Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 24, 2021 15:02:04 GMT
Mess in a Bottle can be found in Target! Whew đšđ± I miss Target runs
While you are there you can find Lillypie, Lip Bar and Honeypot products as well. All black and woman owned. I think Bevel is also found at Target
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 23:46:59 GMT
Discuss racism openly Find out how slavery, the civil war, and Jim Crow are being taught in your school district. Advocate that it is taught correctly.This one has been particularly challenging in my district lately. Not because of our teachers or our admin; most of our staff (teachers AND admin) is working hard to counteract the traditional white-centric/white-supremacist narratives that have been so prevalent in education. Parents observing lessons remotely are BIG mad that we are discussing racism with students (including in conjunction with reading To Kill a Mockingbird, a decidedly NOT anti-racist book written by a white woman 60 years ago). They're mad we have prioritized equity and diversity, filing FOIA requests for any emails that contain BLM/Black Lives Matter. I guess their counterargument is that Black lives don't matter? It's fucking exhausting as a white person trying to effect change, and I can "opt out" any time because I'm white; the fact that Black women especially have to do so much lifting is unconscionable. I canât imagine the exhaustion an educator who canât get parents on board must feel but I wanted to say thank! This is important necessary work.
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 23:36:17 GMT
My gut feeling is we may as well defund the police since theyâve never been able to figure out who killed JonBenet.
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 19:28:59 GMT
My threads are almost always marked political despite the topic. I mostly log on from a phone but when I am at a desktop I spend about 10 mins switching them all back. It never stops the pea from marking it political again.
Hate and anti racist activism isnât political but a lot of people certainly think so.
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 19:26:03 GMT
In the pre-dawn hours of January 23, 1957, a Black man named Willie Edwards, Jr. was declared missing when the truck he was employed to drive was found abandoned along the road near Montgomery, Alabama. It was later discovered that four white men had forced Mr. Edwards, a resident of Montgomery, to jump to his death from the nearby Tyler Goodwin Bridge. Mr. Edwards was driving back from his first assignment as a deliveryman for a Winn-Dixie grocery store when he stopped for a soft drink. As he read his log book under the console light in his truck, the four armed white men approached the vehicle, forced Mr. Edwards to exit the truck at gunpoint, and ordered him to get into their car. Accusing Mr. Edwards of âoffending a white woman,â the men proceeded to shove and slap him as they drove. One man pointed his gun at Mr. Edwards and threatened to castrate him. Sobbing and begging the men not to harm him, Mr. Edwards repeatedly denied having said anything to any white woman. Eventually the men reached the bridge and ordered Mr. Edwards out of the car. Ordered to âhit the waterâ or be shot, Mr. Edwards climbed the railing of the bridge and fell 125 feet to his death. Mr. Edwardsâs truck was soon found in the store parking lot, with the console light still on, but authorities had no answers about what had happened to him. Mr. Edwardsâs wife Sarah, just 23 years old and pregnant, was left to raise their two young daughters. She initially hoped her husband had taken an unannounced trip to California, but those hopes were dashed in April 1957 when two fishermen discovered his decomposed body. Nearly twenty years later, in 1976, Attorney General Bill Baxley prosecuted three known Klansmen for Mr. Edwardsâs murder, after a fourth man confessed in exchange for immunity. Those indictments were later quashed and the FBI ultimately informed the AG that one of the men charged, Henry Alexander, was a federal informant. Mr. Alexander had been indicted for other acts of racial violence, including bombings of four churches and two homes, and the assault of a Black woman riding on a bus. Mr. Alexander was never prosecuted for any of those offenses, and the charges for Mr. Edwards's murder were dropped. In 1993, Mr. Alexander reportedly confessed to his wife on his deathbed that he and three other white men had indeed murdered Mr. Edwards. Alexander's wife later reported he told her, âThat man never hurt anybody. I was just running my mouth. I caused it.â In 1997, the Alabama Department of Vital Statistics changed Mr. Edwardsâs cause of death from âunknownâ to âhomicide,â but a 1999 Montgomery County grand jury declined to indict any of the surviving suspects for the murder of Willie Edwards Jr. calendar.eji.org/racial-injustice/jan/23?fbclid=IwAR2CqwaBe7yuPd99hTRc3bgXCSS2kaZDNSrKJPvn2i_ka4Re0cv6nQ6cAu8
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 19:18:34 GMT
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 19:12:23 GMT
www.sandiegouniontribune.com/opinion/commentary/story/2021-01-15/opinion-reparations-moral-constitution-african-americans?_amp=trueRecent images of the Confederate flag being waved inside the Capitol building by insurrectionists who support President Donald Trump demonstrate that America has yet to confront its âoriginal sin.â We urge President-elect Joe Bidenâs new administration to follow Californiaâs example and create a national commission to study reparations for slavery. This would not be the first time that the United States studied reparations. The United States has previously created commissions and boards to study and compensate victims of the Holocaust and Japanese internment camps as well as Native Americans. These three historic examples of reparations can help us understand how we may begin to confront the United Statesâ âoriginal sin.â
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 16:45:40 GMT
I had to Google her because I had no idea who she was and why we should care about her sexuality. Â I see that she is very young and has a large young fan base. Â I hope that people who admired her before this announcement remain fans. Â I still find it odd when anyone publicly announces their sexuality to people other than family and close friends. Â My reaction is, "Why is this my business?" Â I guess when you are a public figure, it matters somehow? Â I would like to see the day that this isn't considered news and that people are all just people, regardless of sexual preference. Â The way we humans tend to categorize each other saddens me sometimes. Â It is still very important for people to come out, and it will continue to be important until the LGBT+ community decides the day has come that it isn't. Straight people don't get to claim this isn't an issue, because their opinion on this doesn't count. You aren't expected to "care" about every single person's sexuality, but all of us need to care that people who aren't straight feel safe & supported enough to be be able to live their lives truthfully. Sexual preference not mattering is a great concept, but as a society we aren't at that point yet, and until we are we still need to show support to the members of the LGBT community when they do come out and not dismiss their truth with comments such as it being private or not mattering. Being accepted for who they are always matters because it still isn't always the case. They are still discriminator against, shunned by their families, bullied etc. LGBT+ people still need to be visible because that's the only way we will ever get to a point where it truly doesn't matter any more. Coming out isn't "categorizing" people - it's the exact opposite, it's seeing the beautiful differences in people, the variety, and loving & accepting all of them. Applying this same energy to Black people doesnât just make sense but would honor the Black activists who started the modern day gay rights movement. Black people look out for everyone else so reciprocity couldnât come at a better time. Anti-blackness is global and doesnât just hurt Black people. Donât forgot itâs killing Black people but look for the ways injustice trickles down. www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2019/08/05/how-black-press-helped-pave-way-gay-rights/?outputType=ampdaily.jstor.org/the-stonewall-riots-didnt-start-the-gay-rights-movement/www.glaad.org/amp/understanding-black-lgbtq-history-liberation
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 16:34:41 GMT
I don't disagree with you. I just think it's a lot for a 4 year old to be expected to have a grasp on. I donât want to seem like I am piling on or picking on you, but I am a pre-K teacher and assure you it is not a lot for a 4 year old to grasp.  It is not a lot for a 3 year old to grasp.  I donât want to derail this thread but agree that reading the articles Olan posted would be helpful.  They have some important information.  It is something that absolutely NEEDS to be addressed with kids.  Thank you for amplifying what I shared.
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 15:50:18 GMT
Um yup! It is important for a 4, 5, 10, 12, 35, 80 year old person to see the others skin color. Again when one doesn't and is blind to another skin tone, you are dismissing who they are, their unique beauty, their struggles, what they may have had to overcome themselves as well as their ancestors. I am sorry you don't agree but to me it is a form of racism. It shows you are not truly comfortable with the whole person. I don't disagree with you. I just think it's a lot for a 4 year old to be expected to have a grasp on. They do. Research says they do. Experts have weighed in. Itâs no different than the American Pediatric Association saying too much tv is bad for small children. When we know better we do better. If we donât do better itâs only because we are comfortable with things remaining exactly as they are. I know many of you have me on ignore but itâs very easy to click on articles and briefly read the information they contain.
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 15:01:06 GMT
kidshealth.org/en/parents/talk-about-race.htmlGood Article edition.cnn.com/2020/05/28/health/parents-raising-white-children-racism-wellness/index.htmlQ&A on NPR from the author: What is the consequence of that silence? It breeds a lack of capacity among white people to engage in conversations about race and to respond when racism is happening. If I hear racism out on the street or from a co-worker, should I challenge it? What should I say about it? If my African American colleagues or friends see me be silent because I don't know what to do, I become untrustworthy. My daughter is told, "Police are safe â go find one if you're in trouble," but her African American cousin is learning complicated messages about the police from his parents. Those differing messages mean they can be great friends for a while. But eventually, the depth of their friendship will erode because my white child will not be able to identify with her African American cousin or her African American friends. If you look at the readership vs response of threads dealing with racism and Black issues youâd see that ignoring it and hoping racism will go away is the coping mechanism for many white people. It wonât. Talk to your kids. Donât pretend you donât see my Black skin so life is easier to navigate for you. It doesnât change how hard it is for me. www.npr.org/2020/06/03/869071246/how-white-parents-can-talk-to-their-kids-about-race
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 14:53:30 GMT
She should though. Skin colors are beautiful. You are dismissing the person, their culture, and who they are if you don't see skin color. I mean I get it, it is with a kind heart but it doesn't help to reduce racism or help anyone overcome obstacles when people say that. See their skin color. See them for who they are. You are choosing to ignore a part of them when you don't see skin color. Is that necessary for four-going-on-five year old though? Kids that age aren't aware enough to know what their own culture is. The most important thing at that age is that they have an understanding that we're all human. It's the foundation for the learning that you've described. Children start receiving explicit and implicit messages about the meaning of race from birth and begin to show pro-white/anti-Black bias by age three (Baron & Banaji, 2006). To counter anti-Black bias and racism, experts recommend naming and taking action against racism with kids as early and as often as possible. This guide shares some key points and research-based best practices parents and caregivers can use to promote positive racial identity development in children, support conversations about race and racism, and move from conversation to action. As early as 3-6 months, babies notice and respond differently to people based on race (Kelly et al., 2005). By age 3, children categorize and express bias based on race, and may even use racist language intentionally (Van Ausdale and Feagin, 2001). Before your child can talk, they are already learning about the world, and about race, through your actions. Who is coming over to the house to visit? Who do they see when they are out and about in the neighborhood? What music are they hearing? What kind of artwork is hanging up on the walls? Are the main characters in the books they read predominantly white? How about the shows and movies they are watching? What race is their pediatrician, principal, and teacher? Be intentional about seeking out, valuing, and supporting creators, authors, colleagues, neighbors, professionals, and educators of color. You can tell kids âBlack Lives Matterâ and to value âdiversityâ, but it wonât mean much unless your actions show it. It is important to name whiteness and for white people to identify as âwhiteâ. Not naming or claiming the word âwhiteâ masks whiteness, white supremacy, and white privilege, power, and history as members of the dominant racial group. When white kids learn about racism, they may experience being white as a source of shame or guilt (Tatum, 2017). Share with them examples of white people who have utilized their power and privilege to take action against racism and oppression, and how they can commit to doing the same (Tatum, 2017). Ask them their ideas on how they can speak up and take action against racism and support them in incorporating this as an ongoing practice and action. We canât fix a problem until we name it. Naming systems of inequity, such as white supremacy and racism, is key to disrupting their impact on the development of young children. Naming not only brings about an awareness of longstanding, systematic racism, but positively affirms the identities and resistance of oppressed communities (Freire, 1970; Ladson-Billings & Tate,1995; Richerme, 2016). Naming also empowers young children with the vocabulary and shared language needed to identify inequity and take action on their own as they become more experienced around issues of race and social justice. www.theconsciouskid.org/how-to-talk-to-kids-about-race
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 14:28:15 GMT
I had to Google her because I had no idea who she was and why we should care about her sexuality.  I see that she is very young and has a large young fan base.  I hope that people who admired her before this announcement remain fans.  I still find it odd when anyone publicly announces their sexuality to people other than family and close friends.  My reaction is, "Why is this my business?"  I guess when you are a public figure, it matters somehow?  I would like to see the day that this isn't considered news and that people are all just people, regardless of sexual preference.  The way we humans tend to categorize each other saddens me sometimes.  What I did read that was interesting is that she has traction alopecia from wearing her hair in that tight ponytail.  I noticed that one side of her forehead hairline is considerably more receded than the other and see that she tends to wear the ponytail to one side. I didn't know you could cause alopecia by continual pulling on the hair root like that.  The good news is that if you stop the causation as soon as you notice the receding hairline, the hair can grow back.  The hair follicle will be permanently damaged if continue pulling on it like this.  Knowing this, why she doesn't stop the ponytail is beyond me.  Yes, I can see it is part of her whole persona, but is it worth a bald forehead for the rest of your life?  And a crooked one at that?  I clicked on a Youtube video of James Charles giving her a makeover.  In addition to doing her makeup, he took the ponytail out and gave her a cute curled style.  I don't know how old she was when she started becoming popular, but as she grows up, I hope she ditches the bows and ponytail for a style that is healthier for her hair.  The makeover was really well done.  She is a beautiful young woman.  Chatty as heck, but very pretty. Sexuality=private Hairline=public consumption I love this place đ€Șđ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 8:56:33 GMT
Last week brought such horrors and such wins, and a clear racial thread between them. On Wednesday the day began with a historic Senate-runoff win, part of a decade-long effort of community organizing led by politician Stacey Abrams. That afternoon, a mob of white supremacists stormed the Capitol wearing MAGA hats, brandishing weapons, and waving Confederate flags. This clash of opposing forces set the Internet into a tailspin. Even before the day darkened, Iâas a queer, Black woman living in the Southâhad mixed feelings as I watched the conversation around Abramsâs role in an unprecedented victory unfold on social media. In 2018, Abrams ran for governor of Georgia but lost to Brian Kemp, who was the Secretary of State at the time. Despite her loss, Abrams didnât simply disappearâshe became one of the most powerful forces in politics and focused on fighting voter suppression, which she believed contributed to her defeat. Fast-forward to this month, when Democratic nominee Raphael Warnock won out over incumbent Sen. Kelly Loeffler and Democrat Jon Ossoff over Republican David Perdue, thanks to the tireless efforts of Abramsâs grassroots organization Fair Fight. A number of politicians and activists I follow on Twitter likened Abrams to âCaptain Americaâ; Mark Ruffalo called her a âreal superhero.â This may seem like innocuous praise, but thereâs a fine line between celebrating a Black womanâs efforts and burdening her with the responsibility to save us. The chatter took an even stranger turn with compliments that seem to fetishize her; men, specifically white men, commented on how they wanted to leave their wives for her. Black women are undoubtedly powerful, but this characterization is often problematic. The phrase Black Girl Magic, popularized by CaShawn Thompson in 2013, holds a valuable message, but one that is often reduced to clichĂ© or used out of context by non-Black people as a well-intentioned gesture of support. Many white and non-Black Americans still have no idea what it means to actually value and honor Black women in a meaningful way. As Tamika Mallory, the cofounder of Until Freedom, an intersectional social justice organization, and a former cochair of the Womenâs March on Washington in 2017, says, âA good ally places themselves in between the system and those people the system is harming, using their privilege to allow the voices of the impacted folks to be heard and protected.â Which also means working to correct the massive disparities that are widespread in our society. The response to Abrams proved what so many of us experience in our personal lives: too often weâre tasked with solving problems we did not create. Stacey Abrams is smart, hardworking, determinedâand yes, a force. But being a Black woman doesnât make you innately strong. And yet this kind of expectation has become a societal norm. As author and activist Mikki Kendall writes on the âStrong Black Woman problemâ in her 2020 book Hood Feminism: Notes From Women That a Movement Forgot, âThe fact that Black women are supposedly tougher than white women means that we are built to face abuse and ignorance, and that our need for care or concern is less pressing.â While the adoration is flatteringâAbrams certainly deserves the praiseâone question remains: Are we leaning too heavily on her shoulders? Rather than taking to Twitter to project your desires for Abramsâs future, consider doing the additional work to help clear a path for more women like her. Abrams herself has laid out a clear plan and clear reasoning for what needs to be done: expand voter registration, use technology to simplify the process, fight the purging of voter registration rolls, learn about organizing, and prepare election officials for large turnout to reduce time spent in line. Investing in Black womenâs expertise results in real change. As I reflected on the events last week, I realized that in some ways, we have made progress: We have made it possible for women like Abrams to fight and make change. But righting all the wrongs of the world requires more than we can ask from one woman. www.vogue.com/article/stacey-abrams-pressure-on-black-women/amp
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 7:55:31 GMT
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61 vs 316
Jan 23, 2021 7:34:30 GMT
via mobile
Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 7:34:30 GMT
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 7:27:11 GMT
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 7:13:40 GMT
Violent âPOCâ stormed the Capitol and more than half of Black women voted for Donald Trump but luckily Hannah Montana went out and got the entire state of Wyoming to vote and democracy was defended. Bad guys lose and Stormtroopers are currently watching over our great nation.
See how narratives change at the whim of people?
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 6:52:12 GMT
Wouldnât it be cool if everyone stayed engaged and looked out for people who carried democracy on their backs this election season. Everyone who voted against Trump carried democracy on their back. I disagree. Edited to add: Here you go with the revisionist ass history. Donât deny or downplay the role Black people, black women in particular played in this election. It wasnât an everyone race. Some of us worked much harder than others. Donât be dismissive of that hard work. Stacey Abrams turned Georgia blue. Now Kamala Harris will break ties. Black women fixed what America got wrong in 2016. Period.
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Olan
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 1:59:43 GMT
Wouldnât it be cool if everyone stayed engaged and looked out for people who carried democracy on their backs this election season.
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Post by Olan on Jan 23, 2021 1:38:50 GMT
amp.cnn.com/cnn/2021/01/22/us/kentucky-attorney-general-daniel-cameron-impeachment-petition/index.htmlThree former grand jurors are among the "concerned Kentucky citizens" petitioning the Kentucky Legislature to impeach state Attorney General Daniel Cameron, according to Kevin Glogower, one of the attorneys representing the petitioners. The citizens filed a petition Friday seeking the impeachment of Cameron on charges of "breach of public trust and failure to comply with duties for misrepresenting to the nation the findings of the Grand Jury" and "abuse of office and breach of duties of professional responsibility and ethics," both of which are connected to the lack of charges filed against the Louisville Metropolitan Police Department officers implicated in the death of Breonna Taylor in September.
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Post by Olan on Jan 21, 2021 12:18:13 GMT
Amanda Gorman is killing it. "What just is isn't always justice." You can support Amanda Gorman by pre-ordering her books! They are both on Amazon The titles are: Change Sings The Hill We Climb FYI buying a Black authors book before release is super helpful. www.epicreads.com/blog/preorder-books-by-black-authors/ June 2020 but a good list for YA books by black authors
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Post by Olan on Jan 21, 2021 12:13:08 GMT
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Post by Olan on Jan 21, 2021 12:04:10 GMT
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Post by Olan on Jan 21, 2021 11:58:25 GMT
You can support Amanda Gorman by pre-ordering her books!
They are both on Amazon (I wonât link it)
The titles are:
Change Sings The Hill We Climb.
FYI buying a Black authors book before release is super helpful.
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Post by Olan on Jan 20, 2021 14:43:42 GMT
I came across the Honey Pot items at Walmart yesterday. In my mind, I thought I remembered it was Black Woman owned. What tipped me towards it was the ingredients. But if I can be totally honest, this statement on the packaging is what sold me: âMade by humans with vaginas, for humans with vaginas. because it takes one to know oneâ đđhow could I not buy it!! đđ€ŁSeeing that on the bottle always cracks me up because as a kid that was the catchy reply back to an insult. If someone called you stupid youâd say âtakes one to know oneâ.
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Post by Olan on Jan 20, 2021 14:26:49 GMT
www.nps.gov/articles/black-women-and-the-fight-for-voting-rights.htmBlack women found themselves pulled in two directions. Black men wanted their support in fighting racial discrimination and prejudice, while white women wanted them to help change the inferior status of women in American society. Both groups ignored the unique challenges that African American women faced. Black reformers like Mary Church Terrell, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, and Harriet Tubman understood that both their race and their sex affected their rights and opportunities. Because of their unique position, Black women tended to focus on human rights and universal suffrage, rather than suffrage solely for African Americans or for women. Many Black suffragists weighed in on the debate over the Fifteenth Amendment, which would enfranchise Black men but not Black women. Mary Ann Shadd Cary spoke in support of the Fifteenth Amendment but was also critical of it as it did not give women the right to vote. Sojourner Truth argued that Black women would continue to face discrimination and prejudice unless their voices were uplifted like those of Black men. A timely read for today. Black women turned this election around so be sure to look for ways you can: Amplify a Black womanâs voice. Especially in the workplace. Share your salary so she can negotiate the same compensation Fight the Stand Your Ground Laws. It will mean more Black lives lost. Donate to HBCUs. Kamala Harris attended one. So did Stacey Abrams. And Raphael Warnock. Turn your outrage into action. Take control of the gun safe. medium.com/equality-includes-you/what-white-people-can-do-for-racial-justice-f2d18b0e0234
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Post by Olan on Jan 19, 2021 16:05:05 GMT
How do you think Miya is standing up to the âintense shameâ? Does she look like she is going to harm herself? Do you think her earning potential will be affected by this personal choice she made?
In the history of shaming Karenâs have any of them ended their lives or is this just pinning victim hood and weakness on perpetrators of a crime that has resulted in hundred of Black men and women losing their lives. Not livelihoods but LIVES.
Never in the history of victims has the onus been placed on the harmed group to SOLVE the problem. Rape victims. Domestic violence victims. All are told hey nothing you said or did resulted in your abuse. Instead what Black people Black women in particular hear is doing xyz will result in better treatment. And then better treatment never happens. Civil Rights Movement really did play out and decades have passed yet Black people are still expected to take this shit treatment smile and act like we are really a progressive society on the path to better! If only you did this then we will do this. So we get degrees and engage in respectability politics only to experience the same treatment our freed ancestors did.
Before Black people would have these types of experiences and everyone would say no that couldnât have happened. So much so when Karens are caught on tape everyone acts shocked that shit like this actually happens. And now Brene Brown talks about shame being ineffective and now videotaping white women behaving badly is counterproductive shaming and should be re-evaluated....B. Brown talks a lot about personal responsibility and anti-racism work too. Donât latch on to one thing and reject all the actionable things you can do to be anti-racist.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr said âThe hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in a period of moral crisis, maintain their neutrality.â In these days of emotional tension, when the problems of the world are gigantic in extent and chaotic in detail, there is no greater need than for sober thinking, mature judgment, and creative dissentâ
If you think shaming isnât the solution. Share yours. đ€·đŸââïž
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Post by Olan on Jan 19, 2021 15:00:49 GMT
The intense shaming of people like Ponsetta or the woman in the park who called the police on the bird watcher has always bothered me. I do feel that they need to be held accountable, but what is the end goal? Is it to ruin their lives or possibly lead to them hurting themselves? Or is it to bring about change? Jeremyâs girl posted about Brene Brownâs podcast the other day and I think this thread is a good time to remember what was said in that podcast. Whether it is on this board specifically, or in society more generally, shaming is not the same as accountability. I think it would be wise for some to remember that. The hard part is how to hold someone accountable. I think that we resort to shaming because we are hurt or donât know what else to do. But is that really effective at bringing about change? And if your approach is to try to shame people here with the stated goal of creating anti-racist allies, I would say to re-evaluate your methods and see if it is working or not. What methods have worked though. Whatâs the alternative? What will it actually take to move white people to be better people? What does accountability look like?
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Olan
Pearl Clutcher
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Posts: 4,053
Jul 13, 2014 21:23:27 GMT
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Post by Olan on Jan 19, 2021 14:23:52 GMT
This is why I hate WoC and PoC. Call Black people Black. White presenting âWoCâ should not be placed into the same category as Black women.
âI wasn't racial profiling whatsoever. I'm Puerto Rican,â Ponsetto said. âI'm, like, a woman of color. I'm Italian, Greek, Puerto Rican.â
âHe's 14? That's what they're claiming? Yeah. I'm 22,â Ponsetto said. âI've lived probably just the same amount of life as him. Like, honestly. I'm just as a kid at heart as he is. I feel sorry that I made the family go through, like, all of that stress. But at the same time, it wasn't just them going through that.â
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