Malia Kuuleialoha Said: Wow, please for your own sake, please lighten up. The historical significance of black face and a college student or a NFL cheerleader painting their face for a halloween costume are so far off from eachother that it isn't even funny. When you call attention to things like this you take away attention from ACTUAL racism. Instead of drugging up a contrived article on Halloween costumes as a discussion forum for race, you could have actually found a real article about racism to give a commentary on. If you actually were a historian and understood historical significance of black face you would understand that the only reason that it was ever offensive for a white person to paint their face black was because of the intended racism behind it. It was a statement. A Halloween costume is not a statement. It's a costume, it's supposed to look nothing like you. It's supposed to be whimsical and poke fun. You have no reason to judge these people unless you know for a fact that their motives were racist.
You can't tip toe around everything in life. We are a melting pot society. The fact that an artist like T-Pain has become popular enough to become a Halloween costume shows how much our society has changed for the better since the civil rights movement. Costumes of Jon Gosselin, T-Pain, Freddy Kruger, and German Beer Wench's all stand side by side. One more thought. If a black woman dresses up as the St. Pauli girl is it inherently racist? No. Because it's a Halloween Costume. Halloween is supposed to be fun. Stop trying to suck the fun out of a great american tradition.
Agree/disagree? I thought this post was very truthful and well put, mainly the intended racism part, but i'd like to hear what others have to say
So the first picture is a T-Pain costume, right? There isn't anything racist about that, she's dressed as a celebrity. The costume wouldn't look right if she hadn't made herself black. However, I'm a tad confused as to what the second picture is supposed to be. If he's actually just dressed as a black guy, then yeah, that actually is kinda racist.
"The only moral it is possible to draw from this story is that one should never throw the letter Q into a privet bush, but unfortunately there are times when it is unavoidable."
-Douglas Adams, The Restaurant At the End of the Universe
It's a white guy pretending to be black, albeit by using a method typically used to demean blacks in the earlier days of the film industry. They probably went around like "hey I'm a black guy lol" and nothing more. Using a cheap way of pretending to be black to get a cheap laugh during a holiday about dressing up isn't offensive (to me). Extremists civil rights groups have lost sight of the real purpose of trying to achieve civil rights, and are just people who'll cause trouble when there really ought not be any.
In my day, video games gave you three chances to kill about 2000 enemies in one sitting with no pause button. Easy mode meant you got two more lives to throw away on the first boss. You don't know the meaning of hard.
I think it's pretty racist to consider this racist. Kinda like society is ready to accept skin colour as just another part of a person's physical appearance like hair or eye colour and then some idiot starts screaming, "HOLY SMOKES! BLACK PEOPLE!"
Also, political correctness is stupid because it completely overlooks real racism like the KKK and all that shit.
I dressed up as generic Islamic Extremist last year to be "Osama Bin Liner".
My mum made a beard for me and I wore a white towel would around my head and a white dressing gown. I didn't colour my skin or anything but I had a party at my house since I couldn't really leave.
I dunno if what I did was racist, but people would consider it that in some parts.
Also, my family has constantly pointed out that certain members look like celebrities.
My great aunt looks like Paul O' Grady as a woman... However my uncle (Through marriage to my aunt) even admits he looks a bit like a white Eddie murphy. And we've joked a few times about maybe putting him in blackface for halloween before he got rid of his moustache. I dunno if that would've been racist either since he seriously DOES lok liek a white Eddie Murphy.
I can't show photos. But It's weird sometimes looking at old photos of when he has the 'tashe.
And in a moment, three words, the angels that had been singin' for years...
Suddenly started screaming...
I dressed up as generic Islamic Extremist last year to be "Osama Bin Liner".
My mum made a beard for me and I wore a white towel would around my head and a white dressing gown. I didn't colour my skin or anything but I had a party at my house since I couldn't really leave.
I dunno if what I did was racist, but people would consider it that in some parts
Yeah I would consider that pretty racist, because entire nations of people dress like that and are not terrorists.
Also it's pretty sensitive, because after 9/11, people who are not even Muslim, but have head towels, were the targets of hate crimes or hate harassment.
I know that 1 of the common excuses are "I don't mean it that way." But ignorance is basically one of the foundations on which racism is built.
FIGHT current chapter: Mother's Den
FIGHT_2 current chapter: Prime Directive
I kind of think that allowing those costumes to be an issue prolongs racism in a way. Racism won't be gone until skin color isn't an issue at all, and some people keep dredging up reasons to be hurt.
Although, it's hard to judge whether or not those people in costume were being racist without knowing how they were presenting themselves. Photos don't show it.
"Faliat" Said:
I dressed up as generic Islamic Extremist last year to be "Osama Bin Liner".
If you were dressed specifically to be Bin Laden, I don't find it racist.
The first one doesn't bother me, and the second one seems designed specifically to bother people, and because of that doesn't bother me. They're both pretty shitty costumes, though, all things considered.
"Hawk" Said: If you were dressed specifically to be Bin Laden, I don't find it racist.
I was dressing up as a parody of Bin Laden. I've been calling the guy "Bin Liner" since 9/11 as a joke. Mainly because he's full of crap, stinks and needs taken out.
Was probably the best joke I ever made as a twelve year old. It certainly was better than one in which the Milky Bar Kid falls off his horse...
Oh and BTW, that cheerleader, I'd know who she was dressing up as from MILES away.
It's LIL' WAYNE!
This post was last edited on Nov 8,`09 11:14pm
And in a moment, three words, the angels that had been singin' for years...
Suddenly started screaming...
Is it just me or do people love to post stuff about black people saying things aren't racist.
It's like "Hey! Lookit THIS!!!!! *dodgy image, racial taunt, story about discrimination etc* But it's OK 'cause Lookit THIS!!!! *black person saying there's nothing wrong here* What do YOU think?"
-implication being that if you disagree with what the quoted the black person says you're an over-sensitive cretin who is too Politically Correct.
Meh, the name looks African.
But you know the sort of thing. I've seen it done about rape, gay people, people with disabilities...
There is a very big difference between dressing as a person who is black and dressing as a black person, or a disables or gay person for that matter.
Going as a particular person who happens to be of that race is not racist.
Going as a generic stereotype of that race is.
If someone went as Daniel Craig would this be offensive to blonds?
"BffSatan" Said: There is a very big difference between dressing as a person who is black and dressing as a black person, or a disables or gay person for that matter.
You've misunderstood:
ozoneocean Said: It's like "Hey! Lookit THIS!!!!! *dodgy image, racial taunt, story about discrimination etc* But it's OK 'cause Lookit THIS!!!! *black person saying there's nothing wrong here* What do YOU think?"
-implication being that if you disagree with what the quoted the black person says you're an over-sensitive cretin who is too Politically Correct.
THAT is done about any topic people think will have a "politically correct" reaction.
But in this instance Skull says that's not the case.
Heck. There's so many Filipinos who wannabe white. Especially in those elitist colleges where its usually children of business and military leaders that go there.
And black men who wannabe white (Michael Jackson).
And white men who wannabe black (Eminem).
People are entitled to freedom of expression. People should be free to wannabe what they want.
Michael Jackson didn't want to be white. The guy had vitiligo and decided to go all over pale instead of mottled ( At least that's what I think. Sources say that it was just the condition itself that did it.). It's the same as shaving off all your hair once you start going noticeably bald. You don't wanna be bald, but it's better than a comb-over.
This post was last edited on Nov 12,`09 9:58am
And in a moment, three words, the angels that had been singin' for years...
Suddenly started screaming...
"Mr Lostman" Said: I didn't say that. You came to that conclusion on your own. (You're right, though. It is.)
I came to no such conclusion, but you have- this is confirmed by the text in brackets.
Why you want to side step about to say things in your own particular strange method is your own affair, but bravo1102 disagrees with you and as a forum poster I value his opinion VERY highly (he's well read extremely, experienced, knowledgeable, polite...), so I feel pretty safe in my position.
The point is, it is nigh impossible at the age these people are to be completely ignorant of the historical implications of blackface. They most likely weren't doing it just to go "as a famous person," but because they knew it would get a rise out of people. Feigning innocence only damns your case further.
If you think I'm being an oversensitive PC hippie by disagreeing with the OP and the quote, so be it. I'd much rather be part of the effort to move forward and abandon old practices tied to insulting other races.
The point is, it is nigh impossible at the age these people are to be completely ignorant of the historical implications of blackface. They most likely weren't doing it just to go "as a famous person," but because they knew it would get a rise out of people. Feigning innocence only damns your case further.
it's very possible for young people to be completely ignorant. on ANY topic. we live in an age where you google things instead of learning it, so they're all retarded.
Malia Kuuleialoha Said: Wow, please for your own sake, please lighten up. The historical significance of black face and a college student or a NFL cheerleader painting their face for a halloween costume are so far off from eachother that it isn't even funny. When you call attention to things like this you take away attention from ACTUAL racism. Instead of drugging up a contrived article on Halloween costumes as a discussion forum for race, you could have actually found a real article about racism to give a commentary on. If you actually were a historian and understood historical significance of black face you would understand that the only reason that it was ever offensive for a white person to paint their face black was because of the intended racism behind it. It was a statement. A Halloween costume is not a statement. It's a costume, it's supposed to look nothing like you. It's supposed to be whimsical and poke fun. You have no reason to judge these people unless you know for a fact that their motives were racist.
You can't tip toe around everything in life. We are a melting pot society. The fact that an artist like T-Pain has become popular enough to become a Halloween costume shows how much our society has changed for the better since the civil rights movement. Costumes of Jon Gosselin, T-Pain, Freddy Kruger, and German Beer Wench's all stand side by side. One more thought. If a black woman dresses up as the St. Pauli girl is it inherently racist? No. Because it's a Halloween Costume. Halloween is supposed to be fun. Stop trying to suck the fun out of a great american tradition.
Agree/disagree? I thought this post was very truthful and well put, mainly the intended racism part, but i'd like to hear what others have to say