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| #Post#: 4952-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Re: Racist bullying | |
| By: rp Date: March 19, 2021, 8:42 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| What empire is the first picture? | |
| #Post#: 4954-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Re: Racist bullying | |
| By: Dazhbog Date: March 19, 2021, 10:42 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=rp link=topic=35.msg4952#msg4952 | |
| date=1616161332]What empire is the first picture?[/quote] | |
| Portugal: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portuguese_Empire | |
| #Post#: 4955-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Re: Racist bullying | |
| By: rp Date: March 19, 2021, 10:46 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Dazhbog link=topic=35.msg4954#msg4954 | |
| date=1616168526] | |
| [quote author=rp link=topic=35.msg4952#msg4952 | |
| date=1616161332]What empire is the first picture?[/quote] | |
| Portugal: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portuguese_Empire | |
| [/quote] | |
| Ok. | |
| #Post#: 5183-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Psychological decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: March 31, 2021, 2:30 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBmV0bG59u4 | |
| Related: | |
| https://us.yahoo.com/news/colorism-spectrum-black-communities-yet-155118445.html | |
| [quote]I was sitting at a lunch table in 10th grade when an | |
| amber-skinned boy told me that I was the darkest girl he would | |
| go for. I remember being annoyed by his assessment that I had | |
| barely made the cut for desirability, but as a teenage girl | |
| wrestling with her own perceptions of beauty, instead of being | |
| outraged, I accepted a moment of simultaneous praise and | |
| devaluation. | |
| That experience of being temporarily placed on a lighter-skinned | |
| pedestal simply because I was a noticeable gradient lighter than | |
| a few of the chocolate girls around me, is just one of many | |
| within Black communities that showcase the nuances and | |
| subtleties of colorism. It�s those subtleties that can make the | |
| problem even harder to see and easier to perpetuate. | |
| From hit reality shows, to the lyrics of our favorite songs, to | |
| uncovered stories from Black Hollywood, the reality of colorism | |
| continues to show up in Black entertainment and culture. Though | |
| many of us are aware of this centuries-long issue, Black | |
| communities have yet to truly reckon with it. | |
| ... | |
| Colorism is a system of power that favors lighter-skinned people | |
| and it has a history of enforcement by government, educational, | |
| and media institutions. | |
| The emotional scars inflicted by dark-skinned girls and boys who | |
| bully lighter ones are not �the same� as the systemic scars left | |
| by employers preferring less qualified but lighter-skinned Black | |
| men over dark-skinned men or a criminal justice system that is | |
| 65 percent more likely to convict people widely considered to be | |
| very dark. | |
| That said, healing is messy and while the ways that colorism | |
| shows up in our lives may not be the same, we are all unified by | |
| our right to be seen and for our pain to be acknowledged. We all | |
| have blind spots in one area or another, and centering | |
| compassion can help us find them. | |
| I used to think that lighter-skinned girls were celebrated, but | |
| in recent years I�ve come to understand that being exoticized | |
| and fetishized is not �the same� as being celebrated, and being | |
| likened to a trophy is not �the same� as being cherished. In | |
| some cases, it may even increase the risk for violence.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 5223-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Psychological decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 2, 2021, 1:05 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/culture/2017-10/12/content_33154166.htm | |
| [quote]Uygur faces are finding their way to movie screens, | |
| phones, and billboards across China. | |
| Members of the ethnic minority group have facial features that | |
| Chinese brands have deemed �attractive,� creating opportunities | |
| for talented Uygurs to break into the entertainment business as | |
| singers, models and TV stars. | |
| ... | |
| Though he cautions that Han Chinese still far outnumber the | |
| number of Uygur models, many of his Chinese clients are �looking | |
| for a face that have some Asian characteristics, but also have | |
| some kind of white Europeanness to it.� | |
| ... | |
| In many ways, the shift in beauty standards correlates to a rise | |
| in purchasing power. Increased disposable income is a calling | |
| card for international brands looking to take advantage of the | |
| new market. | |
| The brands bring their own standards for beauty, revealing the | |
| Western bias in defining beauty, even in local cultures. | |
| ... | |
| A 2012 McKinsey survey of this group found that �this generation | |
| of Chinese consumers is the most Westernized to date.�[/quote] | |
| https://i1.sndcdn.com/artworks-000052318933-jo9edx-t500x500.jpg | |
| #Post#: 5277-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Psychological decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 3, 2021, 11:47 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Eurocentrism not only does not end when "whites" are a minority, | |
| it often amplifies as the rarity of "whiteness" makes it even | |
| more 'valuable' in the minds of the colonized: | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/grew-majority-minority-country-still-184200923.… | |
| [quote]Trinidad and Tobago, known for its Carnival and sunny | |
| beaches, is a compelling study of colonialism�s enduring | |
| psychological wounds. Trinidad was invaded by the British in | |
| 1797. Tobago, a nearby island, was annexed to Trinidad in the | |
| late 1800s. British rule in Trinidad and Tobago shared | |
| characteristics with other countries also owned by the crown, | |
| including a political system that stripped most of the country�s | |
| population of their rights and humanity, policing that preserved | |
| white people�s positions at the top of the race-class pyramid, | |
| and a primary aim of extraction that molded the country into a | |
| plantocracy. The queen would be removed as head of state only in | |
| 1976 when the twin-island nation became a republic. | |
| For more than a century, Britain transposed its own ideas of | |
| racial purity, comportment, language, society, and culture, | |
| systematically dissolving and criminalizing ways of life enjoyed | |
| by Black people in Trinidad and Tobago. | |
| ... | |
| I found my own Trinidadian upbringing confusing. On one hand, I | |
| was made to believe that race mattered very little, echoing | |
| sentiments of postraciality that surfaced after President Barack | |
| Obama was elected. My schoolbooks emphasized that Trinidad and | |
| Tobago was a rainbow utopia, evident by the shoehorning of as | |
| many creeds and races as could possibly fit into small, | |
| grayscale pictorial representations. I�d look at my face in the | |
| mirror�my light but definitely brown skin, my broad | |
| nose�clocking my features against the fact that my last name was | |
| confusingly Chinese (my great-grandfather on my dad�s side came | |
| from there) and wondering what the hell I was. | |
| I was Black when I traveled, a fact made clear to me on my | |
| first-ever trip to America when I was seven. But when I was | |
| home, in a society that was mostly Black and Brown anyway, I | |
| could just be Trinidadian. My mixedness represented a kind of | |
| ideal amalgamation that fit neatly into the nationalist | |
| narrative our country�s first prime minister proposed�himself a | |
| Black firebrand who stated in one breath that �Massa day done,� | |
| but in another, �There can be no Mother India for those whose | |
| ancestors came from India. There can be no Mother Africa for | |
| those of African origin. � A nation, like an individual, can | |
| have only one Mother.� | |
| On the other hand, I was made to believe that race mattered very | |
| much. I never considered my Blackness, because I knew, deep down | |
| and even as a child, what kinds of trauma my light skin exempted | |
| me from. I desperately wanted to be white, not just to look it | |
| but to feel it, to feel as though I was popular at school, as | |
| though I was special, as though I could vacation overseas | |
| whenever I wanted. My �diverse� and private Catholic school made | |
| that abundantly clear, in which we were told once that if we | |
| failed our exams, we would be accepted to only those high | |
| schools�coded language for schools that were typically all-Black | |
| and largely neglected. | |
| Theorists speak of decolonization as a process involving a | |
| reordering of our society and culture according to Indigenous | |
| worldviews. But even before this, even before Trinidad and | |
| Tobago can reach consensus on what indigeneity means to such a | |
| confluence of people, its most powerful must reflect on the | |
| wrongness of a system that while wreaking psychological havoc | |
| below, still graciously sees white and lighter-skinned people | |
| sitting on thrones that have simply switched hands.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 5302-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Psychological decolonization | |
| By: rp Date: April 4, 2021, 6:20 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://twitter.com/JordanSumbu/status/1290769754634870784?s=19 | |
| #Post#: 5357-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Psychological decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 6, 2021, 12:27 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "Non-white" victim of bullying thinks it's OK to be a "white" | |
| bully: | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/asian-american-man-punched-hate-215522370.html | |
| [quote]Asian American Man Punched in Hate Crime Asks for | |
| Attacker to Get Restorative Justice, Not Jail | |
| Daniel Hutchens, 38, pleaded guilty to a bias crime for | |
| assaulting an Asian American man at a Portland MAX stop last | |
| year, according to Oregon Live. He allegedly approached the | |
| victim and asked if he was Chinese before punching him in the | |
| face. Hutchens fled the scene after the attack. The suspect, who | |
| had already spent 100 days in custody, was sentenced to 90 days | |
| in prison during his hearing on March 30. The victim, who did | |
| not wish to be identified, requested to find a resolution that | |
| does not add jail time for Hutchens[/quote] | |
| [img] | |
| https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/jhiRoTv9KG_g559lDDMLRA--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRl… | |
| This is how sick in the head many victims of colonialism are. | |
| #Post#: 5515-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Psychological decolonization | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 11, 2021, 10:40 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://us.yahoo.com/huffpost/internalized-racism-asian-american-130000170.html | |
| [quote]I Hated Myself For Not Being White For Most Of My Life. | |
| Here�s How I Stopped. | |
| I used to hate being Korean. I grew up envying the blond-haired, | |
| blue-eyed, skinny white girls on TV and the movies. It was hard | |
| not to hate my small eyes and flat features when all I ever saw | |
| in the media were portrayals of white beauty. Even my parents | |
| wanted me to get a nose job and shave down my cheekbones because | |
| that�s what they thought was beautiful ― not our faces, | |
| but theirs. | |
| I was ashamed of how we looked to everyone else: uncivilized, | |
| loud, smelly with garlic breath, and dumb with our broken | |
| English and awkward accents. I hated how enmeshed and closed off | |
| my family was and how it seemed like nothing outside of us was | |
| allowed in and we weren�t allowed out. | |
| I used to hate being around other Asians ― in part because | |
| like most Korean Americans, I grew up in the church and thought | |
| that all Koreans were judgmental Christians, but also because I | |
| refused to accept that I was anything like them. | |
| I hated how Asians traveled together in flocks and how abrasive | |
| their languages seemed compared to the calm consistency of | |
| English. I used to make fun of other Asians, believing I was | |
| nothing like them, and trying to convince myself that I was more | |
| American ― or more white ― than them.[/quote] | |
| Pick one. | |
| [quote]Cathy Park Hong, author of �Minor Feelings: An Asian | |
| American Reckoning,� writes, �Racial self-hatred is seeing | |
| yourself the way the whites see you, which turns you into your | |
| own worst enemy.� I became my own worst enemy from the moment I | |
| arrived at LAX at only 3 years old, beginning what now feels | |
| like a lifetime of assimilating to whiteness and desperately | |
| trying to be seen and accepted.[/quote] | |
| This (in bold) is probably the best line in the article. | |
| [quote]For a large part of my youth and young adulthood, I spent | |
| my time in America fawning out of survival. Fawning is one of | |
| the trauma responses, similar to flight, fight or freeze. | |
| Fawning is when you people-please to diffuse conflict in order | |
| to reestablish a sense of safety. | |
| I fawned by aiming to please white people and viewing myself the | |
| way they saw me. I fawned by laughing off racist jokes, | |
| microaggressions, fetishizations, and the repeated belittling of | |
| my cultural background and how I look. | |
| I learned early on that this is what I would have to do to make | |
| it through alive. I laughed off countless �open your eyes� jokes | |
| and I begged my parents to buy me Lunchables so I wouldn�t have | |
| to bring smelly kimchi to school for lunch. A friend once told | |
| me I smelled weird, so I became accustomed to spraying myself | |
| from head to toe in perfume to mask the smell of Korea whenever | |
| I left my house. | |
| I distanced myself from other Asians, thinking I had found the | |
| solution to all of my problems by aligning myself with white | |
| people, clinging to my proximity to whiteness. Instead of just | |
| quietly minimizing myself and my racial trauma, I simultaneously | |
| perpetuated and mocked Asian stereotypes and rejected the parts | |
| of myself that didn�t fit the white mold. As the saying goes, if | |
| you can�t beat them, might as well join them. | |
| I fawned into the model minority myth, designed to pit people of | |
| color against each other to uphold white supremacy. I fawned and | |
| tried to survive the only way I knew how, by blending in ― | |
| only that was never actually possible. | |
| It wasn�t until I got older and I was able to explore my culture | |
| outside of my family of origin that I could appreciate these | |
| parts of myself that I desperately tried to keep hidden. | |
| ... | |
| In Korea, I learned about our painful history and just how much | |
| colonialism is rooted in racism. I learned about how long we�ve | |
| been carrying and passing down this trauma from generation to | |
| generation, until it reached me and my family ― the first | |
| to make it to the land of opportunity and freedom and have a go | |
| at the American dream. | |
| ... | |
| Now when people ask me what was once a very dreaded question | |
| ― �Where are you from?� which really means, �What are | |
| you?� ― I proudly respond that I�m Korean American because | |
| I want to normalize the fact that this country is made up of | |
| humans of all colors, shapes, sizes and ethnicities. I view | |
| myself from my own lens instead of filtering myself to appeal to | |
| white people because I want to show the world that this is what | |
| America truly looks like.[/quote] | |
| OK, but if fawning is merely a survival reaction by an ethnic | |
| minority living among a majority of a different ethnicity: | |
| 1) why does one "non-white" minority living among a different | |
| "non-white" majority not fawn to that majority group? (Did | |
| Ghandi try to be "black" during his time in South Africa? LOL) | |
| 2) why does a "white" minority living among a "non-white" | |
| majority not fawn to that majority group? ( | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/enemies/orania/ | |
| Duh!) | |
| Until we recognize that fawning is only ever directed towards | |
| "whites", we have not reached the root of the problem. | |
| #Post#: 5718-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Psychological decolonization | |
| By: rp Date: April 21, 2021, 2:11 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| "Non-White" defends "Prince" Phillip: | |
| https://twitter.com/tunkuv/status/1380499302280220675?s=19 | |
| [quote] | |
| I liked Prince Philip. | |
| He was...candid. | |
| My favourite line was his saying aloud that a badly installed | |
| fuse-box somewhere in Scotland seemed to have been "put in by an | |
| Indian." | |
| I've never met a decent Indian electrician. | |
| Have you? | |
| [/quote] | |
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