Colin Kaepernick and united black people
Posted: Sun Sep 25, 2016 8:32 pm
A rather insidious function of white supremacy is keeping black people divided. I can see this on multiple levels. When Colin Kaepernick first started his protest, people tried to shame him by making it about him being rich and raised by adoptive white parents, so what the hell could he possibly have to complain about(like he's not really "black" anyway). It's as if they can't fathom why a black person would care about other black people. Like he only has the right to speak up if he has suffered...he can't possibly just be, you know, angry at the treatment of people who look like him. Even his stupid, biological white mother who gave him up for adoption tried to shame him. I was really proud and moved by how black twitter stood behind Kaepernick and responded to this shameless attempt to undermine his Kaepernick's blackness with the hilarious #kapsoblack hashtag. And it was so beautifully fitting that this was around the time that he showed up for a game and suddenly had a huge afro.
White America loves black celebs that just take their money and keep their mouth shut. They love black people who are "detached" from their blackness and fully assimilate with whiteness. A successful black person who unapologetically speaks up for other black people scares the shit out of them, and their go-to tactic is to shame them into silence. Makes me wonder if that's why so many black celebs don't speak up...like they feel as if they don't have the right to speak on oppression.
I was recently thinking about how inner-city violence is a result of the destruction of black communities/unity by white supremacy. I believe when the cohesiveness of the community is undermined, violence rises; especially when folks don't have the luxury of the state doing violence on their behalf.
White America loves black celebs that just take their money and keep their mouth shut. They love black people who are "detached" from their blackness and fully assimilate with whiteness. A successful black person who unapologetically speaks up for other black people scares the shit out of them, and their go-to tactic is to shame them into silence. Makes me wonder if that's why so many black celebs don't speak up...like they feel as if they don't have the right to speak on oppression.
I was recently thinking about how inner-city violence is a result of the destruction of black communities/unity by white supremacy. I believe when the cohesiveness of the community is undermined, violence rises; especially when folks don't have the luxury of the state doing violence on their behalf.