthday!
Once again, it's my honor and privilege to bow in the direction of the Bay Area and remind you TransGriot readers to wish one of our trailblazing iconic transwomen a happy birthday.
She transitioned in the 1950s, was a Stonewall Vet, a member of the Mattachine Society and now executive director of TJIP, but Miss Major not only continues to be an inspiration to us as one of our icons, she continues to fight for the human rights of all transpeople.
And from time to time she sends some love the TransGriot's way
Know that I have much love and respect for you Miss Major. Without you and the other trailblazing transwomen of African descent we would have no community now much less any connection to our proud history.
You are one of my leadership role models in terms of telling it like it T-I-S is and it's a joy to not only hear you speak and read some interview you done, but be around you and spend quality time in your presence.
Much love to you Miss Major on this day. Keep speaking your truth, have a blessed day, and may you have many more.
She transitioned in the 1950s, was a Stonewall Vet, a member of the Mattachine Society and now executive director of TJIP, but Miss Major not only continues to be an inspiration to us as one of our icons, she continues to fight for the human rights of all transpeople.
And from time to time she sends some love the TransGriot's way
Know that I have much love and respect for you Miss Major. Without you and the other trailblazing transwomen of African descent we would have no community now much less any connection to our proud history.
You are one of my leadership role models in terms of telling it like it T-I-S is and it's a joy to not only hear you speak and read some interview you done, but be around you and spend quality time in your presence.
Much love to you Miss Major on this day. Keep speaking your truth, have a blessed day, and may you have many more.
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