ONTD Political

"A Message from the Average Black Person"

1:06 pm - 06/26/2009
Via the Huffington Post (Would love to hear what you guys think)

To Whom It May Concern:

Greetings. My name is Elon James White. I'mBlack.

I write this letter on behalf of a lot of people that fall into the category of Average Black People. (Yes, I capitalize it, as if it were a title.) I do not claim to represent them because that would be absurd. I really, truly don't. I don't even represent my circle of friends. At any point in time one of my Black buddies will, in fact, tell me to go to hell when speaking on concepts of race, politics, or religion.

I do, however, qualify as an Average Black Person. I am neither a part of the Black intelligentsia, nor do I fall into the category of your garden-variety street Negro. A lot of folks see Black people in one of these two categories. Normally, let's be honest, it's the latter.
Type your cut contents here.

I don't qualify.

I do come from "the Hood." That's right. I am a born and bred Brooklynite raised in the middle of Bed-Stuy. If you aren't familiar with Bed-Stuy, perhaps you have never listened to gangster rap. You're probably also unfamiliar with Jay-Z, Biggie Smalls, or the thousands of songs that yell out "Brooklyn!" and then give a shout-out to Bed-Stuy. It's fine. Just understand that Bed-Stuy has a primarily negative connotation and for many years was used in boasts to gain respect or fear because it's an incredibly violent environment.

In other words, you could get shot, son.

Speaking of which, I am the son of a single mother. My father is in prison. My grandfather was a pastor and I grew up in the church. I, without shame, also enjoy fried chicken, watermelon, ribs, and orange soda. I can have an incredibly in-depth debate on the best five MCs ever. My credit isn't great and I've been shot.

With facts like this I qualify as a stereotypical Black person right?

But I am also a computer programmer. I've been known to quote Nietzsche. I, on occasion, host dinner parties where I serve five-course meals, including a specialty of mine, White Truffle Tilapia (it's delightful). I have the entire John Williams discography and wear a backpack that is emblazoned with the Thundercats insignia.

Those with one half of that story shake their head at the sheer mass of stereotypes I carry. Then those with the other half question if I even understand the Black experience at all. Some refer to me as someone who "made it out." I currently live in Crown Heights. Some say "You're not like the others." Most people I interact with are very similar to me.

I am an Average Black Person.

So, as an ABP, I have a few requests:

Media.
Please stop referring to blacks as a monolith. I can't possibly express to you the different types of Black people that exist. We neither move as an entity, nor do we move as three or four entities. For every Sharpton, there's a Steele. And for every Sharpton and Steele there are a hundred folks in the middle. What we share is a past, which on occasion helps shape our view on things. Also? Obama is not a unicorn. Please stop acting like Obama and his family are magical in the Black community. Just because some of you may not have seen a Negro like this doesn't mean they don't exist. Lots of smart black folk living with their smart mates and their cute smart kids. So please remember. Obama? Not a unicorn. Black people? Not one voice: I don't care what the supposed Black leaders try to claim.

Supposed Black Leaders.
Please stop speaking for us as if we were a monolith. This is not the 1960s. We don't need a Martin Luther King, Jr. or a Malcom X. You speak for yourselves and your view on what's happening. You also can't police black people. There isn't an us. Are there issues within the Black community? Absolutely, but it's not everybody as much as it is certain groups, most time classes that are in need of help and focus. Hence you can't speak for "Blacks." There are people who need your help and don't want you speaking for them. Oh, and for the love of all that is holy, could you please stop critiquing Obama simply to show you aren't drinking the kool-aid? I get it. You're sugar-free. Got it.

Critics Of Obama.
Hey, um...guess what Black people are not? A monolith. We are not holding Obama on a pedestal. Some critique him harshly (and personally I feel unjustly) and others love him. This is the case with every president. Obama is not the spokesperson for Black people. He is a symbol of hope. He is a symbol of opportunity in a land where opportunity for us seemed nonexistent. He's a symbol of a fight where people cried and died and sacrificed in order for the opportunity for him to exist. But his actions are his actions and have to be judged. Just not four months after he walked in the door with one of the worst clean up jobs in the countries history. You may critique him without critiquing Blacks' ability to critique him.

The hypocrisy of saying we are not One, and yet speaking for the exact group for which I justemphatically denied exists, is not lost on me. Perhaps there are Black people who absolutely want to be spoken for and referred to as if we were one big team. I acknowledge the possibility, but if this was the majority people like Dyson and Smiley would be way more important, and let's be honest: they aren't. I hope that my message is clear. After reading this, the next time you talk to a Black person you can feel comfortable in now knowing with every fiber of your being that you have no clue what they think or feel based on their skin color.

But if they're wearing a Soulja Boy shirt you may disregard this essay and judge them immediately


Page 1 of 2
<<[1] [2] >>
schonste 26th-Jun-2009 06:05 pm (UTC)
we love you elon james but you do not know how to use a cut tag ♥

In other news, this is a good essay.
goingvogue 26th-Jun-2009 06:05 pm (UTC)
But if they're wearing a Soulja Boy shirt you may disregard this essay and judge them immediately

Love it.

This essay was really really good.
aymaera 26th-Jun-2009 06:08 pm (UTC)
This was my favourite part as well :P
misatojaganshi 26th-Jun-2009 06:05 pm (UTC)
IA on the monolith!
also they're made a black in america 2! soledad o'brien said the sheer amount of criticism they got for the first one made her think it was good idea to make another one, is it going to be 4 more hours of all the negative aspects of being black in america? ughh are we actually going to see the black middle class in this version? D: its easy to present the black community as a monolith with absentee fathers in prison, baby mamas and poverty because that seems to be the image the media is most comfortable representing.

and also they're many different 'blacks' in america, what about afro-caribbeans, immigrant blacks and the like? i'm biracial immigrant and i couldn't relate to anything they showed in 'black in america' @.@;
zacefronfiction 26th-Jun-2009 07:03 pm (UTC)
Me too! That needed to be said.
wicked_g 26th-Jun-2009 06:13 pm (UTC)
Obama is not the spokesperson for Black people.

Thank you. I hate it when I see news outlets treating him like that. I mean, it's not like every white president before him were spokespoeple for ALL white people. Except, no one thinks of it that way.

After thought and not really related: was anyone else creeped out by the monolith in 2001? I was. I had nightmares about it for a week. *shudders*

Edited at 2009-06-26 06:15 pm (UTC)
misatojaganshi 26th-Jun-2009 06:19 pm (UTC)
ia it seems like differences in white people are acknowledged across the board in terms of class, income and in gender but when it comes to minorities stereotypes are all people acknowledge, they don't see the individuals.
radname 26th-Jun-2009 06:16 pm (UTC)
Good job! Although I never understood the negative stereotype with Blacks, fried chicken, watermelon and ribs. I love all those foods and I'm White. I never really understood the link.
wicked_g 26th-Jun-2009 06:29 pm (UTC)
...it's seen as...something negative? Damnit, I can't think of how it can be horrible. IDK. It's easy to make? Which means...the ingredients are cheap? Which means...people who eat it are poor?

Excuse me, I think I've stretched myself a little thin on this one comment.
heather 26th-Jun-2009 06:18 pm (UTC)
This is great.
buongiornodaisy 26th-Jun-2009 06:24 pm (UTC)
The reason why I like Obama is because he came off as so painfully normal--so, yeah, I don't get the ~unicorn~ Obama myth.
schonste 26th-Jun-2009 06:29 pm (UTC)
The reason that unicorn myth came about is because he was so likeable; the only reason he was likeable is only because he was magic and rides in on unicorns and is a pacifist beatnick, okay! Fuckin...hippie.
bloody_pickle 26th-Jun-2009 06:30 pm (UTC)
But if they're wearing a Soulja Boy shirt you may disregard this essay and judge them immediately
We should add that at the end of every article/post
schonste 26th-Jun-2009 06:32 pm (UTC)
number 6!
jaquenerd 26th-Jun-2009 06:40 pm (UTC)
Thank you for posting this.

<333
draperyfalls 26th-Jun-2009 06:46 pm (UTC)
Funny and well-written.
carminaburana 26th-Jun-2009 06:47 pm (UTC)
Love the essay and would love your recipe for white truffle tilapia, please. HAHAHAHA
christinex1001 26th-Jun-2009 08:12 pm (UTC)
Actually, I'd like him to invite me over for dinner so I could just happily consume them without having to actually cook.
drawntoinsanity 26th-Jun-2009 06:53 pm (UTC)
i loved the soulja boy comment!
xevochic late?26th-Jun-2009 06:55 pm (UTC)
I get sad when I have to explain to BLACK PEOPLE that not all Black people are "African American" or that there is no way to "act Black". It's fucking sad.

Black people exist in the Caribbeans, the Islands, the Americas, Africa, Europe, Asia, and Australia. There are different cultures among different nationalities/ethnic groups of Black people. So there is no true definition for "being Black". Fuck anyone who says otherwise.
helders Re: late?26th-Jun-2009 06:59 pm (UTC)
and not all american black people want to be called "african american." i actually really hate that pc-term because i've never been to fucking africa, my family has bene here longer than some white people, and i'm just as american as anyone else.

edit: but i do get what you mean. it's wrong to lump anyone who is visibly black into one category. i try not to do that, and when i hear someone who is black speak with an accent i ask, "oh what country are you from" and when they tell me i make not to refer to them as ghanian or nigerian, etc. it's just respectful.

Edited at 2009-06-26 07:00 pm (UTC)
helders 26th-Jun-2009 06:56 pm (UTC)
this is excellent. american black people are the ONLY race of people who have to be representative of one another and it pisses me off. in the media, if one black person does something wrong, it somehow reflects us all, and people tend to think the "not like the others" thing is really true. with black people, being "different" aka "like you know, everyone else!11" is always the exception, never the rule. i witnessed that firsthand at my freshmen orientation when i was surrounded by so many white people who after knowing me for a day thought i could be their cultural black friend who'd answer the stupid ass questions because i was "nice."

i hate the world

this is kind of ot lol

Edited at 2009-06-26 06:57 pm (UTC)
seroquels 26th-Jun-2009 07:02 pm (UTC)
OT: i love Dr. Sweets :) I'm so addicted to Bones right now it's ridiculous. I'm loving that TNT is replaying all the old episodes this summer so I can catch all the ones I missed.
seroquels 26th-Jun-2009 07:00 pm (UTC)
as another Average Black Person, I agree.
militsa 26th-Jun-2009 07:01 pm (UTC)
Excellent essay, particularly after months of media coverage that has seemed to comprise more than the ususal amount of that "all Black people think..." reporting--and I think we have a quorum on the white truffle tilapia, that sounds amazing. Recipe?
elon_james My White Trufle Tilapia Recipe...26th-Jun-2009 07:06 pm (UTC)
is a secret! Just in case people get tired of spouting my mouth off about stuff I'm opening a cafe ;)

But here's a picture!

http://www.chezbougie.com/blog/?p=20
helders Re: My White Trufle Tilapia Recipe...26th-Jun-2009 07:08 pm (UTC)
that looks deliciouuuuus. i am sitting her imagining how it must taste, seriously.
flowerings 26th-Jun-2009 07:12 pm (UTC)
I feel like I should paste this on a shirt to wear out one day.
xevochic 26th-Jun-2009 07:14 pm (UTC)
LOL That would be an awesome shirt.
mylaptopisevil 26th-Jun-2009 07:44 pm (UTC)
I was waiting for you to post this after all your twitter pimping AND I DIDN'T WANT TO STEAL YOUR THUNDER.
elon_james 26th-Jun-2009 07:46 pm (UTC)
hahaha, Thank you. I'm slow sometimes on making the rounds!
everythingonit 26th-Jun-2009 07:47 pm (UTC)
...

If that's average then I think I fail again.

I want a Thunder Cats backpack. I want Thunder Cats alot of stuff!

And I love Ribs. I'm so happy our BK has ribs now.
ladypolitik 26th-Jun-2009 07:47 pm (UTC)
mercystars 26th-Jun-2009 07:54 pm (UTC)
There should be paper copies of this made and distributed.
eleveninches 26th-Jun-2009 08:24 pm (UTC)
This is a wonderful post. Thank you.
randomneses 26th-Jun-2009 08:30 pm (UTC)
Thank you for this. There also needs to be an essay for ignorant ass black folk who think only certain criteria makes one black.
delicate_____ 26th-Jun-2009 10:35 pm (UTC)
ignorant black and white people would need to read that, i think
fargo_pixie This is witty and informative and all around A+26th-Jun-2009 08:34 pm (UTC)
Photobucket
Page 1 of 2
<<[1] [2] >>
This page was loaded May 21st 2013, 8:29 am GMT.