Skip to content

Em-URGE-ing Voices

Your urgent thoughts, urging action.

 

Show:

Clear

The Real Reason Students Are Fighting for Leggings

Apr 04, 2014 / Choice USA Staff / Our Folks Blog
Most middle school girls learn the tricks of avoiding being sent home because of their clothing choices. They can scrunch up shoulders to avoid the fingertip rule, hide from the teacher that walks around with a ruler to measure tank top strap width, or sneak a sweater in a backpack for when the principal is … Read More

Hey NPR: Stop Shaming Teen Parents!

Apr 03, 2014 / Summer / Our Folks Blog
Earlier this week NPR published an article detailing the success of comprehensive sex-education in lowering the teen pregnancy rate in Denmark, South Carolina. While I believe firmly in the power and importance of comprehensive, sex-positive, sex education for all young people  I was disappointed by the assumption that all teen pregnancies are unwanted and that … Read More

3 Things You Can Do for Sexual Assault Awareness Month

Apr 02, 2014 / Diana / Our Folks Blog
April is sexual assault awareness month. If you are a college student, you might be aware of this because April is when campuses host Take Back the Night. According to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center, “the month of April has been designated Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM) in the United States. The goal of … Read More

Las Mujeres de Oaxaca

Apr 01, 2014 / Kayla / Our Folks Blog
  Hospitals in Oaxaca, Mexico have received a lot of attention recently, and for all the wrong reasons. When local stations and photographers captured an image of an indigenous woman giving birth on the front lawn of a hospital that had turned her away they revealed what seems to be a persisting issue for the … Read More

The Politics of Being a Tall Woman

Mar 31, 2014 / Allie / Our Folks Blog
My height is political. It has taken me too long to write that sentence. I am 5’11”, cisgender woman.  The “average” female in the US over 20 years old is 5’4”, while for males it’s 5’9 ½”. Therefore, I am a solid 7 inches taller than your average female. I also have big hands. Like, … Read More

Shanesha Taylor: The Case of Punishing the Poor

Mar 28, 2014 / Nick / Our Folks Blog
With the reproductive justice movement, the discussion often gets bogged down in life or death rhetoric. Pro-choice advocates also assume the fight is over as long as Roe V. Wade is in place. We have abortion clinics, Obamacare allows for insurance to cover contraceptives, and women have the right to vote. However, there’s a huge … Read More

Making the Leap From Student Organizer to Progressive Professional

Mar 27, 2014 / Choice USA Staff / Our Folks Blog
Searching for your first (or second, or third) job out of college is not easy. You want to do something challenging and rewarding, but you don’t have the years of experience many employers require. Translating the skills you’ve developed as a student leader to the “getting paid to do what you love” world isn’t easy, … Read More

3 Facts I Hope the Supreme Court Keeps in Mind About Birth Control

Mar 26, 2014 / Diana / Our Folks Blog
You might have heard about that birth control case involving Hobby Lobby that’s reached the Supreme Court. The case is Sibelius v Hobby Lobby and oral arguments were held yesterday, Tuesday March 25th. For those of you who might be wondering what the case is about, The Washington Post explains thusly: “It all starts with … Read More

The Non-Issue of “White Face”

Mar 25, 2014 / Kayla / Our Folks Blog
A few days ago, singer, songwriter, and actor Nick Cannon took to Instagram to promote his upcoming album “White People Party Music” by donning a white persona he calls Conner Smallnut. While some fans thought Cannon’s impersonation was on point, others took to their keyboards in protest, claiming that Cannon’s actions were ignorant, racist, and … Read More

A few days ago, singer, songwriter, and actor Nick Cannon took to Instagram to promote his upcoming album “White People Party Music” by donning a white persona he calls Conner Smallnut. While some fans thought Cannon’s impersonation was on point, others took to their keyboards in protest, claiming that Cannon’s actions were ignorant, racist, and hypocritical.

As a black person I have to admit that I occasionally forget how easy white people seem to get their panties in a bunch over fear that they are being victimized by racism. It continues to boggle my mind that this is a true worry for many white people, because it’s so clear that these people do not grasp the concept of racism.

Racism is about power. To be racist the targets must be people who have, historically and continually, lacked power, property, or value. To be racist, the perpetrator must have power to subdue the targets in some way, whether that be physically, legally, mentally, financially, etc. Taking this definition and placing it into a real life example it becomes clear how absolutely idiotic the concept of “reverse racism” is.

For a man of color, like Nick Cannon, to be racist against white people a series of things is required to happen. First black men would need to imperialize the world. They would need to reconstruct the histories of every other nation to be told from the stand point of black men. Black people would need to tear white families apart and force them to assimilate to a culture they are not familiar with. Black people would need to build an economy based on the concept of whiteness being subhuman to justify enslaving them for over four centuries. Then black people would need to convince the world that whiteness is a thing to be ashamed of. Little white children would need think themselves ugly because of their pale skin and white women would bear the tragedy of institutionalized rape.

Can we see how farfetched and actually insulting the concept is?

This is why Nick Cannon’s “white face” is a non-issue. Sure, it could be argued that his methods were a bit brash and inappropriate by some. But to make claims that his act was racist? Absolutely incorrect.

In a country where a renowned black singer is making the same as some white dentists? Yeah, I don’t think so. In a country where a man became famous for shooting and killing a black child? I don’t think so. The reality of the situation is this, the lasting effects of “White Face”? A couple pictures and maybe a good chuckle. The lasting effects of black face? The continued presumption that blackness is a costume for whiteness to pick up and don whenever they feel inclined, but then turn around and declare unacceptable and “ghetto.” The reinforced idea that being black is trope and for black people to be acceptable they must be as white acting as possible.

To be frank, I feel that the people who are offended by this need to pull their heads out of their asses and understand the historical context that they have created for black people to live in. The actions of whiteness over this nation’s history have made it deplorable to wear black face. And it is an absolute luxury that white people do not have to be so clearly reminded of that every day. But as a black woman, I know that luxury does not extend to myself or people who look like me. We carry it and our identities as a burden because we cannot afford to forget our histories when there is so little of it left.

Get Updates, Actions, & Events: