Listen Live!
join BAW
forgot password
LIFE
WORK
PLAY


blAck americaweb.com

Commentary: Before We Blast Others Who Promote Black Stereotypes, We’ve Got to Stop Giving Them Ammo

Date: Thursday, November 09, 2006
By: Gregory Kane, BlackAmericaWeb.com

The language in the university fraternity’s “Halloween in the Hood” party was pretty clear.

It urged prospective attendees to wear “regional clothing from our locale: fur coats, bling bling ice ice, grills, hoochie hoops, white tee’s and Air Force Onez.”

Sound familiar? Don’t we hear about “bling bling, ice ice, grills, hoochies, Air Force Onez” and “da hood” from black rappers all the time? Of course we do.

Except the senders of the invitation aren’t black. The invitation came from a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity on the campus of -- Are you sitting down? -- Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Justin Park, a Hopkins junior, sent the invitation prior to the “Halloween in the Hood” party on Oct. 28 (And Mr. Park, that’s “Halloween in DA Hood.”). Add his attempt at using black lingo to the skeleton dressed in a pirate’s costume that was dangling from a rope outside Sigma Chi’s fraternity house the night of the party and what you have is a regular poop storm on what many folks consider the dullest campus in American higher education.


Advertisement

Infiniti in Black Witness Inspiration as it happens. Watch Mike Thompson's film, "Act Two - The Process" now.


Members of Hopkins Black Student Union staged a protest. The party was only one issue, BSU members said. Among their other complaints: white and Asian students routinely snub black students when it comes to forming study groups; there aren’t nearly enough black tenured faculty members and white faculty advisors routinely pressure black students to either change majors or drop courses; and the assumption that black students are unqualified to attend Hopkins and got a free affirmative action pass.

It’s a good thing black students at Hopkins brought up these other grievances, because when they point to Sigma Chi’s “Halloween in the Hood” party and the invitation as an example of anti-black racism, they don’t have a leg to stand on.

Black students claim the hanging pirate was meant to symbolize a lynching, showing once again how quickly some black folks can shift into victim mode. Pirates WERE hanged. That was the penalty for piracy. All hangings were NOT lynchings. Not all lynchings involved hanging.

And the language in the invitation? Well, it just goes to show that non-black folks have SO got to stop listening to rap music. Because that’s where the language comes from. Park, a Korean student who’s been expelled from Sigma Chi, didn’t learn about Air Force Onez, bling bling, ice ice, hoochie hoops and “da hood” from listening to his parents talk at home.

He learned it by listening to the folks who purvey and perpetuate the worst stereotypes of black folks today: black rappers. These guys leave me pining away for “Amos ‘n Andy” reruns, which at least had the redeeming quality of being funny.

The stereotypes of black folks nearest and dearest to the hearts of black rappers -- black males as thugs, pimps and gangstas and black women as hoochies and ‘hos -- aren’t funny in the slightest. Neither is Mr. Park, who claimed the first invitation he sent was meant to be humorous.

When someone broke the news to him that it wasn’t, Park sent ANOTHER invitation. Apparently he still had the itch to be clever.

“(Thank you) Johnnie L. Cochran for being a true homie and getting Orenthal Simpson, commonly known as OJ, acquitted.”

And I thought it was only white folks who had a problem getting over the verdict in the O.J. Simpson criminal trial. Apparently some Asians are afflicted too.

I teach a writing class at Hopkins. For the past four or five consecutive semesters I’ve had to tell at least one white student to let that O.J. Simpson thing go. When I mention to the class that there are people involved in the lynching of Emmett Till who are still alive and haven’t even been charged, much less prosecuted, they look at me like I’ve grown an eye in the middle of my forehead.

“Who’s Emmett Till?” they ask.

A group of tenured black Hopkins professors -- all six of them -- told the university’s president that Hopkins students come to campus with little to no idea of the history of racism in America. They proposed that Hopkins introduce courses, seminars and workshops that will teach students that history.

Justin “Funny Boy” Park had better be the first to sign up.




Discuss

rnscampbell says:

I recently attended a workshop and evidently met Parks' relative. During a breakout session the task was to name adjectives read more

catherha says:

it doesn't matter if pirates were hanged or lynched or not, everbody knows when you say hood you are read more

Mizraim says:

What, Mr. Kane, is the difference between 'bling bling' and 'ice ice' in the hood and the expensive diamonds worn read more

Mizraim says:

What, Mr. Kane, is the difference between 'bling bling' and 'ice ice' in the hood and the expensive diamonds worn read more

ccv2al says:

I have met smarter bumbs excuse me HOMELESS. I am growing more confused with how we treat one another even read more

More Headlines

Commentary: Barack Obama Can’t Win as Long as He Continues to Play That Tired, Dog-Eared Race Card

Rather than representing a new kind of politics, Obama appears to be not so different from any number of liberal black politicians who've graced the stage.

Commentary: Thank Goodness the Olympic Basketball Squad Finally Remembered How to Work as a Team

In their quest to recapture the top medal, the the USA men’s basketball team is treating all comers with respect -- meaning as if they could win.

Commentary: If America Can Nation-Build Elsewhere, We Can Rebuild Regions Here Hit Hard by Job Losses

Many former employees at once stable manufacturing companies are taking jobs paying far less than what they previously earned -- if they find work at all.

Commentary: Did Ebony Magazine’s List of ‘25 Coolest Brothers of All Time’ Get It Right? Of Course Not

They’re the "25 Coolest Brothers of All Time," according to the August edition of Ebony magazine. But do all 25 men on the list belong there?

Commentary: Could Bernie Mac’s Early, Impoverished Years Have Contributed to His Fatal Lung Ailments?

He was born poor, but his humble beginnings turned out to be the straw that he would spin into comedic gold. Did his years in poverty ultimately claim Bernie Mac?

Commentary: Black Youth Leadership Programs Help Our Kids Crush Misconceptions of Us – and Our Future

Whether in the media or at the barber shop, we're often led to believe that our young people are too far gone and that black men don't take an interest in their communities. ...

Commentary: Sorry, White Supremacist Idiots – The Revolution You're Seeking Simply Isn’t Going to Happen

The combination of a rising “minority” population and possible election of a black president has excited full-time haters like nothing since the civil rights movement.



Copyright © 2001-2005 BlackAmericaWeb.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
About Us | Advertise | Help | Privacy Policy | Search | Terms of Use | Unsubscribe