Letters posted here are associated with the following Salon Premium Member:

KavinRoots

Published Letters: 2

Tuesday, November 18, 2008 02:11 PM
Original article: First lady got back

@ sonofloud

Yeah sonofloud, you got it all wrong.

One black president doesn't change centuries of slavery, racism and oppression, and doesn't change our racially unequal society in the present.

Just like pointing to one rich black person like Oprah Winfrey (I'm not sure why people looove using her so much as the example) doesn't change the fact that so many people still live in poverty, and that the rates of poverty are still much higher for blacks and latinos.

Nope, one black president is not the end of anything. It's one step - an important step - in a a long, long battle against racism and oppression.

So as far as you're concerned, sonofloud, the dragon has not been slain at all. The battle is still just beginning.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008 01:50 PM
Original article: First lady got back

Big booties are beautiful - but so is being Biracial

Wow, this article made me sign up on Salon.com just so I could post this message.

Erin Aubry Kaplan writes, 'to hell with biracialism!' apparently in an attempt to refocus the attention on blackness and away from Obama's biracial background and message of unity, which she argues has been treated as 'exotic' in America. To try to to understand her perspective better, I read her critique (right here on salon.com) of Jennifer Lopez's character in the movie 'Out of Sight' where she questions whether 'the public's embrace of Jennifer Lopez's abundant butt signal[s] a cultural revoultion -- or simply the triumph of watered-down multiculturalism?' While I agree that multiculturalism is a poor stand-in for the real nature of race relations in a society that is still very much racist, I beg to differ with her analysis in these two cases.

Being biracial is also beautiful. I never liked those comments I heard in the media that Barack Obama 'wasn't black enough': he is who is he is, and there is beauty in that. If those white racists back in the day were not so paranoid of losing their 'pure white blood' then they wouldn't have created the one-drop rule that basically classified mixed (black and white) children as black. That's why biraciality was first squashed - because it was a threat to white supremacy. I realize that championing black characteristics is a good cause, but why can't we champion biraciality at the same time? Parents of mixed-race children are undoubtedly breaking racial barriers and simultaneously undermining the bogus classification of races. Emphasizing biraciality is a powerful tool to undermine racism, just as championing blackness is. And no, I don't believe the two are mutually exclusive. Just ask Michelle Obama's husband; and I'm sure Michelle herself would agree.

Most Active Letters Threads

405

I'm thankful I'm not President Obama

Backers deride Katrina-style negligence, haters hate him more each day. Can this presidency be saved? Of course
323

Tough-guy John Bolton, hiding under his bed

As usual, right-wing pseudo-warriors are drowning in extreme cowardice.
320

Greg Craig and Obama's worsening civil liberties record

A new Time account of the fall of Obama's White House counsel sheds much light on rule of law issues.
228

A key British official reminds us of the forgotten anthrax attack

A vast array of establishment and expert sources do not believe this episode was really resolved.
154

Phil Carter's resignation from key detainee policy post

Many of the "War on Terror" policies he spent years condemning were ones expressly embraced by Obama.

View all »

Letters Help

Currently in Salon