Donate SIGN UP

Not News, But Am I A Racist?

Avatar Image
Deskdiary | 02:18 Sun 17th Sep 2017 | News
120 Answers
My wife and I have just returned from a 'come as your hero' party.

I went as Rick James who, in my opinion, is the most unrecognised piece of brilliance ever to have uttered a note (Google Fire and Desire - just superb).

Anyway, I blacked-up. And about 45 minutes ago was told I was racist for doing so. I tried to explain that as Rick James is a hero so how on earth can it be racist, but it fell on death ears.

So, an I wrong or, if as I suspect, is my accuser a complete moron?
Gravatar

Answers

101 to 120 of 120rss feed

First Previous 3 4 5 6

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Deskdiary. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
AOG

Back on the derailment:

//But to bring matters up to date, the ancestors of those who were taken from Africa, are now living much better lives that the ancestors of those who escaped slavery.//

No, I don't agree. There are those who are the descendants of slaves who have much better lives, and there are those whose families were not sold into slavery who have much better lives.

It's no where near cut and dried like that. That is a huge oversimplification.
SP....well said.
I don't know when it started, but all civilizations (except the Persians) seemed to have used slaves. When did it end? - it hasn't!
AOG

You wrote:

//But then why not continue to solely blame the white man, it gives that bit of power over them.//

Now it's time to call Alanis Morrisette...
I think most people will understand that the story of the slave trade is far more complex than good/evil on one side or another.


It is.
But my view is ... yes it happened get over it.
-Talbot-

AOG doesn't bring it up that often. He did here, but that I feel was just to make a point.

What the point was is debatable.
Deskdiary - What you have here is the difficult situation where intention collides with perception.

You did not intend any racial slur with your costume, but that does not mean that none was received by people who saw you wearing it.

This gives rise to the difficult moral dilemma - are you entitled to wear what you want, given that your motives are not provocative, and by the same rule, are people entitled to take offence at what you wore, regardless of whether that was your intention or not.

Personally, my way round it is this - I would say that you did not intend to upset anyone, but you ran a knowable risk, and as such, you have to accept the consequences of your actions.

Is it wrong to assume that someone who blacks up is racist? Yes it is - but such is our society's perception of that action, that you knowingly run that risk, and lack of intent does not present an inviable defence.

I am sure that in future, you will consider carefully your costume choices based on this experience. Having a hero, and not intending offence does not mean that everyone else is going to understand and accept your appearance. You need either to be ready to accept that, or re-think your outfit for the evening.
oh, I don't know, andy. If he'd been to a regular fancy dress party where he could dress up as anyone he liked, to make up as a black man would quite reasonably cause offence.

But this was quite specifically a "come as your hero" party. And he did. It's possible, as has been suggested, that he could have done so without blacking up, and that would probably have been the wisest course. None the less, he was doing what it said on the invitation.
jno - // oh, I don't know, andy. If he'd been to a regular fancy dress party where he could dress up as anyone he liked, to make up as a black man would quite reasonably cause offence.

But this was quite specifically a "come as your hero" party. And he did. It's possible, as has been suggested, that he could have done so without blacking up, and that would probably have been the wisest course. None the less, he was doing what it said on the invitation. //

I think your point is valid, but sadly some people trample all over the finer points of invitation interpretation in their rush to be offended - and that is why, personally, I would have said, Yes, RJ is my hero, but given the potential for confrontation in our modern PC world, I'll pick a hero whose representation will be less contentious.
A-H

I don't believe this actually happened.
ah ... I was right then


or

SO ... I was right!
On the invitations that we get for fancy dress parties, it always says no stereotyping of black people is allowed, that's how it should be. You and your friends may be living in the past and need to move on a bit.
Ahh though Sham Rants.... you are allowed, encouraged even, to dress up as a woman , if you are a man. And vice versa.
Does it say the same thing to the black peoples invitation to your fancy-dress parties?

Or don't they get an invite?
-Talbot- It says the opposite on our black friends invitations, no stereotyping of white people. We all know how to have a great time without racism, it's 2017 after all.
Love thy neighbour
SP - //A-H

I don't believe this actually happened. //

Why do you think it didn't happen?
Talbot - //ah ... I was right then


or

SO ... I was right! //

Apologies - I don't understand your point - care to explain?

101 to 120 of 120rss feed

First Previous 3 4 5 6

Do you know the answer?

Not News, But Am I A Racist?

Answer Question >>