A threat or worthy of trust?

First, let me say I apologize for my lack of blogging. Life seems to get away from you at times…

Now, on to the meat of it. I was reading the NY Daily News online and came across an article “White grandfather stopped and cuffed for walking home with his black granddaughter” and I just couldn’t believe it. Well now of course that isn’t entirely true. I definitely believe it, but I guess it’s more that I don’t want to believe it. People often tell me that racial prejudices don’t exist and that I make it out to be more than it really is, but you know I just don’t buy that. And if I wanted proof, well here it is in the most simpliest form. A black girl and a white man together rings alarms in the minds of so many people. Allegedly there was a kidnapping of a black girl by a white man, but when you read, it seems more like there were reports of people spotting a white man who [must have] kidnapped a black girl. So for me, this seems more like they saw him and his granddaughter and thought, well they can’t possibily be together… or related… there must be something wrong here.

The saddest part of it all isn’t the racism they were faced with (though that is of great sadness), but what kind of impression of police that encounter will leave on the little girl. There was no apology, there was no kindness, there was only aggression and police. Those two often go hand in hand, but at 5 you should be faced with positive images of police, not that of threat and racism.

Check out the article: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/white-grandfather-stopped-cuffed-walking-home-black-grandaughter-article-1.1021896 

notjustmythougths

The Other Wes Moore

It’s been a little longer than I would have liked to write this post, but I had to finish this book in its entirety as well as develop my thoughts. The book: The Other Wes Moore One Name, Two Fates by Wes Moore was an incredible tale. To generalize (which is not giving the book the credit it deserves) would be to simply say that this is a memoir of sorts about two men each named Wes Moore. While that is true it is much deeper than the surface of their lives.

I highly recommend this book to everyone – teachers, students, adults, professors. I believe everyone can gain a little knowledge about themselves and the society around them. As you may have already established, I am passionate in my views regarding the disparities of society surrounding race and economics. In the telling of the lives of each Wes Moore I found so many of the things I felt about society come alive in their life stories. Wes Moore presents the book in chapters with two sections to every chapter – his story and Wes’ story. The side by side portrayal allows the differences in their lives (and possibly their fates) to come alive and the disparities glare at you with unapologetic reality.

One thing that remains with me is a question Wes Moore poses to the imprisoned Wes and Wes’ response. The question is in the introductory section of Part III of the book “Paths Taken and Expectations Fulfilled.” Each part has an introductory section, which is an excerpt from an interview conducted at the prison by Wes. Wes asks, “Do you think we’re all just products of our environments?” The imprisoned Wes answers, “I think so, or maybe products of our expectations.” Wes elaborates on his point saying, “… others’ expectations that you take on as your own.”

I keep thinking about this. Mainly because I am one of those people that believe you are a product of your environment – both the environment inside and outside of your home. But I also think about this because I believe there is validity in the statement. For those that have succeeded, most have done so because they have had people rooting for them – believing in them. They have had mentors or family and friends that believe their success is probable. There are exceptions to this of course – where people want to prove others wrong and show them in spite of the lack of support and belief in them they will succeed. But those exceptions are not what kept this in my mind.

I haven’t always had the easiest life. I was fortunate to have a two family household – so people tell me, but my parents fought constantly. To my mother’s heartbreak in my adulthood I shared a sad truth, I do not have one happy memory with both my parents in it. My happiest moments of my childhood are with my friends, my grandmother, or my parents separately. They eventually separated, when I was 14 and going to high school. My mother lost a husband. I lost a father. I moved in with my grandparents. Even with the instability at home one thing that remained constant was the push from my mother to do well in school. She always told me I could be anything I wanted to be in life and to let nothing stop me from true success. My teachers, in the private school my parents could hardly afford, instilled this same belief – I could be anything. Enough people told me this that I believed and sought out this expectation of me.

The imprisoned Wes Moore was never told those things. His criminal brother Tony did tell him to stay in school, but when you’re in and out of prison and your actions aren’t positive those words hold no meaning. His mother simply asked him not to be like Tony, but never gave him guidance on what he could be. I am not placing blame on his mother… she too was a product of this same reality. The low expectations society places on certain people (the economically repressed and forced urban dwellers) become instead [of positivity] what is ingrained in the budding minds of the youth.

Wes writes, in a section about his life, “‘Justin, you are a good kid, you need to stay away from Wes or you will end up going nowhere like he will.’ Justin simply shook his head and ignored him. It amazed Justin how easily they would write off a twelve-year-old.” This quote details an interaction between Justin (Wes’ best friend) and a teacher. At twelve-years old teachers had a remarkably low expectation of Wes. Fortunately his fate provided strong mentors and people who believed in his success. His mother was always a stronghold in this belief.

And so it makes me wonder, are we the products of our expectations?

Please read the book, you will more than love it. You will be inspired. http://theotherwesmoore.com/

Thank you Wes Moore for sharing your story as well as Wes’.

notjustmythoughts

“Illegals” Pt 2

And so the (mis)treatment continues…

While the president considers having a foriegn leader come into our country for care…this is what happens to those already here.

http://colorlines.com/archives/2012/01/immigrant_whos_disabled_after_work_accident_dies_after_deportation.html

Please read this article from colorlines.

notjustmythoughts

Illegal

Just had my mind blown….

First, let me say that I know meanings of words change over a period of time, but this one… OH HELL NO, this is just ANOTHER racist tactic imbedded in society.

So the word illegal, in the English language, originally refered to inanimate objects and actions… now it [also] refers to a group of humans (illegal immigrants), thus dehumanizing this group of people. When in fact, they are not illegal… their actions, which got them into the country were illegal, but they are not. They are undocumented. How can you be an illegal human… somehow counterfeit or not real? 

How did this one slip right by me?! I vow to never use the words illegal and immigrant in relation to one another.

Let’s start a movement and give back the human quality these immigrants possess.

Please tell me, notjustmythoughts.

Dalits

A Dalit is an “untouchable” in India. As I was reading this article in the NY Times I kept thinking, kind of sounds like the gap between the wealthy and the poor here in America… and then this paragraph:

“Dalits still lag behind the rest of India, but they have experienced gains as the country’s economy has expanded. A recent analysis of government survey data by economists at the University of British Columbia found that the wage gap between other castes and Dalits has decreased to 21 percent, down from 36 percent in 1983, less than the gap between white male and black male workers in the United States. The education gap has been halved.”

I bolded the text to signify what stood out to me.

Read the full article here…http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/22/world/asia/indias-boom-creates-openings-for-untouchables.html?ref=world

notjustmythoughts.

 

Poverty Porn?

Just another day in media’s unfair portrayal of minorities.  This article is about the Native Americans – the Lakota Indian Reservation specifically. 20/20 had a special titled “Children of the Plains.” This piece was an unfair characteristic of the Lakotas without touching on the deeper issues that create the poverty in their communities…

this is all too familiar… BUT the Lakotas fought back putting out a video. So I know for certain that the unfair portrayal of minorities in the media is notjustmythoughts… check out the article by colorlines.com it icludes the video. http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/12/native_american_youth_to_abcs_diane_sawyer_were_more_than_poverty.html

And so I’m angry

This is just the kind of thing I’m talking about…

RACE, RACE, RACE!!!

This is happening to American Muslims… I know it’s a religion, but it’s a race issue! I mean Jewish is a psuedo race, when it’s a religion and ethnicity… so I guess that’s the same for Muslims… Either way… this is the stuff that makes me angry!

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/lowe-explanation-bailing-all-american-muslim-high-comedy-premise-weren-t-sad-article-1.990400

He, called me IGNORANT!

http://www.amptoons.com/blog/files/mcintosh.html

I responded to someone’s blog with a comment about “White Privilege”… would you believe the person responded back to me saying I was ignorant and that race doesn’t always have to do with the issues of society.

I am not big on judgement, but I do presume this person was a white male. Just the way he responded I could feel that his privilege has clouded his thoughts into believing that is something that does not exsist.

My belief is that race is inherently imbedded into every aspect of society. How could it not be…this country, from the moment Europeans set foot to land, persecuted those who were unlike them (Native Americans). Then it moved on to Slavery. Then the abollishment, that really was something that just happened and not necessarily what Lincoln set out to do. But even with Abollishment… we had Jim Crow and other segregation laws. Racism is something that is imbedded in the very nature of what it is to be America.

Now, just to clarify. I am happy to be American. I am thankful for the privilege that comes with being an American… and that American Privilege has sometimes clouded my ideas of other people…. but then I started traveling… and educating myself more… on things that maybe this country hasn’t shared so openly (and we know the gov’t hides things!) and sometimes… well sometimes I don’t like being an American… all the things that happened to get me here… I guess that’s really what I don’t like.

And now that I rambled a bit… I say all this, just say, check out the article on white privilege… It’s a real thing and white people write about it. 🙂

notjustmythoughts, keep reading friends and share your thoughts with me. I love to read your comments!

Racism Manifests

check out this article. It’s from 2005, but really, not much is different: http://blackcommentator.com/131/131_guest_black_struggle.html

Personally, I very much believe this (racism manifests) is real. I am Latina, but face a lot of the same fates. The racism I have faced is not in the form of Jim Crow or the ‘new’ immigration laws of Arizona or Alabama (yes I liken these to Jim Crow), but I have faced it. Here are some way’s I have seen it manifest…

I have never gotten a job where I went on the interview with my curly hair. In fact, I was turned down for the position and one year later was called back to work with this person’s associate. I wore my hair straight for that interview and got the job. Seeing the person who turned me down – well they “didn’t recognize [me] with straight hair.”

Whether my hair is curly or straight I often hear, “your black right?” I am not offended. Black (and every other race/ethnicity) is beautiful, but really? Why, I always ask. I have never received a reply. I believe this is a racist statement because my hair is on the verge of kinky.

People refer to all seemingly immigrant Hispanics as Mexicans.

On the note of Mexicans: the Coto/Margarito fight, someone commented about Margarito, “get him, he’s a damn illegal.” In fact, Margarito was born in California – though of Mexican decent. I sharply turned around with a scathing look and accused this person of being racist. He denied it of course. I told him how he was racist (by making such a comment of being illegal just because the person is Mexican) and realizing he was in a room full of Hispanics back tracked his statement. I did not speak to him again. 

Let’s not (or maybe we should) get started on the news. This is the GREAST racist tactic of all. Blacks and Latinos don’t grace the front page of the paper – they are mug shot there. What I mean, never the story of positive only a negative will be on the front page if they are Latino or Black… unless of course they are athletes…

I guess that’s all we are good for eh? crime, violence, or sports.

We have Obama you might say… well people have been hanging that man to dry since the day he was announced president.

I have tons more examples, these were just the first to escape my finger tips. The article I included really resonated with me because of the words “racism manifests.” I’ve been thinking about it a lot.

These can’t be, no… notjustmythoughts…share yours…