Archive for the ‘Race’ Category
Broken Social Contracts and Silent Consent
March 3, 2009 · 4 Comments
I was so moved by the trailer to Social Contracts by Laura Rahman that I had to post it and write a post. An insightful clip of documentary dealing with issues of sexual violence in the Black community.
Ugh, can someone explain this to me?
February 18, 2009 · 10 Comments
I really hope Delonas has a helluva explanation for this political cartoon … http://tinyurl.com/k6ybp
Re-Post south side scholar: Let’s All Point & Laugh at Rihanna
February 13, 2009 · 3 Comments
This is a repost of a powerful piece on Rihanna, Chris Brown, and Domestic Violence in the Black community. Taken from South Side Scholar.
Friday Funny: Happy 100th Colored People
February 13, 2009 · 0 Comments
Happy 100th anniversary NAACP… now change you name immediately!
Education is more than a Mind Game
February 12, 2009 · 3 Comments
This past week, renowned Psychologist Richard Nisbett published an opinion piece in the New York Times entitled, “Education Is All in the Mind.” While I’ve come to respect Nisbett for his research and advocacy against polemics such as The Bell Curve, his recent piece misses the mark. The central issue is that Nisbett privileges psychological factors over other factors and leaves the reader to think what it takes to repair schools essentially are “mind games.”
The Recession and the Ivory Black Tower
February 9, 2009 · 0 Comments
The arrival of the recession didn’t really hit me that much. I remember the basic economic principal that I was taught when I was younger, “As the supply of jobs goes down, demand for education goes up.” While this is still probably true, this past week’s events really made me take a deeper stock of my position as an academic and the ways that the University system is insulated, but not impervious. This past Friday, Clark Atlanta University dismissed 100 staff members, including 70 faculty citing financial difficulties.
BHC: MLK on White folks and the Pace of Progress
January 19, 2009 · 7 Comments
“I have been dismayed at the degree to which abysmal ignorance seems to prevail among state, city and even Federal […]
Quit Frontin on Kwanzaa
December 26, 2008 · 20 Comments
Being Pan-African is a weird thing. To many folks it means wearing dashikis, avoiding swine, and shouting ase at every opportunity. I, however, realize that you aren’t going to do that. For most Black folks, the holiday of Kwanzaa is one tied to Pan-Africanism and thus gets mentioned more in their living rooms on TV commercials than at family gatherings. I’ve decided we’ve been frontin’ on Kwanzaa for no real good reason. I think now, more than ever, we run the risk of being allured by an Obama presidency into thinking we have arrived at the promised land. Look around your family, your neighborhood, your nation, and tell me if we can afford to continue to not be self-reflective and work towards a better community? If you cannot take seven days to redefine you relationship to the people who live with you, love you, and look like you, what kind of change are you really invested in?
“I am an American…”
December 24, 2008 · 0 Comments
I don’t think I was really prepared for those four words, but as the clock struck midnight and November 5th rolled in I started hearing and reading the words “I am an American,” from many of my friends and family. Well, much like my man Ice Cube said, “I’m here to deprogram you, don’t forget what they made your great grandmama do, your great granddaddy do without a dollar or a penny or a thank you…”. I am very thankful for an electoral victory, but an election can’t erase the reality that we came from or live in.
Racial Identity and the Workplace
December 23, 2008 · 3 Comments
This past week, I had a chance to appear on NPR’s News and Notes with Farai Chideya and discuss racial […]