A black man with a gun and weed? That’s a gangster. A white man? A libertarian.

Let’s not forget this. As US citizens learn to see themselves as increasingly progressive regarding drug culture and legislation, you’ll notice the attack (stop and frisk policies, for example,) on black and brown citizens increases rather than wanes as the police reorganize and re-activate. It’s no surprise marijuana will begin to become legalized for recreational use. But that doesn’t represent a victory. Quite the contrary, it represents a repression. The freedoms marijuana is associated with have long ago been almost entirely and concretely racialized.

And progressive gun-ownership culture has always been about white property owners no matter how hard white people try to revise history.

Don’t send me notes about drugs and drug culture.

#white power 101

12 notes

Portraits of Miss Korea 2013 Contestants Spark Discussion on Plastic Surgery

Look at all the white people who think Koreans want to be white. And go figure most of the controversy is coming from Reddit users who wonder why Korean women don’t think “Korean features” are pretty.

Why not post next about how white people think anime characters are white. That one always gets the racism out in the open. While Korean plastic surgery has become focused on a standardized “face line,” it’s ludicrous to assume the people getting surgeries are doing so “to look more European”. The claim says more about the people making it than it does Koreans and ignores the everyday oppressions Korean men and women encounter that are distinct from generalized white consumer concerns. It’s as if white women don’t think Koreans have a well-developed sense of aesthetics and beauty that is Korean.

Also, stop policing the world as consumers. It rather colonialist. Let’s file this under:

#not a controversy

#Koreans are handling this on their own

#racist social justice 

#whiteness 101

#consumerism

#reddit sucks

#you are racist if you think Koreans all look alike

et al

Paris liberation made 'whites only' [BBC News]

Many who fought Nazi Germany during World War II did so to defeat the vicious racism that left millions of Jews dead.

Yet the BBC’s Document programme has seen evidence that black colonial soldiers - who made up around two-thirds of Free French forces - were deliberately removed from the unit that led the Allied advance into the French capital.

By the time France fell in June 1940, 17,000 of its black, mainly West African colonial troops, known as the Tirailleurs Senegalais, lay dead.

Many of them were simply shot where they stood soon after surrendering to German troops who often regarded them as sub-human savages.

Their chance for revenge came in August 1944 as Allied troops prepared to retake Paris. But despite their overwhelming numbers, they were not to get it.

‘More desirable’

The leader of the Free French forces, Charles de Gaulle, made it clear that he wanted his Frenchmen to lead the liberation of Paris.

Allied High Command agreed, but only on one condition: De Gaulle’s division must not contain any black soldiers.

In January 1944 Eisenhower’s Chief of Staff, Major General Walter Bedell Smith, was to write in a memo stamped, “confidential”: “It is more desirable that the division mentioned above consist of white personnel.

“This would indicate the Second Armoured Division, which with only one fourth native personnel, is the only French division operationally available that could be made one hundred percent white.”

At the time America segregated its own troops along racial lines and did not allow black GIs to fight alongside their white comrades until the late stages of the war.

More at the link.

White Student Union returns to campus [Towson University White Supremacist Group]

This uni needs to find some local antifascists to monitor these assholes. I’d organize a group to shadow the White Student Union as they “patrol” campus. And defo need to send in a student to infiltrate the organization. It wouldn’t be difficult. Let them know they are not a desired presence and that they will persistently be hassled and scrutinized. It’s the only way to beat scum like this.

Reading mainstream study after mainstream study from the US, one thing is clear

  1. Asians apparently don’t exist unless the study is about Asians.
  2. Everything is white, black, and Hispanic. In the US, everything seems aimed at pacifying black people (cultivating the patriarchal and anti-black narrative that black people cannot care for themselves that has been popular since the Moynihan Report,) affirming the rising majority “Hispanic” (rising-majority is a white supremacist narrative for an important and diverse population that whiteness wants to persist composing as a foreign other, even when assimilated as “Hispanic”,) and re-establishing a coherent white population under whiteness (keeping white people focused on a narrative of adherent and coherent, necessary, whiteness.)

4 notes

dagNotes: crime and punishment and the racist bargain with white power

I’m thinking about the Jesse Jackson, Jr, case. 

Read More

3 notes

Forbes: Capitalism In No Way Created Poverty, It Inherited It

anobjectivistblog:

Yaron Brook and Don Watkins: 2/25/2013

The nineteenth century, many people believe, was an era in American history when workers were forced to toil in sweatshops twenty-eight hours a day for starvation wages. It was only when governments intervened, either directly on behalf of workers or indirectly by empowering unions, that conditions improved.

The facts tell a different story—one that reveals the unmatched power of capitalism to improve human life.

Remember the historical context. As Ayn Rand observed, “Capitalism did not create poverty—it inherited it.” For much of human history, the vast majority of the population was mired in poverty. All too often, the average individual lived in unimaginably wretched conditions. It was only in the nineteenth century, and then only in the West, that the masses started to enjoy prosperity.

The narrative that gradualism is a natural and magical aspect of capitalism and that its resultant growth is natural rather than regulated is rather stale story-time material and almost mythical now as its heroes are certainly over one hundred years old and story-tellers long dead. The fanboy culture persists. You can find them gathering in student unions in small offices, LARPing their way through university as little-Hayeks and hungry-Rands. They are such a small minority even in American culture anymore, you won’t be criticized for asking why Forbes would bother publishing such rubbish. Sure, every crass libertarian white boy will publish the article in its entirety, without comment, on his tumblr. They’re dreamers. And who isn’t sentimental about their childhood fantasies about what being an adult might be?

Let’s talk facts. There is no “spontaneous social order” of the free market. There is a patriarchal social hierarchy. There is cooperation and oppressive social relations. Working classes are toiling to keep healthy, housed, and fed held on the brink of poverty by employing classes that demand ever-increasing production while insisting wages remain stagnant or are allowed to  effectively decrease, the result of other economic factors.

The only profit in capitalism has been for the capitalist classes. We all know that any benefits employees could count on as an exchange for selling their labor cheap have become almost entirely externalized costs for owners and employers. Even stakeholders are held in contempt as capitalists chase more profits. It’s only the selfishness of individual capitalists in their roles as citizens-who-seek-to-pay-no-taxes who have kept the workplaces regulated. The government can’t afford social welfare programs; employers have to help. Nevertheless, both government and capitalists together legislate for the benefit of a small minority of white and male citizens and their white daughters and wives.

To be fair to the author of the article and all the boys and girls circulating it, objectivism and vulgar libertarianism, using only the effective and desirable pieces of neoclassical economic theory and Austrian School social theory, tell a different story. That story is used to interpret “the facts”.

The rest of us endure.

(PS: The “how the west grew rich” books are fucking old, Reagan-era capitalist fantasy literature. Should tell you something about vulgar libertarianism that their references are nearly thirty years old, and that those books, like How the West Grew Rich, were using primary source material from even decades earlier.)

(Source: the-capitalist)

"

During a Homecoming program in September, a panel of eminent law school alumni discussed the challenges of governing in a time of political polarization—a time, in other words, like our own. The panel included a former US senator, former and current congressmen, and the attorney general for Georgia.

One of these distinguished public servants observed that candidates for Congress sometimes make what they declare to be two unshakable commitments—a commitment to be guided only by the language of the US Constitution, and a commitment never, ever to compromise their ideals. Yet, as our alumnus pointed out, the language of the Constitution is itself the product of carefully negotiated compromise.

One instance of constitutional compromise was the agreement to count three-fifths of the slave population for purposes of state representation in Congress. Southern delegates wanted to count the whole slave population, which would have given the South greater influence over national policy. Northern delegates argued that slaves should not be counted at all, because they had no vote. As the price for achieving the ultimate aim of the Constitution—“to form a more perfect union”—the two sides compromised on this immediate issue of how to count slaves in the new nation. Pragmatic half-victories kept in view the higher aspiration of drawing the country more closely together.

Some might suggest that the constitutional compromise reached for the lowest common denominator—for the barest minimum value on which both sides could agree. I rather think something different happened. Both sides found a way to temper ideology and continue working toward the highest aspiration they both shared—the aspiration to form a more perfect union. They set their sights higher, not lower, in order to identify their common goal and keep moving toward it.

As I write this, our country’s fiscal conundrums invite our leaders to wrestle with whether they will compromise or hold fast to certain of their pledges and ideologies about the future of our nation’s economic framework. Whatever the outcome of this fiscal debate over the next months or years, the polarization of our day and the lessons of our forebears point to a truth closer to our university.

A university by its inclusiveness insists on holding opposing views in nonviolent dialogue long enough for common aspirations to be identified and for compromise to be engaged—compromise not understood as defeat, but as a tool for more noble achievement. The constitutional compromise about slavery, for instance, facilitated the achievement of what both sides of the debate really aspired to—a new nation.

Something like this process occurs every week on a university campus. Through debate, through questioning, through experimentation, we aim to enlarge the sphere of knowledge and refine the exercise of wisdom, to do the hard work of opening others’ minds and keeping our own minds open to possibilities. The claim is often made that a democratic republic is a highly inefficient form of governance but probably the best we know of so far. The same can be said of a university: its way of discovering and teaching knowledge can be highly roundabout and frustrating, but no one has invented a better way.

Part of the messy inefficiency of university life arises from the intention to include as many points of view as possible, and to be open to the expectation that new ideas will emerge. The important thing to keep in view is that this process works so long as every new idea points the way toward a higher shared ideal, namely truth.

At Emory of late we have had many discussions about the ideal—and the reality—of the liberal arts within a research university. All of us who love Emory share a determination that the university will continue trailblazing the best way for research universities to contribute to human well-being and stewardship of the earth in the twenty-first century. This is a high and worthy aspiration. It is tempered by the hard reality that the resources to achieve this aspiration are not boundless; our university cannot do everything we might wish to do, or everything that other universities do. Different visions of what we should be doing inevitably will compete. But in the end, we must set our sights on that higher goal—the flourishing liberal arts research university in service to our twenty-first-century society.

I am grateful that we have at our disposal the rich tools of compromise that can help us achieve our most noble goals.

"

 James Wagner, President, Emory University, in his letter “From the President: As American As…Compromise” praising the pragmatic compromise in US democracy that led to the three-fifths compromise. This is as heinous a revisionist paean to our problematic racist past as I’ve ever seen. I love how he sees it as noble. What moderation of expectations, huh.

Here’s the email address for the editor of Emory Magazine should you feel like directing your just contempt of such utter fucking nonsense.

From The Hispanic Leadership Network (American Action Network Affiliates)

Republicans recently received the following list of dos and don’ts to consider when discussing immigration from the right wing Hispanic Leadership Network.

When engaging in conversation or doing an interview on immigration reform:
Do acknowledge that “Our current immigration system is broken and we need to fix it”
Don’t begin with “We are against amnesty”
Note: Most everyone is against amnesty and this is interpreted as being against any reform.

When talking about a solution for the millions here without documentation who could qualify to get in line first with a temporary visa, then legal residence and finally citizenship:
Do use the phrase “earned legal status”
Don’t use the phrase “pathway to citizenship”
Note: This has a different meaning and can denote getting in front of the line to get citizenship – this is not true. Most Republicans and Democrats, along with 70% of Americans, support a fair system by which those who are undocumented can come forward, register with the government, pass a background check, pay a fine, learn English and get legal status first – that is earned legal status, not automatic citizenship.

When addressing securing our borders:
Do use the wording “enforcement of our borders includes more border patrol, technology, and building a fence where it makes sense”
Don’t use phrases like “send them all back”, “electric fence”, “build a wall along the entire border”

When talking about immigrants:
Do use “undocumented immigrant” when referring to those here without documentation
Don’t use the word “illegals” or “aliens”
Don’t use the term “anchor baby”

When addressing amnesty and earned legal status:
Do acknowledge that the true meaning of amnesty is to pardon without any penalty
Don’t label earned legal status as amnesty
Don’t characterize all Hispanics as undocumented and all undocumented as Hispanics

When broadly addressing reforms:
Do acknowledge that President Obama broke his promise and failed to propose any immigration reform for five years, while using this issue as a political wedge
Do talk about the issues you support like overhauling the bureaucratic visa system, creating a viable temporary worker program, a workable e-verify system, and border security
Don’t focus on amnesty as a tenet of immigration reform
Don’t use President Reagan’s immigration reform as an example applicable today
Note: That legislation was true amnesty; in addition, border security, fixing our visa system, and a temporary worker program were parts of the reform which were never implemented.

Privileges: To Associate

dagseoul:

We must practice to be aware of what are treated as minor elements of privilege that are so inconspicuous its recipients (often its benefactors as well) can ignore how painfully oppressive they are. For example, the freedom of association is a minor element in the narrative about our social mobility that exerts great force of prohibition for others who are not permitted to freely associate or, should they be granted permission, are always thoroughly scrutinized for their associations. I write “minor” in that it is ignored and taken for granted by white men, seen as merely a by-product of white supremacist and patriarchal capitalism.

I must keep this privilege to freely associate in mind when I write, blog, teach, socialize, shop, eat, et al.

Privileges: To Associate

We must practice to be aware of what are treated as minor elements of privilege that are so inconspicuous its recipients (often its benefactors as well) can ignore how painfully oppressive they are. For example, the freedom of association is a minor element in the narrative about our social mobility that exerts great force of prohibition for others who are not permitted to freely associate or, should they be granted permission, are always thoroughly scrutinized for their associations. I write “minor” in that it is ignored and taken for granted by white men, seen as merely a by-product of white supremacist and patriarchal capitalism.

I must keep this privilege to freely associate in mind when I write, blog, teach, socialize, shop, eat, et al.

Tarantino Unchained: For His Pleasure

Argue all you want about Tarantino’s newest exploitation film. Who gives a shit whether it’s good or not? It will make a profit. He will make more shiny turds for his fans to polish.

Fact is, we have to ask ourselves why all the bother defending him? There’s nothing at stake in all this for Tarantino but his pleasure, and that should be what we’re all talking about.

dagArchives: Writing about Whiteness, White Privilege, Crass Libertarianism Super-Post

dagseoul:

Always looking for conversation about these things.

dagseoul:

In June last year, I began working on how I write about whiteness, white power, capitalism, and anti-capitalism mainly to develop concepts that are central to a manuscript I’m working on. Immediately, I was engaged by two groups of tumblr bloggers: libertarians and social justice bloggers. Neither appreciate my representations of free market capitalism and white social justice activists. Too bad, right.

I’ve received several requests for a post with links to what I’ve written. This is not everything, but it includes the posts where I work on concepts I think are significant.

I’m into revision, so I’ve edited and proofed and added a little here and there, but this is mostly as it was posted. You can use this long post if you like as each entry is present after “Read More”, or save the individual links. I’ll add to it as people help me find things I’ve written that they’d like included.

  1. dagNotes: Notes On Whiteness, White Power, Capitalism & Anti-Capitalism
  2. On Crass Libertarianism (a vehicle for white supremacist capitalist society)
  3. dagNotes: A little bit on how I see privilege and white power working, even in Korea
  4. White Power 101: White Privilege Denial Discourse
  5. Why it’s racist. In one sentence.
  6. (On why colorblindness is white supremacist.)
  7. To Ziggystardyke: On Being White
  8. dagNotes: The reason I wrote “White is not a skin color”
  9. dagAsk: Three Lessons
  10. Possessive Whiteness
  11. 11A. Possessive Whiteness and Liberals:
  12. dagNotes: on writing about whiteness
  13. My Super-Post on Crass Libertarianism, Liberty, Ideology, Ron Paul fans

Read More

Curriculum for Whiteness: Authenticity

dagseoul:

It’s not authentic until it’s white feels and white tears.

file the white apology as an example of this.

dagArchives: Writing about Whiteness, White Privilege, Crass Libertarianism Super-Post

Always looking for conversation about these things.

dagseoul:

In June last year, I began working on how I write about whiteness, white power, capitalism, and anti-capitalism mainly to develop concepts that are central to a manuscript I’m working on. Immediately, I was engaged by two groups of tumblr bloggers: libertarians and social justice bloggers. Neither appreciate my representations of free market capitalism and white social justice activists. Too bad, right.

I’ve received several requests for a post with links to what I’ve written. This is not everything, but it includes the posts where I work on concepts I think are significant.

I’m into revision, so I’ve edited and proofed and added a little here and there, but this is mostly as it was posted. You can use this long post if you like as each entry is present after “Read More”, or save the individual links. I’ll add to it as people help me find things I’ve written that they’d like included.

  1. dagNotes: Notes On Whiteness, White Power, Capitalism & Anti-Capitalism
  2. On Crass Libertarianism (a vehicle for white supremacist capitalist society)
  3. dagNotes: A little bit on how I see privilege and white power working, even in Korea
  4. White Power 101: White Privilege Denial Discourse
  5. Why it’s racist. In one sentence.
  6. (On why colorblindness is white supremacist.)
  7. To Ziggystardyke: On Being White
  8. dagNotes: The reason I wrote “White is not a skin color”
  9. dagAsk: Three Lessons
  10. Possessive Whiteness
  11. 11A. Possessive Whiteness and Liberals:
  12. dagNotes: on writing about whiteness
  13. My Super-Post on Crass Libertarianism, Liberty, Ideology, Ron Paul fans

Read More