According to your FB status you got in a scuffle with some African Americans. Hope you're okay - what happened?
This got me thinking about African American culture...and really black poverty in general. It's sad that so many African Americans are still below the poverty line (something that IS partly caused by societal restrictions), many African American families are single parent households (fathers far too often skipping out on parenting duties), and so on.
However, sometimes I wonder about African American culture itself, and if there is a part of it that is self-perpetuating in its struggles (OMG AZELMA IS RACIST???? Hardly, hear me out.)
Bill Cosby caught a bunch of flak from the African American community when he called them out for various things:
1. The lack of parenting - IE daddy's skipping out
2. Ridiculous excesses - kids living in the projects struggling to make rent wearing $500 shoes. If you've ever lived in a city, this can be verified. If I go to the South Side of Chicago, I guarantee my wardrobe will be worth a lot less than many of the African Americans there.
3. Criminal Activity within the community - Black on black crime, specifically.
4. Lack of stress on education - you can grow up to be a baller or a rapper. Abominations like BET reinforce this (watch The Boondocks, a show produced by black people that rips BET and calls it what it is...absolute trash that is ruining the African American community).
http://www.gibbsmagazine.com/Bill%20Cos ... mments.htmOf course Bill Cosby being critical...and in my opinion spot on, was criticized as "racist" by Jesse Jackson, the NAACP, and other black "leaders."
I like to cite other minority races that have had substantial obstacles yet aren't having the same type of cultural/socio-economic issues. I concede, black people did have hundreds of years of institutionalized slavery to deal with...so it's not exactly the same...but consider:
Chinese/Asian people - they were HATED in this country, but they came here and took all the shitty jobs working on the western railroads that nobody wanted. They created their chinatowns, had a commitment to scholastic achievement, and look what happened to Chinese-American culture. Ever read about the Japanese internment camps during WWII (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese-A ... internment )? Look at them in this country. Many other cultures have faced huge issues - yet aren't facing the same levels of poverty and crime as African-Americans. Why is this?
The Irish - the irish were HATED in this country. Despised by the WASP community (White anglo saxon protestant). They couldn't get jobs...their kids couldn't even go to protestant schools because they didn't want to read the King James version of the Bible. So what did they do? They made their own communities in places like Boston...it's what gave rise to Catholic schools in America, so the Irish kids could read their Bible and go to school etc.
Hispanics - consider the hispanic community. While still dealing with their own poverty/crime issues, a great many of them have "risen up" out of it. I worked at Wendy's in high school with hispanic people who worked 80-hour weeks. They held down jobs at multiple fast food restaurants, just to make enough money so they could send some of it back to Mexico (or wherever) and help support their families. Consider the strong hispanic communities in cities like Miami, Phoenix, etc.
Also, it's interesting that actual African people (not African-Americans), HATE african-americans in this country. They think they are lazy, entitled, etc. etc. My step mother taught in an inner-city school with a large Somalian population and they LOATHED the american black kids.
Conclusion: Clearly racism had a deep impact and indirectly (or directly) caused many of the challenges the African-American community faces today. However, we have black leaders serving in our government, black lawyers, doctors, etc. So clearly upward mobility is possible. I think to a certain extent, black impoverished culture has self-perpetuated some of these issues by not having strong family support systems (absent fathers), not stressing education or hard work (again, I'm speaking in regards to the whole, not individuals), and having a culture viewpoint of "the man is keeping me down" and an entitlement attitude at times (asking for "reparations" for slavery and "affirmative action" are two examples that come to mind). Thoughts?