I awakened this morning to learn that Hillary is being roundly criticized for using the word "Plantation" in describing our federal legislative bodies. Her critics describe use of that word as "racist." I'd say that Hillary used the term appropriately in her MLK Day speech and it had nothing to do with racism. Her critics in this matter clearly don't understand what "Plantation" means. If they had spent a few years at USM they would know exactly what type of management system she was talking aout.
If the House of Reps is the Plantation, is Hilary casting herself as Harriet Tubman? If so, that's a worse casting job than Al Pacino playing James Bond.
Any of you who experienced the bitter racism of the South-which still exists-would not skip so lightly over this horrible reference.
I witnessed more racism in the Northeast than I ever dreamed of down here. Whether you'll admit or not, this campus has been run like a plantation for many years. If you think my use of that word is racism you need to brush up on your history.
Ya know, I am truly amazed by the idea that there is all this racism in the South that just doesn't exist anywhere else in the universe. I attended an integrated public school (approx. 60% white, 40% African-American) in the South. I played sports with African-Americans, I went to college with African-Americans, I have studied with African-Americans, I have partied with African-Americans, and I have worked with African-Americans. Every time I go to Wal-Mart or the mall, I shop with African-Americans. When I go to a restaurant, I dine alongside African-Americans, and when I go to the doctor, I sit beside African-Americans in the waiting room.
But I don't think about the fact that I'm doing any of that stuff with African-Americans, because MOST of Southern society is fully integrated to the point that anyone under the age of 50 has been doing that stuff his or her entire adolescent and adult life, if not since birth. I'm one of those people.
The idea that the South is some kind of weird time warp world where slavery still exists is preposterous. Most Neo-Nazi skinhead types abide in the North/Northwest, and the last I heard, the HQ of the KKK was in Indiana. Horrible things took place in the South, of that there is no doubt. However, Rodney King was in LA (not Louisiana), and the NYPD (not the Hattiesburg PD) sodomized that guy with a plunger. Things are bad all over. It's not a Southern problem now, it's a worldwide problem now. The nature of hate -- Arabs hating Jews, Jews hating Arabs, Chechs hating Slovaks, Slovaks hating Chechs, Whites hating Blacks, Blacks hating Whites, and everyone hating the French -- is not a Southern failing. It's a human failing.
No one in my family ever owned a slave. I am not a Klansman, nor have I beaten, jeered, or otherwise mistreated those who seek civil rights. That doesn't make me a good person, but it does lead to one thing. I won't let anybody make me feel like I've got a problem just because I live in the South. Those who cry about racism in the South probably have never been outside of it.
Two points, however. I would hazard to say that many who cry about racism in the South have never actually been to the South, but shape their views around preconceived notions and movies like Mississippi Burning. And second, I'm not sure hating the French is necessarily a bad thing.
Awesome post, Guesstimate. Two points, however. I would hazard to say that many who cry about racism in the South have never actually been to the South, but shape their views around preconceived notions and movies like Mississippi Burning. And second, I'm not sure hating the French is necessarily a bad thing. Okay, that last part was a joke. Yes Quarter
You guys are indulging in the same kind of stereotyping of "non-southerners" as you accuse them of doing to you.
Let it rest. It is a long leap from talking about Hillary perceived political or personal faults to making Hillary be a stand-in for all-things-not southern.
Yes there is racism in Yankeeville. This has hardly been news since Martin Luther King marched through Cicero. I've lived in both regions and -- there are about an equal number of folks in both who seem convinced that the other region is more racist and hypocritical than the other.
Smugness is self righteousness isn't pretty whether it is north or south of the Mason Dixon line.
No, Stephen, I will not let it rest, not after your smug little response.
Why don't you re-read my post and tell me exactly how I stated or otherwise implied that "Yankeeville" was worse than the South. You can't because I didn't. My post was clear -- it's an everywhere problem.
I hate to take you to task, but I usually expect better than this from you. But here you get an F in reading comprehension. Where did I blanketly stereotype non-Southerners in my post? I hate to put this in such plain terms, but your comments read like so many pat-answer rebuttals the minute any southerner has the temerity (or to put it in your condescending term, "smugness") to suggest that maybe the south is not such a backward place. It's all fine and good when public discourse is dwelling on the deplorable racial injustices committed here fifty years ago, replete with subtle hints of "ya know what, I'll betcha they're still like that now." But it's suddenly time to "let it rest" and move on whenever that distorted and exclusionary vision is challenged. After all, such commentary must be written off as Whitey apologia, no? God forbid we might inadvertantly shatter the precious perception that most of today's south is populated the great unwashed league of bigots. While I do not mean to quantify you, Stephen, with all (or necessarily any) of the above, I did want to point out that your below post did smack of much of that irritability.
Hillary's "plantation" remark is relevant to all of this because of the undeniably smug underscoring she attached when using it (her "if you know what I mean" jab). I'm not sure where you get the idea that anyone is leapfrogging her to the bastion of "all-things-not-southern"; I was content with "all things condescending and race-baiting."
No Quarter (just give it to me as two dimes and a nickel instead)
The whole world is festering with unhappy souls: the French hate the Germans, the Germans hate the Poles, Italians hate Yugoslavs, South Africans hate the Dutch-- and I don't like anybody very much.
P.S. George Washington loved the French--that's good enough for me.
Black vs White wrote: Racism still exists in all parts of country.It currently marches under a different name:Affirmative Action.
In my experience, there's sadly plenty of the old kind of racism left, not to mention the powerful tendency--shared by us all--of putting the responsibility for social problems on everyone else. That solution is comfortable. It allows us to bask in the glow of moral outrage at no expense to our self-esteem. But it's misleading. It overlooks the fact that none of us are perfect, and that in fact we are all fallen human beings. As Hamlet said, "Use every man after his own desserts, and who would 'scape whipping?"
Maybe Hillary has read the piece in Academe that our colleague, Ivory Phillips from Jackson State wrote a couple of years ago, characterizing HBCUs as plantations
How is it that Ivory can use the word "plantations" but Hillary can't?
Gander wrote: How is it that Ivory can use the word "plantations" but Hillary can't?
She can use the word, she just needs to use it accurately.
However, this is an eye-opening article and I hope our board readers look at it; it's interesting to see that what Ivory Phillips accepts as normal in the larger academic context. It was actually painful to read such comments as
"Today, many colleges and universities—both black and white—are moving toward more corporate models of institutional governance. Consequently, the struggle for shared governance must continue to be a major endeavor on all college campuses. It will, however, clearly be more difficult for those on black college campuses.
The sooner the public understands how it loses when the academy becomes a mere factory or training plantation, the better off we will be as a society. "
And earlier,
"The faculty senate at Virginia State University was abolished in 2001. The administrations of other colleges have created "superbodies" to encompass and thus overshadow the senate’s and the faculty’s interests. On virtually every campus on which I have talked to faculty senate leaders, the administration has also used the tactic of ridiculing and bad-mouthing the senate and its leaders. Such blatant undermining of shared governance rarely occurs on white college campuses."
It would be fascinating to read this author's take on USM's present situation.
Gander wrote: savvydapunch wrote: Maybe Hillary has read the piece in Academe that our colleague, Ivory Phillips from Jackson State wrote a couple of years ago, characterizing HBCUs as plantations How is it that Ivory can use the word "plantations" but Hillary can't?
Ivory is a "victim". Once you give up victim status,you are left with the responsibility for all your shortcomings.