Krystal L. Green

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Showing posts with label Racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Racism. Show all posts

Nov 17, 2016

Sit to Stand Up: Continung the Struggle

Taking  A Stand: The Struggle Continues


What happens when a NFL quarterback worth $10 million dollars takes a stand? Everyone has an opinion about Colin Kaepernick's decision to sit during the playing of the National Anthem. For me it's simple. I admire Kaepernick' courage and support his right to exercise his First Amendment Rights. I'm sure it was not an easy decision considering everything he has to lose. Think about the "punishments" metered out to John Carlos and Tommie Smith after their win at the 1968 Olympic Games. What about the sacrifice of Muhammed Ali, banned from boxing in his prime and the support he received from prominent Black athletes. It's easy to take a stand when you have nothing to lose.

Personally, I remember as a youngster my feelings about the National Anthem. It was "their" song, not mine. I knew it did not apply to me. Yes, I stood and sang it, respectfully. But my heart was sad and I felt my exclusion even then. Today, when I hear the anthem, I am militant and feel that, whether others like it or not, it's my flag and my country too. I'm emboldened to continue my fight to do all that I can to make Dr. King's vision of brotherhood in this country a reality.

There's so much written about Kaepernick's "sit to stand up", so I won't labor the issue. I pray that as he kneels in protest God gives him strength and guidance and that the penalty he will pay doesn't break his commitment. His decision not to vote for any of the presidential candidates caused another up roar.  But, each of us has to determine how we will contribute to our collective progress. I leave this Langston Hughes' poem for you to ponder as the struggle continues.

I, too, sing America.

I am the darker brother.
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When company comes.
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.

Tomorrow,
I'll be at the table
When company comes.
Nobody'll dare
Say to me,
"Eat in the kitchen",
Then.

Besides,
They'll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamed-

I, too, am America.


Jun 2, 2014

A Must Read: The Case for Reparations by Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic


 
Ta-Nehisi Coates
I encourage you to read "The Case for Reparations", a powerful, must read article by Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic, dated May 21, 2014. The Atlantic’s cover alone should begin an interesting discussion:
The Case for Reparations
 
Two hundred fifty years of slavery. Ninety years of Jim Crow. Sixty years of separate but equal. Thirty-five years of racist housing policy. Until we reckon with our compounding moral debts, America will never be whole.


Feb 20, 2014

The "Angry Black Woman" Speaks


I guess you could call me an angry black woman. I sometimes feel so bad that the media talks negatively about me all the time and even our First Lady Michelle Obama has been referred to in those same terms. It seems that few bother to understand why the angry black woman evolved.

People often refer to Dr. King’s “Dream” and assume a collective reality. The dictionary defines a dream as a succession of images, thoughts, or emotions occurring during sleep; a dream is a goal or an aim; a dream is a wild fantasy or something of unreal beauty; a dream is to conceive something remotely. I noticed that the word dream is listed somewhere between dreadful and dreary. Yes, even though I’m a black woman, I have hopes and dreams, just like everyone else. If your dreams have been shattered, you might be angry too. For some of us, struggling each day, life is not a dream, it’s a nightmare.


Jun 13, 2013

E. W. Jackson Fans the Fires in VA Race


E. Earl Walker Jackson, Sr. is an American politician, Christian minister and lawyer in Virginia. On May 18, 2013, he was nominated as the Republican Party candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Virginia.

 His thoughtless comments about abortion, homosexuality and the Democratic party as well as his ridiculous positions i.e., comparing Planned Parenthood to the Ku Klux Klan and referred to gays in the military as “sexually twisted” have generated controversy ever since he began to receive national attention as his party’s nominee for that position.  He's in the process of walking back his most recent blunder, claiming that practicing yoga could lead to Satanism.

Mar 28, 2012

The Angry Black Woman: Don't Buy the Hype



As I talk to my daughters and other young women in my community, I hear them say that they took certain actions so that they would not give the impression of being the stereotypical "angry black woman".  I'm here to say "don't buy the hype".  You have every reason to be angry and you can, if the mood strikes you, act like "an angry black woman".  Watch and see...the world will go on.

Mar 27, 2012

"The Hunger Games" Hits Screen-Offensive Racist Tweets Follow


I wasn't surprised when I learned that "The Hunger Games" became the third largest grossing weekend movie debut when it was released on Friday, March 23.  The box office take was $155 million for the opening weekend.

I was surprised and appalled by offensive racist tweets that followed the movie's success. It appears that some of the fans objected to Black actors being casted in three roles:




"Why is Rue a little black girl? stick with the book"

 "it ruined the movie"

"I'm pissed that Rue is black"

Amandla Stenberg
Lenny Kravitz was cast as stylist Cinna while District 11 tributes Rue and Thresh were portrayed by Amandla Stenberg and Dayo Okeniyi respectively. Suzanne Collins wrote that both Rue and Thresh have "dark brown skin", so readers should have been prepared for the casting.



Tweets about "feeling disgust", "wasted tears...wasted emotion" joined one fan who tweeted "call me racist but when I found out rue was black her death wasn't as sad #ihatemyself,". Another tweeted "Ewwww rue is black?? I'm not watching".






Dayo Okeniyi


These tweets highlight a shocking and offensive racist trend in the country which many turn a blind eye toward. I'm wondering if I was the only one surprised by this turn of events. Leave your comments and tell me what you're thinking.  I'd love to know.

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