T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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403.1 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | ridin' the Antelope Freeway | Tue Sep 25 1990 14:24 | 20 |
| Carla,
Go ahead! Right on! Good for you! I think you made the right choice
but there's something you ought to know (you probably already do).
Be prepared for people to call you names - the one I have in mind is
"sanctamonious", 'scuse my spelling. I have never, well almost never,
nobody's perfect, let pass without challenge any ethnic slur. Against
anybody. It was one of the best things about my upbringing: no overt
racism, and little covert. So when someone tells a *foo* ethnic joke,
I object. When someone says 'gyp', 'jew the price down', 'that's white
of you', 'what a fairy', 'how many pollacks...', they hear from me.
So be prepared to be told you have no sense of humor, to lighten up,
not to be holier-than-thou, aw c'mon I wasn't serious; also to succeed
sometimes and receive an apology. And sometimes you make a mistake;
once I called some folks at another caf lunchtable, only to find out
they were discussing someone's reprehensible behavior. Good thing I
had been polite about it...
and btw, that isn't just feminism -- it's the right thing to do!
|
403.2 | are we doing any good? | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Tue Sep 25 1990 16:35 | 19 |
|
I find ethnic humor to be disquieting, uncomfortable, tasteless,
offensive. But I am not so sure that voicing my opinion on hearing an
off-color joke is really doing any good (of course, that never stopped
me). I admire you, and so do many others. However the people you
speak to (the man in the bar, for instance) don't hear what you have to
say. They only "hear" that you are some kind of nutso, womens' libber
and/or homo who overeacts to a good joke (and they will relate your
reaction as part of the joke the next time they tell it).
But if enough of us speak up, who knows what can happen?
-m
p.s. Interesting that you specified that the person was a white
middle-class male. How could you tell?
-m
|
403.3 | Are you free of this one? | CONFG5::WALKER | | Tue Sep 25 1990 16:39 | 16 |
| Here's a whole other area to interrupt: jokes and comments about fat
women (comments are often disguised as a false concern about
health/fitness).
There's an anecdote in Susan Kano's book "Making Peace with Food," that
gives two different ways to respond to cruel comments about fat people:
"Suppose a friend of yours notices an obese person on the street
and says, "Look at that, isn't it disgusting?" What would you say?
My instinctive reply is, "No 'it' isn't, and the person you just
insulted isn't an it -- he/she is a human being!"
Or try one of my workshop participant's suggestions: "I wonder
who's inside? Don't you?"
Briana
|
403.4 | | FORBDN::BLAZEK | shadow on a harvest moon | Tue Sep 25 1990 16:49 | 9 |
|
Madeline,
It was fairly easy to tell he was a white male. =8-) I knew
he was middle-class because he had mentioned his boat and his
new sportscar to the bartender.
Carla
|
403.5 | wish *I* was that middle class! | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Sep 25 1990 16:54 | 4 |
| Hm, I thought boats and sports cars put you beyond the middle
class.
--bonnie
|
403.7 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Sep 25 1990 17:06 | 21 |
| re .3, when the person said that "it" was disgusting, that's probably
exactly what he/she meant. They meant "it" (the fat) was disgusting to
*them.* They probably didn't mean that the human being who was fat was
disgusting to them.
I really don't think that comments about the appearance of other people
are on the same level of offensiveness as ethic jokes or jokes that put
down women. *Jokes* about fat people are on the same level. But, not
comments. I think we have to accept the fact that people are, at
times, going to turn to their friends and make comments about the
appearance of other people.
re .5, Bonnie, don't you think there are various levels to what
constitutes the "middle class" in America. I could say to you, for
example, that I wish I were part of the middle class who can afford to
take my family to Europe on a vacation. ;^)
re .0, I admire you for speaking up Carla.
Lorna
|
403.8 | And my only boat is in my bubble bath. :-) | SELECT::GALLUP | u cut out your eyes, u refuse to see | Tue Sep 25 1990 17:26 | 10 |
|
RE: boats and sportscars
I always considered myself "middle class", but I can't seem
to afford either!
kath_who_drives_a_4_banger_that_LOOKS_like_a_sportscar
|
403.9 | I *know* I can't change the WHOLE WORLD, but... | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Leave the poor nits in peace! | Tue Sep 25 1990 17:28 | 32 |
| I learned long ago that being true to myself would not always go
hand-in-hand with being popular or "easy going". When someone
asks me if I am thus-and-such a national origin, or such-and-thus
a religious affiliation, I ask why. If they say they want to tell
me a joke, but do not want to offend me - in case I belong to the
group being ridiculed - I quite simply inform them that they have
*already* offended me. Sometimes they think I am joking; I seem to
have something of a crediblity problem (*8. Often, I will get the
"No. Come on. I'm serious. Sheesh! don't give me a hard time."
At that point I will inform them that I am quite serious, and that I
deny humour that is based on stereotypes. I have been known, on *many*
occasions to walk away if the person persists in telling the joke.
I hear the rationale all the time about "it's only a *joke*! There
isn't any HARM in it!" I repudiate this entirely! The simple fact
that there are people who believe this shows that there *is* harm in
racial/sexual/ethnic jokes. When we hold any group up to ridicule,
which is exactly what is done with these jokes, we dehumanize and
objectify *all* group members. Not only that, but the people who
laugh at the jokes are also being dehumanized. I simply cannot stand
silently by and let this go unconfronted. I may not be capable of
changing the world; that doesn't mean I shouldn't speak out to my
little corner of that world.
There are few areas in my life in which I have found the capability to
be truly assertive - confrontation is an area (arena? (*8) with which
I still have much trouble and feel much trepidation. When the rights
of human beings to *be* human beings - unique and special - are
impinged however, I can not sit idly by, else I become the impinger.
E Grace
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403.10 | there were these three nits, see, and.... | MILKWY::JLUDGATE | Postpostmodern man | Tue Sep 25 1990 18:08 | 37 |
|
how about jokes that are based on regional rivalries?
i have younger cousins who used to delight in telling me
about: "10,000 Swedes ran through the weeds
at the battle of Copenhagen
10,000 Swedes ran through the weeds
chased by one Norwegian"
then i would be forced to inform them that they had just
as much swedish blood in them as i did................
ditto when they tried to tell me irish jokes.
anyways..........my favorite story (following the basenote) is not
from personal experience, but from hollywood. i think the movie
was called "Soulman", and in it....
time for a spoiler warning, in case any of you would rather rush
out and see this for yourself.....
okay, in the movie, the protagonist grows personally by taking
certain chemicals changing his skin color so that he may get a
scholarship reserved for black people. at a couple of points,
he happens to overhear two white students telling jokes aimed
at blacks, they notice him and plead "No offense".
at the end of the movie, he is back to his original color, and
encounter the two students again....they tell another joke, he
finally blows up and decks the two of them, then offers as a
consolation"No offense..."
that had me standing up and cheering. (not that i really support
violence, but that was just hollywood, right?)
|
403.11 | on changing the whole world | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Wed Sep 26 1990 13:36 | 14 |
|
My wife gave me this story. It was given out in a course she took re-
cently. It's author is anonymous.
As an old man walked the beach at dawn, he noticed a young man ahead
of him picking up starfish and flinging them into the sea. Finally catch-
ing up with the youth, he asked him why he was doing this. The answer
was that the stranded starfish would die if left until the morning sun.
"But the beach goes on for miles and there are millions of starfish,"
countered the other. "How can your effort make any difference?"
The young man looked at the starfish in his hand and then threw it to
safety in the waves. "It makes a difference to this one," he said.
|
403.12 | From last week's Boston Globe - "REALITY GETS DOSE OF DREAM" | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Wed Sep 26 1990 22:22 | 111 |
| REALITY GETS DOSE OF DREAM
DERRICK Z. JACKSON
LAST CHRISTMAS -
Kwanza, I gave my best friend the book "I Dream a World:
Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America." In the book,
dancer Katherine Dunham, 81, said, "I like to avoid confrontations
if I can. But if I cannot, I want to be totally prepared to
solve them or eliminate them."
Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, 57, a former congresswoman, said:"If we
had waited to change the hearts and minds of the people, it would
have taken two more generations. We don't have time....You have
to change the law."
The book was published last year. The publishers should have
waited a few more months. They could have included my best
friend.
A year ago, my friend and her 3-year-old son were bicycling
through Waitsfied, pop. 1,400, in central Vermont. The son said
he had to use the toilet. Mother and son went to a convenience
store. A clerk said the toilet was broken. My friend said the
clerk suggested in a hostile tone that no other store would let
her use a toilet.
My friend and her son used a toilet a half-block away.
This made my friend suspicious. She is African-American. She just
happened to be cycling with a white friend and her 2-year old son.
My friend asked her friend to take her son into the store and
ask to use the bathroom.
The white mother and son were shown a working toilet.
My best friend became angry. Accompanied by her husband, she
went back into the store to confront the clerk. The clerk, with a
look as hard as granite, said:
"I can let anybody use the bathroom that I want".
My best friend had had enough. Her husband called the State
Police. A trooper arrived. He was stunned at the claim of such a
primitive form of racism. He went into the store.
As my friend stayed outside, the clerk told the trooper, "Why
don't they go back where they came from?" The owner of the store
told the trooper, "Why don't they go back on the bus they came on?
...We don't need their kind around here." The owner later said he
was talking only about tourists, not African-Americans. That is
still an odd statement, since tourism is the lifeblood of the
Sugarbush ski area.
The state took my friend's case. It was herstoric. It was the
first criminal prosecution under Vermont's 3-year-old law
prohibiting discrimination in public accommodations.
A year passed. Just before the trial, two local African-Americans
agreed to testify for the defense that they had used the store's
toilet with no problem.
My friend was unfazed. She told her state attorney that the case
had nothing to do with proving that the clerk, store or town were
racist by character. She said assault defendants can trot in as
many friends as they want who can say the defendants never hit
them, but it does not mean the defendants did not hit anyone else.
The trial was held 10 days ago in Barre. A defense witness hinted
that my friend was oversensitive because she lives near Boston,
which he said is a "racial area".
The jury was so sensitized, it deliberated only one hour. The
clerk was found guilty. Of a maximum fine of $1,000, she was
fined $750. The judge said, "I don't know how you can call it
anything but a clear case of discrimination."
The victory was a shared one. State trooper William Harkness had
shown courage by making sure the words of the clerk and the owner
made it into the courtroom. State attorney Phil Keller pored over
civil rights law despite having an infant daughter who was born
three months premature. An all-white jury in Barre gave an
outsider full justice, resisting the temptation to protect the
reputation of a local peer.
Courage belonged to Martha Katz and her son, George, the white
friends who tested the clerk. Without them, my friend's claim
would have been laughed at. Instead, many Waitsfield residents
were sympathetic to my friend's case.
Courage most belonged to my best friend. Because of her, the
convicted woman will never discriminate like that again. Though
Waitsfield's Chamber of Commerce denies the case had anything to
do with it, the town, which had long considered public toilets,
now suddenly has them.
"I Dream a World" is now on exhibit at the Massachusetts College
of Art. Rachel Robinson, wife of the late Jackie Robinson, said
her motto is "Fight back."
In Vermont, my friend said, "Fighting back helps me regain the
part of my dignity that was viotated." She wanted to be an
example for her son, to make him aware of his rights and his
"power to use them."
My best friend, the fighter, is Michelle Holmes. She is my wife.
Her son, Omar is my son. Out of a bad dream, Michelle changed a
small corner of America.
|
403.13 | THANKS FOR THE STORY! | NYEM1::COHEN | In search of something wonderful | Thu Sep 27 1990 10:01 | 15 |
| Charles,
What a fabulous story, and one that should be told over and over and
over again.!
Kuddos to Michelle, and to Omar, and to their friends and the
trooper...it seems that one person can change the face of things to
come.
Thanks so much for sharing that story....I needed a little bit of
"racial hope" instead of racism this morning!
Jill
|
403.14 | | SANDS::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Thu Sep 27 1990 10:15 | 6 |
| As a native Vermonter, I felt both shame and pride when I
read that....
Thanks for entering it, Charles.
Kathy
|
403.15 | Discrimination is like bread and butter. | BPOV06::BOOTHROYD | Cheese balls and bean dip! | Thu Sep 27 1990 12:11 | 55 |
| We allow discrimination to continue every time we tune into most
commercial television programs or allow our children to watch (and for
some of adults out there) cartoons. The commercials, NOT the programs,
are discriminatory - in the case of the cartoons?? I'd say both.
How many times how you caught a television commercial where the focus
is on the up lift of a woman's skirt, her cleavage, etc, in order to
sell a product??? How many times have you or your children tuned into
a cartoon where more than one character was *off-white*?? Where the
commercials weren't based on war oriented toys for boys or 10 year
old girls dressed in make-up?? How about a commercial for Bubble Yumm
bubble gum which apparently got pulled from the air waves .. the one
with a 10 year old girl in more make-up than I wear stating that all
there is in life is boys and malls??? Enough is enough folks .... I
have friends who are screaming censorship but that's not the answer.
We, you and I, allow this to go on by buying the products or just
sitting back and watching this pass in front of our eyes without
blinking or flinching. I'm not calling for prayer or burning books -
just simple acts of protest by exercising our rights. Write a letter
to the culprite (company) and voice your opposition. Young men are
receiving bad vibes about woman, have a common lack of respect, and
think sex is meant for their enjoyment - not caring how (forcibly)
they get it either!!
I may have gone off the beaten path (ie topic) but I blew up the
day I saw a concert t-shirt for Guns & Roses which pictured a woman
sitting in an alley way, with her knees bent, panties pulled down to
her ankles, something whitish in coloring (you know the area!), smoking a
cigarette with the caption 'Guns and Roses was here'. I'm tired
of seeing every crime known to Hollywood to be some sort of crime
against women - rape, incest, beatings - and every other TV movie
based on it not always educating the public in all counts but to get some
of the air time away from rival networks. It hasn't been a complete
turn around toward this, it's been ever so subtle in the past couple
for years (ie Reagan era).
It's happening in DEC, in HUMOR. I keep bringing it up because I'm
appalled at the ignorance of those individuals who participate or
revel in it. A topic was discussed (SOAPBOX)on what type of clothing
men find women attractive in YET it turned to outfits that one could
cop some cleavage, etc etc etc. Over 1/2 of the descriptions were outfits
that jurors in many states have deemed *suggestive*, placing the
blame on the woman, and the attacker receives a slap on the wrist. Others
told me to calm down, not to take it so personally but I can't. I'm
going to say my piece in these conferences JUST as I have done to those
outside (bars/clubs) who have offended me. In some of the cases the
perpetrator was trying to pick me up!!!! Is this (ie offensive jokes)
the way men behave in the Northeast??
Am I the only one who's fed up????
/gail
|
403.16 | look! I used product X, now I'm 10 years younger | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Leave the poor nits in peace! | Thu Sep 27 1990 12:38 | 35 |
|
>>Am I the only one who's fed up????
No.
I long ago stopped buying products that were sold in -- to me -- an
offensive manner. People laugh at me; they say "So-and-so doesn't
*care* if one person doesn't buy their product!" Maybe, maybe not. I
don't care, *I* care if I buy their products.
I was thinking of this the other night. I was watching television, and
an ad came on for a deodorant. A deodorant designed specifically for
women; you know, it's in a *pink* container. I hate pink! The woman
in the ad was wearing a terrycloth robe. Nothing too bad about that.
However, she was reclining in a very sensuous manner, the robe was open
to her breasts, had "fallen" down off one shoulder, and was quite
obviously *not* being worn over a nightgown.
sigh.
Do these advertisers really think that I need to have some young
woman's bare chest stuffed down my throat -- figuratively speaking --
to believe that their client company's deodorant works? Do they really
think that I believe that if I would just use THEIR PRODUCT, I, too,
could have robes falling off my shoulder?
Double sigh.
Yeah, they probably do.
Another product to add to the list.
E Grace
|
403.17 | We can only get there by each small step. | SELECT::GALLUP | Walk right thru the door! | Thu Sep 27 1990 16:39 | 53 |
|
RE: .15 /gail
> How many times how you caught a television commercial where the focus
> is on the up lift of a woman's skirt, her cleavage, etc, in order to
> sell a product???
A large portion of those tv commercials are selling products to
women. If women are BUYING the products, does this mean that the
advertising works and/or they agree with the portrayal of women
this way?
> How many times have you or your children tuned into
> a cartoon where more than one character was *off-white*??
Actually, many of the ones that I watch (that actually portray
"people") do have a variety of people from ethnic backgrounds.
However, most of them have little bears and flying horses these
days.... Some examples off the top of my head are Pee Wee's
PlayHouse, Fat Albert, Gem, Ghostbusters, and many of the
Superhero ones have many different characters from many different
ethnic backgrounds.
> Where the
> commercials weren't based on war oriented toys for boys or 10 year
> old girls dressed in make-up??
Sad, but true. However, I DID see a Nintendo commercial with
a little girl in it, and a new outside race-car-thingie with
lots of little girls AND boys in it.
> We, you and I, allow this to go on by buying the products or just
> sitting back and watching this pass in front of our eyes without
> blinking or flinching.
I have a point here, really! :-) My point is that 10 years
ago you wouldn't have seen ANY of the things I just mentioned
about to counter your points. We're beginning to see a change
and that is GOOD. It is NOT going to happen over night. You're
right, /gail, we DO need to voice our opinions to those in charge
of the airwaves........
but we also need to applaud and point out the advances that have
already BEEN made.
kath
|