Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Another Sign America IS NOT Transcending Race: The Niglet

Dennis

Elizabeth_dennis3_1_2 University of Alabama
student Elizabeth Dennis recently changed her Facebook profile image from Piglet, a Winnie the Pooh character, that was in blackface with one hand holding a watermelon and the other holding a bucket of KFC Fried Chicken, with the word “Niglet” underneath.  After it got around that the photo was up she posted a new pic and added the confession “the profile pic was a joke ... Sorry if I offended.”

But after looking at all of  the photos that she posted of herself in blackface, I am even more disappointed that she was apparently supported by other brothas and sistas to do what she did. 

Elizabeth must have missed the big speech yesterday because these photos were up TODAY.   

But America’s transcending race and blacks need to get over it. Yeah right!

I wonder what's the percentage of white college students dressing up in blackface to black college students dressing up in whiteface and then being stupid enough or smart enough, depending on how you look at it, to post the photos on Facebook or Myspace.

Let's see now...TheSmokingGun.com reported on the photos taken last year on the bank of the Red River, where students from the University of Louisiana at Monroe decided to reenact their version of the Jena 6. Then there was Texas' Tarleton State University and South Carolina's Clemson University who came  under scrutiny after photos posted on the Internet showed Martin Luther King Jr. Day parties with white students dressed to mimic stereotypes of Black people.  Mimicked stereotypes included Aunt Jemima and gang members.  One student is pictured with his entire body painted in black, while a female padded her buttocks.  To add injury to insult, the students also appear to be drinking 40 ounces of malt liquor and eating fried chicken. And although he's no college student, let's not forget Charles Knipp's Shirley Q. Liquor.

And we're transcending race how again?

Keep reading to see photos...but I gotta warn you, it ain't pretty. 

Hat tip: Brentin Mock

Continue reading "Another Sign America IS NOT Transcending Race: The Niglet" »

Monday, March 17, 2008

The White Man’s Burden is Not the Black Man’s Responsibility

Think2


If you recall, throughout his campaign for the presidency, he’s been painted out to be an undercover Muslim who was swore into office on the Koran.  When that didn’t work, it switched to rumors that he doesn’t say the Pledge of Allegiance and he was the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan’s flunky.  He’s anti-Israel, friends with terrorists…who actually want him to win.  And the most absurd of them all…he’s the Anti-Christ.

Now the focus for Obama haters has turned to his former pastor Dr. Jeremiah Wright of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago and what’s being called “controversial” comments he’s made from the pulpit regarding America’s politics.

It seems that it’s not enough that we’ve adopted their religion and most Blacks are worshiping to their white blue-eyed Jesus, but now they want to dictate the message that we receive as well.  And in the process, they’ve backed Obama against a wall forcing him to publicly distance himself from his pastor in order to prove that he’s not an angry Black man in disguise.

Civil rights icon the Rev. Joseph Lowery once said, “The country’s creating a 51st state—the state of denial.

I guess if the history books favored my race against all reality, I’d be pissed off at anyone who tried to say otherwise.  Too bad.

The fact is that Rev. Wright isn’t the first or the last preacher or Black to call out America for her racist history.  A history that for some reason we are always being encouraged to forget because today Americans are transcending race.  Is that why Black men and women are being imprisoned almost as fast their mothers can give birth to them?  Is that the reason why a man who called a group of young Black women “nappy-headed ho’s” is still on the air?  And were we rising above race when it was joked that Tiger Woods should be lynched?  Is us transcending race to blame for the pimps and ho’s parties on university and college campuses around the country? 

The belief that America is somehow transcending race because whites voted for a Black man is dangerous thinking.

Another greatly feared Black man, Dr. Maulana Karenga, taught me that I am American by birth and African by choice and quite frankly that’s the feeling of a lot of African-American’s who are fully aware of the United State’s role in the history of not only the underdevelopment of Africa, but generations of Black Americans.  And let me tell you, one Black man running for president isn’t enough to erase that history or the feelings that many Blacks harbor whether publicly or on the down low towards the United States government and white folks.  We haven’t touched on the issue of reparations, which our government continues to down play.

But it’s this constant state of denial that continues to have some white folks sheets all up in a bunch to the point where they want to now go into our churches and dictate the message that the pastor delivers.  And if they have their way, we’ll be singing hallelujah and thanking Jesus for slavery, Jim Crow, and the end of affirmative action because if you recall it was the Bible that justified whites mistreatment of Blacks.  But wait---we haven’t forgotten Guyana.

The church, our church, white Jesus aside, is the one institution that carried Blacks through America’s state-sanctioned slavery, lynching, racial discrimination, oppression, disenfranchisement, and exploitation.  It is not our responsibility as Blacks to sugar coat the truth to make it a easier pill for some whites to swallow.  We didn’t have a choice between the red or the blue pill, reality or make believe.  We came out of the womb awake to the ways of the world.

And it’ll probably be right about now that most whites reading this will begin to tune out. 

Yes, it’s that state of denial that begins to kick in right about now whenever the words lynching, racism, and slavery are mentioned in relationship to the Black experience and the role whites played  in it that is hard for some to comprehend.  Unless however it’s in the form of a primetime movie special during Black History Month, then it’s all good for about two hours and some change to remember.

So here comes the mainstream and at times divisive, media trying to take Wright’s comments out of context and making it into a bigger issue than what it should be, perhaps to make up for a slow news day and/or Clinton’s complaints of a media love affair with Obama.  Either way, I thought race isn’t supposed to be a factor in this election?  Maybe they’re forgetting that Wright is but one Black pastor in this country and I am willing to bet that a peek into other Black churches around the country and the message is quite the same, maybe even more controversial.  And that’s just Black churches.  Let’s not forget All Saints Church in Pasadena, California who had been under investigation for a guest sermon its former rector had given just before the 2004 presidential election.  In it, he strongly criticized the war in Iraq but said he believed that both President Bush and his Democratic opponent, Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, were good Christians.  This was taken as an endorsement of Kerry over Bush and in came the IRS.


I know it’s hard to believe for some, but everyone isn’t down with America’s unwritten policy of bomb now ask questions later.  I think we all know what lengths the American government will go to keep the truth from coming out.

It wasn’t that long ago when we were dealing with the Ku Klux Klan and Jim Crow.  Then came the mysterious arrival of crack cocaine in Black neighborhoods around the country and COINTELPRO.  By the late 70s, the white sheets had been replaced with business suits and phony smiles.  And even though the damage had been done that didn’t stop them from giving us Reagan.

A.M.E. church founder Richard Allen said “the only place that Blacks felt they could maintain an element of self-expression was the church,” and I’ll add, but they still managed to burn down more than a few back in the day.

Fortunate for Dr. Wright, it’s not so easy to get rid of dissident voices today as it was 30 and 40 years ago. 

Dr. Wright may be retired now, but thank God for us that there are still pastors and ministers like him out there who aren’t afraid tell it like it is when it comes to the United States Government and the history that was so conveniently left out of the schoolbooks.

Those who don’t know their history are doomed to repeat it…and this ain’t no reentry in slavery.  Preach on, preach on.

Friday, March 07, 2008

More Blackface News: Robert Downey Jr. To Play A Black Man

Tropicthunder_l

Is there a shortage of Black male actors in Hollywood willing to take on roles as…Black men?  Was Denzel Washington booked already?  Forest Whitaker unwilling?

I ask this because Robert Downey Jr. is scheduled to play a Black man in Ben Stiller’s upcoming comedy Tropic Thunder.  Downey is white and will be in blackface.

In the movie, Downey plays an Oscar-winning actor named Kirk Lazarus whose character in the war movie they’re making was written as Black.

Of the role Robert Downey says, “If it's done right, it could be the type of role you called Peter Sellers to do 35 years ago.  If you don't do it right, we're going to hell.”

So I guess we’ve reached the point where Black male actors are no longer needed to play themselves in films, Hollywood would rather resort to using white men in blackface.

Great, just great.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Black People Still Under Attack in Los Angeles

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While the nation’s focus is on yesterday’s primary results, in Los Angeles Black people still continue to be under attack.

Los Angeles police arrested two suspected Latino gang members who allegedly shot a 6-year-old boy in the head Tuesday as his family drove through the Harbor Gateway neighborhood on their way to an auto auction.

According to news reports, Police Chief William J. Bratton said the attack began when two Latino males flashed gang signs before opening fire on the family's red GMC Yukon, which contained six people, including a woman who is eight months pregnant.  The rear window of the SUV was shattered by the gunfire, and one of the rounds hit the boy in the head, he said.


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Meanwhile in my neighborhood, the community gathered at a vigil to remember Jamiel Shaw, a Los Angeles High School junior and star football running back who was shot to death just a few houses away from his home on a quiet street in the Arlington Heights neighborhood.

Police say two Latino men jumped out of a car and asked Shaw if he was a gang member.  He did not answer and the men shot him, according to the police, who said Shaw had no gang affiliation.

In a Los Angeles Times story, Thomas Shaw, Jamiel’s younger brother is said to have asked his father, "Dad, are they going to kill me too?"

The father replied, "I told him 'No, they're not going to kill you.' But in my mind, I thought, 'I don't know.' "

"I don't see it as black and brown. I see it as a gang problem," Shaw's father said as tears ran down his face. "I don't want anybody to think this is a racial thing."

Jamiel's mother, Army Sgt. Anita Shaw, was serving her second tour of duty in Iraq but is on her way home now.

I’m gonna keep it real.  There are certain parts of town that I just won’t go to because I am Black.

But with the shooting of Jamiel, I am reminded that it doesn’t matter where I am, it can happen anywhere at anytime.

This shit is ridiculous and frankly, I don’t feel like our Mayor is doing enough about it.

Black people are under attack in Los Angeles.  It doesn’t matter if you’re a toddler or a junior and star football running back on your way to college.  Black is Black.

"When Black Women Hurt, the American Family Suffers..." National Urban League Releases Report on the State of the Black Woman

Soba_2

Today the National Urban League released their annual State of Black America report "In the Black Woman's Voice." The report provides the Black female perspective of the challenges that currently confront us in America including economic, social, psychological, and medical.

The report is broken down in five key areas --- economics, education, health, social justice, and civic engagement and features a Foreword by the revered Dr. Dorothy I. Height, president of the National Council of Negro Women. 

“The one thing that is certain is the need to hear and amplify the voices of black women,” longtime civil rights activist Dorothy Height writes in the foreword. “Too often, our needs, concerns, struggles, and triumphs are diminished and subordinated to what is believed to be the more pressing concerns of others.”

Along with Heights, the 2008 State of Black America features essays from noted
Black female scholars, political activists, business consultants and other critical thinkers.

In the opening essay, “Shouldering the Third Burden: The Status of African-American Women,” Dr. Julianne Malveaux, president of Bennett College for Women, explores the disproportionate economic, family and societal responsibilities that African-American women bear as a result of, among other things, the limited employment and educational opportunities afforded to many African-American men, who are either spouses or fathers to the children of Black women.

According to Malveaux, black women hold more jobs nationwide than black men, yet — despite their breadwinner roles — earn less on average, $566 a week compared to $629 for Black men.

She contends in the report’s opening essay that the image of Black women in popular culture has barely improved in the year since the Imus incident.

White men continue to dominate on TV’s Sunday morning news shows, she writes, while “the gyrating, undulating image of African-American women in rap music videos and, by extension, on cable television is as prevalent as ever.”

In “Invisibility Blues,” Maudine Cooper, president & CEO of the Greater Washington Urban League, uses a recent tragic case in Washington D.C., involving a mentally disturbed young woman who murdered her four children, to illustrate how impoverished Black women are often “invisible” to a society that often ignores their needs, sometimes leading to devastating consequences.   

Renee Hanson, emerging scholar of the National Urban League’s Policy Institute, explores the role that preschool attendance and parental commitment can play in determining early learning outcomes for children in her essay “ A Pathway to School Readiness: The Impact of Family on early Childhood Education.”

In “The Triumphs and Challenges of Historically Black Colleges and Universities,” Dr. Johnnetta Cole explain how Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) account for 25 percent of all Black college graduates and 75 percent of Blacks with doctorate degrees. Yet many HBCUs are in despite need of funding, as endowments for these schools are meager.

In “Tale of Two Cities,” Alexis Herman discusses the challenges confronting the increasing presence of Black women in today’s workforce. Although more opportunities have opened up to African-American women in both the workplace and academia, with nearly 150,000 Black women currently holding college degrees,Black women are still making salaries that are lower to those of their white female counterparts.

Dr. Lucy Reuben’s “The New She EOs: An Analysis of Business Owned by Black Females,” explains how Black women-owned enterprises (BWBE) play a significant role in employing workers and how many BWBEs provide realistic living wages for their employees.

Continue reading ""When Black Women Hurt, the American Family Suffers..." National Urban League Releases Report on the State of the Black Woman" »

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

I Don’t Do Ignorance
Breaking Down Shirley Q. Liquor, Big Mama, Norbit, Madea, and White Chicks

Minstrels_500
Drawing by Son of Ellis



The global image of the Black woman continues to be under attack, the latest of which being with Charles Knipp and his character Shirley Q. Liquor.  Liquor, is described by Charles Knipp as being "the Queen of Ignunce," who is based on his experiences with and interpretations of Black southern women.  Knipp, who is white and gay, performs the character --- an illiterate, welfare collecting, mother of 19 children, who drives a Caddy, and attends Mount Holy Olive Second Baptist Zion Church of God in Christ of Resurrected Latter-Days AME CME --- in blackface.

Men who take on roles as female characters for the purposes of entertainment are nothing new and they’ve been handsomely rewarded for their efforts with our dollars.  Starting with Flip Wilson’s the devil made me do it “Geraldine” and in recent years Martin Lawrence’s “Big Mama’s House,” Shawn and Marlon Wayans’ “White Chicks,” Eddie Murphy’s “Norbit,” and Tyler Perry’s popular character “Madea.”  With the exception of “White Chicks,” all are Black men dressed in drag as Black women.  The exception is the Wayans brothers, who flipped the script and took on the roles of two white women.

What’s the difference between a Black man in drag and a white man in blackface when both are depicting a Black woman?

Some have argued that Black Americans should not complain about Knipp’s character Shirley Q. Liquor because we turn a blind eye towards Black actors who also perform in questionable roles.

You’ll get no argument from me regarding Eddie Murphy as Rasputia Latimore in “Norbit.”  In fact, long before the film was in theaters, the billboards promoting it were enough to make me wanna holla and throw up both my hands.  And while I definitely didn’t appreciate Murphy taking on the role of a fat Black mean woman for the rest of the world to sit around and laugh at, I can’t overlook the fact he did it as a Black man.

Hattie Mae Pierce, Martin Lawrence’s character Big Mama, is a Black religious woman living in the South.  While Big Mama is definitely a big mama, she isn’t mean.  However unlike Shirley Q. Liquor, she isn’t on welfare, we never saw her guzzling down 40 ounces of beer, and to the best of my knowledge she doesn’t have 19 kids, one of which being named Kmartina.  Oh, and like Murphy, Lawrence is a Black man.

This brings me to Tyler Perry and Mabel “Madea” R. Simmons, best known for the way she says, “Heluur!  This is Madea-ur!” 

Madea probably comes the closet to Knipp’s Shirley Q. Liquor character, being that she didn’t find out that Deacon Leroy Brown was her daughter Cora’s father until her class reunion in 2003 and she’s known to drive a Caddy.  She will argue with anyone, has a penchant for her unique pronunciation and enunciation of words, and is part of a large family with many children and grandchildren.

"Madea" or "Madear" is a typical Black Southern name for a grandmother.  The term is a shortened form of "Mother Dear."

Again, criticism withstanding, Perry is a Black man taking on this role.

A favorite defense of whites against anyone Black who takes issue with Shirley Q. Liquor is the Wayans brothers as Brittany and Tiffany Wilson in “White Chicks.” 

As if somehow, two Black men taking on the characters of white blonde-haired and blue eyed cruise line heiresses is even remotely the same as a white man in blackface taking on the role of an overweight Black woman.  Mind you, this woman sings in his parody The 12 Days of Kwanzaa, “On the fifth day of Kwanzaa, my check came in the mail.  AFDC!  Thank you, Lawd!  Come on kids; let's go to the store for some collard greens, ham hocks, and cheese!”

I wish that when men, white or Black, decided to go in drag as Black women we were always portrayed as beautiful wealthy yet dim socialites. 

The difference between a Black man in the role of a Black woman and a white man putting on blackface and attempting to do the same is that whites don’t have the same history of slavery and racial discrimination that Blacks do.

Since Black women were brought to America, as slaves, we have been forced to endure every form of racism and sexism there is at the hands of whites.

Let me recap it for you.

First, it was the Massuh we had to contend with and his penchant for darker skin that is primarily responsible for the various shades of brown that represent our people today.  Janie Crawford, Leafy, Nanny, and Zora Neale Hurston.  Ashay!

Then for many years, we were forced to take on the role of raising whites children, cleaning their houses, washing their laundry, and cooking their meals.  In keeping in line with America’s approved racial etiquette, we did all of this while being referred to as “girl” or “nigger” and remembering to never look whites directly in the face.  Mrs. Thomas, Lena Younger, Sofie, and Florida Evans.  Ashay!

We dealt with Jim Crow and with the racist police officers, teachers, landlords, bosses, and bus drivers.  Rosa Parks.  Ashay!

For many years, we were denied roles in major motion pictures.  When they couldn’t get away with that anymore, we were denied the same wages as our female white counterparts and the accolades bestowed upon them.  Hattie McDaniel and Dorothy Dandridge.  Ashay!

Now it’s 2008 and we’re nappy-headed hoes and being found in shacks, raped, beaten and urinated on.  In addition, just to remind us that we’re still Black, our asses are being analyzed during tennis matches on live television for the world to see. 

Misogynistic lyrics recited by Black men and financed by white, continue to portray us as sexual objects to the point where some of us are so confused that we’ve gladly taken on the role.

So I find it ridiculous when anyone, white or Black, defends a white man who puts on blackface and an afro wig, calls himself the Queen of Dixie, and  says things like “I'm gonna burn me up some chitlins and put some ketchup on there and aks Jesus to forgive my sins.”

Is Knipp even capable of understanding that back in the day after pigs were slaughtered, their intestines, the chitterlings Knipp mocks, along with hog maws, pigs' feet, and neck bones were given to slaves by their Massuh to eat because it was he who controlled their food choices?

And unlike with Tyler Perry’s films, there is no feel good lesson of morality at the end of Knipp’s performance.  Just a bunch white gay men and women, probably drunk, applauding the performance of one of their own for being able bring to life their own racist stereotypes of how they see Black women.

This isn’t an argument in defense of characters like Murphy’s Rasputia Latimore.  Rather it’s an argument that these characters, while demeaning to Black women, are not racist. 

The same can’t be said of Charles Knipp’s Shirley Q. Liquor character that is demeaning, disrespectful, and racist by virtue of the fact that he is a white man in blackface that is using the most negative stereotypes of Blacks to entertain other whites.  Stereotypes that are based on traits that can be directly traced back to the history of racial discrimination faced by Blacks from whites in this country. 

For example, the generations of Black women and men who in their youth weren’t allowed to attend school with white children and were forced to go to work to help support their families.  Because of America’s sanctioning of segregation and racial discrimination, they never learned how to speak and write English properly; therefore creating the dialect that Knipp so often makes fun of.

Somehow, I find it hard to believe that if the heel was on the other foot, and some Black comedian was traveling the country selling himself as “a piece of poor white trailer park trash” in whiteface, that he’d be welcomed with open arms by whites.  I’ll take it a step further to add, that if that same Black comedian were in whiteface and impersonating a white gay man, it’d be off with his head…literally.

So while I know it’s easy to try and point the finger of blame back on Blacks in defense of Charles Knipp for our poor excuses of comedy in the form of Black men up in drag, unfortunately it’s just not the same.  One is just ignorant, while the other, Knipp, is the expression of years of covert racism towards Blacks from whites post integration.  I expected whites to defend Knipp; after all, they make up his core audience to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars annually.  However, for Blacks to do it is a slap in the face of our ancestors and all that they sacrificed for us to have the opportunities that we have today. 

I don’t do ignorance.

Friday, February 29, 2008

BanShirleyQLiquor.com Launched!
Online Petition Launched to Ban Shirley Q. Liquor

Ncladiesoflove

An online petition has been launched to ban future performances of Charles Knipp his character Shirley Q. Liquor, an African-American woman, as “a welfare mother with nineteen kids who guzzles malt liquor, and drives a Caddy” that he performs in blackface.  According to Rolling Stone Magazine, he makes between $70k-$90k a year to do so.

The petition is targeted towards venues that have currently booked Knipp to perform Shirley Q. Liquor.  In addition, the petition is targeted towards gay America, whom Knipp touts along with “rednecks and their moms,” as being his largest supporters.

CLICK HERE TO READ AND SIGN THE PETITION (www.banshirleyqliquor.com)

***Please forward Petition link to your email contacts***

Thursday, February 28, 2008

One Show At A Time…
Help Cancel Shirley Q. Liquor Show in Miami Beach, Florida April 17th and 18th

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Charles Knipp (Shirley Q. Liquor) is scheduled to perform Friday, April 18th and Saturday, April 19th in Miami Beach, Florida at EXXXOTICA ~ Miami Beach.  EXXOTICA is billed as the largest adult themed consumer show on the East Coast and is sponsored part by Hustler and Playboy Radio.  Knipp’s performance is scheduled to take place in Hall C of the Miami Beach Convention Center located at 1901 Convention Center Drive.

Jeffrey Handy is Co-Owner of Victory Tradeshow Management and creator of EXXXOTICA.  According to a press release issued on January 14th by his company, “You can catch a very special performance by the "QUEEN" of Comedy, the one and only SHIRLEY Q. LIQUOR, described by Rolling Stone Magazine as “a living taboo.

Keep reading to send one email to Jeffrey Handy and Victory Tradeshow Management, the Miami Beach Mayor’s Office and City Commission, Florida’s Congressional Black Caucus Members, the Miami Herald, Associated Press Miami Bureau, the Miami Times (Miami’s Black Newspaper), and the Florida State Conference of the NAACP.

Click below to send an email to the entire list of contacts demanding the cancellation of Charles Knipp’s performance as Shirley Q. Liquor on April 17 and 18 in Miami Beach, Florida.
 
SEND EMAIL NOW

Click here for more info on Charles Knipp as Shirley Q. Liquor


Keep reading after the jump for more contact info...

Continue reading "One Show At A Time…
Help Cancel Shirley Q. Liquor Show in Miami Beach, Florida April 17th and 18th" »

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Just So We're Clear

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Apparently, it’s not exactly clear to some why taking on Charles Knipp has become so personal for me.


So I decided, after much thought, to post the photo that Charles Knipp, aka Shirley Q. Liquor,tactlessly posted on the homepage of his website last week.

Yes, that’s my face, no that’s not my body.  That body belongs to Annie Hawkins-Turner, better known as porn star Norma Stitz, get it…enormous tits.  And while, Ms. Hawkins-Turner made a name for herself with her extremely large natural breasts, 120XXX-50-60 to be exact, I make mine from my work in politics, journalism, and social justice activism. 

Knipp’s had to know that when he posted that photo that eventually it would be reposted, saved on hard drives, and eventually forwarded to me by someone who wanted me to know what he had done.  Mission accomplished.   And before you email to say, “well aren’t you making it worse by reposting it?”  Consider the fact that this photo has already been forwarded to me several times over.  So, it’s already out there.

Sure, people who know me know that I don’t look like that.  But what about those that don’t know me?  Those people that I come into contact with while out shopping or at the bank.  What about months or years down the line when a possible future employer does a background check or Internet search and sees this photo and not knowing that isn’t me, passes on hiring me?  What about the fact, that of all of the bodies that he could choose to tact my face on, he chooses the 1999 Guinness Book of World Records titleholder for the largest natural breasts? 

I am a journalist.  I am not just a blogger.  I work in the real world and not just the virtual one.  I have the right to report on and comment on whatever I so choose to without the fear of someone superimposing my face onto the body of a porn star and posting it on their website.  And that’s what this is really all about.  Defamation of character with malicious intent.

This is about a man, a white man, a white gay man, who dresses up in drag and blackface for other white people, mostly gay, and mimics Black women.  This is about the fact that there was a campaign launched against him in 2007 that cost him money with canceled shows.  This is about the fact that someone took the time to report on his racist blackface minstrel act and he didn’t like it.

Well you know what?  There are a lot of things that I don’t like.  I don’t like the institutional racism that continues to exist from the top down (no pun intended) in gay America’s leadership.  I don’t like the hypocrisy of white gays who claim not to be racist but sell out Charles Knipp’s shows.  I don’t like the fact that because of my sexual orientation I am a part of gay America, especially in times like this.  Hell, I don’t like Charles Knipp.  But that doesn’t give me the right to take his face and put it on the body of porn star and post it on my website for the world to see.  That would be hitting below the belt and frankly shows a sign of weakness. 

If Knipp is such a bad ass, why post my photo on a porn star? All he ever had to do was just name the date time and place to debate me one on one about his racist and derogatory show.  I mean after all, the man obviously has no problem dressing up and imitating a Black woman, he should have no problem debating one.

But instead, he choose to show his true colors.  And in the long run, that might just be his undoing.  Only time will tell…well time, an attorney, and a courtroom.

Black people are constantly under attack in this country, and that includes Black women.  Don’t let the Senator from Illinois and his continued rise to the Presidency fool you into thinking that America doesn’t still have race issues, and very serious ones.  With every show Knipp does as his alter ego Shirley Q. Liquor, he continues to perpetuate the worse stereotypes of Black women.  And remember, Knipp wouldn’t be raking in $90k a year unless he didn’t have his audience of “gay men, rednecks, and their moms.” 

So this fight is as much about preserving the dignity of Black women as it is a challenge to white gay America to clean up their own backyard. 

Will all of this give him more publicity?  Probably and so what.  Him getting publicity is not as important as putting an end to a circuit of blackface minstrel shows that portray Black women as being promiscuous, uneducated, and on welfare.  For me, that’s the bigger picture.  Preserving the dignity of Black women.  If you can’t or won’t get down with that, then maybe you shouldn’t be on my site in the first place.

Peace-

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Black Women Deserve Better...
Black People Deserve Better

Is this the future of Black women?  White, gay, male, and in blackface?



All this time I thought that, the reason for gay America’s refusal to focus on any other civil rights issue but gay marriage was because of their privilege.  But today, it’s clear to me that race and poverty aren’t of any real relevance to their movement because they're too busy laughing at it.

I may not be supporting Senator Hillary Clinton for President, but there’s one thing I wholeheartedly agree with the Senator on, this is very personal for me.

That was the answer Senator Clinton gave to New Hampshire voter Marianne Pernold Young’s question, how do you do it?”

It's not easy, and I couldn't do it if I didn't passionately believe it was the right thing to do," Clinton said.  "You know, this is very personal for me.  It's not just political.  It's not just public.  I see what's happening, and we have to reverse it.”

My sentiments exactly regarding Charles Knipp, this is very personal for me.

You can call me a bitch, you can call me a hoe, you can even call me a nigger, I’ve been called worse.  You can publish my number on the Internet and have me barraged with death threats, I can handle that.

I can even handle you superimposing my face onto the body of porn star Norma Stitz, and then posting it to the homepage of your website.  Bring it!

However, I draw the line at this notion that in 2008 it is ok for a white man, gay or straight, to make $90k a year to dress up in blackface for white gay men, rednecks, and their moms, and degrade Black women.

Liquor_ I draw the line with gay America when they can persecute a Black actor for his perceived homophobia and then support a self-described forty-five-year-old, fat, gay white man and his alter ego character Shirley Q. Liquor, “a welfare mother with nineteen kids who guzzles malt liquor, and drives a Caddy.”

And just like there are Blacks that embarrass me, as a Black lesbian woman, there are gays that do the same.

Knipp doesn’t make his living at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York.  You won’t see him on BET’s Comicview.  It’s not African-Americans that sell out his shows from city to city.  It’s white gay America that keeps Shirley Q. Liquor alive. 

From nightclubs to pride celebrations, Knipp is still around because the gay community continues to take pleasure in the degradation of the Black female, further proving that race is still an issue in America.

Let’s be real about this.  Shirley Q. Liquor is a Black welfare mother with nineteen kids (Cheeto, Orangello, Chlamydia, and Kmartina...) who guzzles malt liquor, drives a Caddy, and speaks Ebonics. 

Knipp likes to justify his routine by saying that his character is a tribute to the good Southern women he grew up around. 

I’m going to address the obvious first, Black women do not name their kids after venereal diseases.

And while on the surface you might be tempted to laugh at Knipp while in his afro and blackface makeup, for many Black Americans poverty is reality and not entertainment. 

"Baby, we was extremely povertied this week.  My check had not came on time. Oooh, we was stretchin' it, honey.  I aks them to keep my power on. I said, 'A woman have got to have some fans runnin' down here in this heat.' "

From living in the projects to spending an entire day in the County office just to find out why a check didn’t come, is a chapter in the story of some Black woman’s life. 

On the fifth day of Kwanzaa, my check came in the mail/AFDC!/Thank you, lawd!/Come on, kids/Let's go to the store/For some collard greens, ham hocks and cheese!"

Why is it that a Black woman would be on welfare in the first place?  Let’s start there.  What role did whites play in blocking the access of Blacks to the same higher education that Knipp took advantage of that earned him his nursing degree?  Think about that.

Think about the fact that Black women, since we were brought to America as slaves, have been forced to endure every form of racism and sexism there is at the hands of whites.  And that no matter how straight and long our hair is or how light our skin, when we speak up for ourselves we’re labeled the angry Black bitch.  Or in my case, the angry Black lesbian bitch.

Consider the fact that generations of strong Black women before me, including those that gay America likes to quote in an effort to show how diverse they are, paved the way for us sistas today so that we would could have the same access that came so easy to those with white colored skin.  Some of those women died without ever seeing the fruits of their labor.  Some like my 87-year-old grandmother, are still living and pushing their children to go further in life than they did. 

Think about the Black women and men who were forced to go to work at the age of 12 to help support their families.  Never having had the opportunity to finish grade school and learn how to speak and write your English properly, today they depend on their grandchildren to fill out forms for them and read them their mail.  There is nothing funny about that.

For years, it was the Massuh we had to contend with and his penchant for darker skin.  Then it was the racist police officer, landlord, or boss.  Fast forward forty years and we’re nappy headed hoes and being found in shacks, raped, beaten and urinated on.  Our asses are being analyzed during tennis matches on live television for the world to see.  Misogynistic lyrics recited by Black men and financed by white, continue to portray Black women as sexual objects to the point where some of us are so confused that we’ve gladly taken on the roll.  And as if all of that wasn’t enough, we have to contend with a white man who gets his rocks off making a mockery of us and our ancestors.

Yes, this is very personal for me.

It’s personal when America has reduced thousands of Black families in New Orleans to living in trailers all the while the same city’s gay pride celebration, Southern Decadence, can shell out the dough to bring in Charles Knipp’s to perform his character Shirley Q. Liquor blocks from where they sleep.  So while New Orleans Blacks are living below the poverty line and in some cases still homeless, it’s all good with the gays.

I’d say that’s personal.

Paraphrasing Senator Clinton, it’s not easy, and I couldn’t fight this fight if I didn’t passionately believe it was the right thing to do.

This is very personal for me.  It's not just political.  It's not just public.  I see what's happening, and we have to stop it.

My people deserve better.  Black women deserve better.

CHARLES KNIPP'S BOOKING AGENT:

  Diva Central Inc.
  7510 W. Sunset Blvd, Suite 1445
  Los Angeles, CA 90046
  Phone:(323) 864-1933
  Email: DivasandDjs@aol.com

Agency lists other clients as being: Thelma Houston, Sweet Baby Jai, Freda Payne, Kimberly Locke, Paris Bennett, Frenchie Davis, Cee Cee Penniston, Evelyn "Champagne" King, Ultra Nate, Crystal Waters, Jody Watley, and more!

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