Wednesday, June 23, 2010

The Elephants Tea Party


Why do so many posts seem to be centered on American social and cultural issues?  I live in the UK, I work here and I follow British politics.  Perhaps it is because race is the preverbal elephant in the room in America, while class is the pachyderm of choice in The United Kingdom.

Enough thinking out loud.  Follow me down the rabbit hole, and call me Bagger Vance cuz were talking Tea Party.  The laughable concept of using the Boston Tea Party as a symbolism for protesting high taxes and high costs is historically inaccurate.  In fact,


In 1773 Parliament passed the Tea Act, which gave the English East India Company a chance to avert bankruptcy by granting a monopoly on the importation of tea into the colonies. The new regulations allowed the company to sell tea to the colonists at a low price, lower than the price of smuggled tea, even including the required duty. The British reasoned that the Americans would willingly pay the tax if they were able to pay a low price for the tea.


Ironically the original tea tax protest included a little red-face minstrel show when, 50 men, unconvincingly disguised as Mohawk Indians threw tea into the sea. But much like today, even then the British colonists (they were still English colonists) ignored the fact that costs and the tea tax were at their lowest levels." The Tea Act allowed the East India Company to skirt any middlemen and undersell their competitors, even undercutting smuggled tea. Parliament would not be able to resist such cheaply priced tea.  Today's baggers rant about high taxes are and make hyperbolic claims that subconsciously exploit race in a similar way that British colonists donned red faces in an attempted to scapegoat Mohawk Native Americans.


The Tea Party's blatant fixation with race is a national fixation with race.  There are very few cultural issues, economic and  political issues which encompass Tea Parties that do not subconsciously revolve around the pachyderm in the room.  This week Newsweek asked, Why Doesn't the Media Interrogate Tea Partiers' Beliefs?  Read the article and follow the trail to the University of Washington poll.  The poll authors state that the poll "examines what Americans think about the issues of race, public policy, national politics, and President Obama, one year after the inaugurationof the first African American president."  Do you see it yet, big tusks, floppy ears?  This poll caused quite a stir over at FiveThirtyEight.com.  


The poll results point toward strong racial and cultural bias held by many of the poll responders.  The Newsweek writer asks,


Might it be possible that the Tea Partiers who profess no racial motivation are, let's say, not entirely aware of their own visceral motivations? I'm sure if you asked the Southern voters who switched to Republican voting habits why they did so, many would say race had nothing to do with it. But why should journalists take that at face value?


Might it be possible that everyone subconsiously knows that racial animus is the muse for Tea Party discontent?  Might it be possible that we ignore the racial overtones of British colonists dressed in Mohawk Red-face with the same ease that we ignore the fact that racial bias infects even the poll questions that look to measure racism?  Check out one of the questions from the poll,


Irish, Italians, Jewish, and many  
other minorities overcame  
prejudice and worked their way  
up.  Blacks should do the same  
without special favors.  (Agree) 


Check out the original elephant in the room post for more....


The Elephant in the room



Tuesday, June 22, 2010

4th Annual Mixed Experience History Month


Nice historical view of light-skinded America and blackness.
Light-skinned-ed Girl

Check out Anatole Broyard, His granddaughter has some interesting work.

Her book looks as if it is an interesting perspective on the One Drop Rule.

Monday, June 21, 2010

We are respectable negroes: White Newborn Babies to be a Minority in the U.S. or Which "Racial" Group will Earn their Whiteness Next?



Ah, The definition of white. Remember back in the day? Classmates would ask, "what are you?" I would reply black, or black and native American. If they strove to be "middle class" their response to the same question would usually be, You're lucky,  I am just white. Not Irish, Italian, German etc. just white. Classmates who subconsciously identified as working class would usually respond with their ethnicity.  "I'm Irish or I'm Italian".  Some construct new racial categories, the best Americanism is, I'm Scotch-Irish".  There is no such thing as Scotch-Irish.  The Scottish call themselves Scottish.  Scotch is a drink.  Just white is the most sought after racial classification in the United States, and it does not exist in the world.


Back in the States some are fearful of the rising amounts of mud bloods: [follow link]
We are respectable negroes: White Newborn Babies to be a Minority in the U.S. or Which "Racial" Group will Earn their Whiteness Next?


In London the white label is usually designated by class.  The working class are dubbed "white working class".  This classification usually applies to White British, Irish, Welch and other "very British, Oy, Oy white working class" people.  The Middle classes are usually dubbed simply middle class.  Interestingly, the middle classes are usually proponents of multiculturalism.  Multiculturalism is very PC.


Note to Americans, middle class in England is not the same as middle class in America.  Middle class in America connotes a suburban lifestyle, marked by material possessions and zip code.  Middle class in England is hereditary, one may buy into it, but acceptance takes generations, proper schooling and diction.  The Tea Party and those that scream middle class loudest in America are not middle class.  Thus we have the vague classification of white.  White in America means non-ethnic, it means disregarding any ties to immigrant ancestors, so please note, we could be middle class.    


The fastest growing ethnic "minority" in England is the mixed race, classification.

The Independant:

A black and white issue: The future of society is mixed

The BBC (Auntie):


Trevor Phillips, head of the Commission for Racial Equality, has called for all citizens to "assert a core of Britishness".http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3596047.stm


Further food for thought:


Right-Wing Groups Use Decline of White Birthrates to Stoke Fear of Homosexuality, Feminism and Abortion | Belief | AlterNet




Saturday, June 19, 2010

Black Identity


I still have not quite worked out the subtle differences in Black Britain and Black America.  Generally I have noticed through discussions and observation that there is an admiration that Black Brits have for Black Americans, but generally speaking Black Americans do not share the cosmopolitan world view held by Black Brits.  Guardian writer Maxine Williams really nails it when she writes:
For many African-Americans, claiming the nation of their birth as their own has been critical in establishing strength and confidence in the face of centuries of subjugation. Thanks to American movements such as theHarlem Renaissance of the 1920s and the civil rights struggles of the 50s and 60s followed by the "black is beautiful" push of the 70s, we can all stand a little taller.
As island identities go, it is interesting that in the UK it is not uncommon to ask someone where they are from and to be told "Yard", a slang for Jamaica – and that is more than 60 years after the Empire Windrush brought the first West Indian immigrants to Britain. That is despite the fact that the person and their parents have been born in Britain, and have never seen the island they claim is so central to their sense of self.
In a "you're cool, but you do not get out much do you?" tone Maxine Williams throws a little shade on Michelle Obama in a Cif (Guardian Comment is Free section) article: