Mal: We're still flying. Simon: That's not much. Mal: It's enough.

'Serenity'


Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Kat - Nov 19, 2012 6:12:23 pm PST #1527 of 30001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Connie, if you haven't, you should read The Worst Hard Time which is an amazing book about the Dust Bowl.


§ ita § - Nov 19, 2012 6:18:22 pm PST #1528 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I thought you meant Jamaica to be a middle... I misunderstood.

There are countries with majority black populations with less direct and indirect exposure to the US--that's what I meant. But if the criterion is "most people are black", yeah we fit that. Nine out of ten, or something like.

I can't remember the guy, and he was possibly just trying to get into my pants, but he did tell me "You have black people on your money. You don't know what that's like." It's not only black people--we have our share of Caucasian money (now I need to go look at denominations...), but at least for him the quantity >0 did not have to be 100% to be emotionally charged. It's a different mindset to have a beauty ideal that is so vanishingly small within the national borders, but since half of that is my only mindset, I have no idea how significant that is.

whose ethnicity I feel completely unequipped to make any sort of guess at, so I would not be able to use any racial descriptor more precise than "she's a brown girl," which, no

I have been in scenarios where saying "Okay, but when you're standing here, where you're standing is white." will not get me beat up, but I was pretty much walking a fine line there. Because race is so much more subjective and less rigourously definable than, say, sex, I'm totally fascinated with what any of it feels like, but of course I will never know, and can't compare it to me, because I can't tell part of my psyche from the rest of it either.


meara - Nov 19, 2012 6:21:47 pm PST #1529 of 30001

I would say I'd never considered having non-white people on money must be because I'm white, but I don't think I've considered it all being men either. (Susan B Anthony and Sacajawea aside)


Lilty Cash - Nov 19, 2012 6:27:02 pm PST #1530 of 30001
"You see? THAT's what they want. Love, and a bit with a dog."

I don't think I've even thought about who was on our money. Except to say, why do we even have money anymore? Let's all use cards and hoard gold dubloons. Wait. Who is on the dubloon?


Ginger - Nov 19, 2012 6:31:26 pm PST #1531 of 30001
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I watched it. We lived in Guymon, which is mentioned frequently in the "The Dust Bowl," for a year. It still has wicked blizzards, frequent tornadoes and a fair amount of dust. There's a little museum nearby that's largely devoted to the Dust Bowl era. It's the most depressing museum I've ever been in that wasn't related to Hitler.

Now I'm earwormed with every Woody Guthrie song I know, particularly "Do Re Mi."


Sophia Brooks - Nov 19, 2012 6:35:22 pm PST #1532 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Only because of what I have open in another window, I know whant to see "Glee does Woodie Guthrie!!!"

I do want to cream DUST BOWL at the "climate change skeptics"


Kat - Nov 19, 2012 6:41:39 pm PST #1533 of 30001
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

It's the most depressing museum I've ever been in that wasn't related to Hitler.

This makes me a terrible person and I shouldn't have laughed, but I totally did.

We live in an area that is predominantly white (~65%) and asian, mostly Korean (~28%). The white is mostly Armenian (and if you ask me, geographically, they are Asian too). I often have the odd realization that, based on first name alone, I often misthink a kid's ethnicity, at least in N's and G's classes. Kyle? Who knew he'd be Korean? Fernando, though, most certainly is latino and one of the handful in the school. (Our Grace is certainly Asian, but, to others, surprisingly non-Korean).

It also occurred to me how we rarely address race in our family. Today, we were out for lunch and were watching a tennis match between someone from the Czech Republic and someone from Spain. Noah asked what the shirt said and I told him it said Czech Republic and did he know that his great-great-great grandfather came from there? Suffice it to say, kid was nonplussed.

Maybe we don't deal with race in our family much because we are so busy addressing gender? I dunno.


Burrell - Nov 19, 2012 6:43:10 pm PST #1534 of 30001
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

My kids describe skin and hair color in all sorts of detail, for all races pretty much, but I think they are still slowly processing the concept of racial identification. If my daughter describes someone as a "black guy" he's probably WEARING black, in the same way the red guy is wearing red and the blue guy is wearing blue.


DavidS - Nov 19, 2012 6:56:09 pm PST #1535 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Apparently there were people who advocated just writing off the whole region, move the residents out and let it go to ruin.

Hey, I read that Batman series of comics.


DavidS - Nov 19, 2012 7:05:59 pm PST #1536 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

I see both generational and regional differences around race with my kids. But I grew up in the sixties and in South Florida, and I do remember driving through the south and seeing racially segregated water fountains and such when I was young.

But for Emmett and Matilda they just grew up with a very different framework for thinking about race. Mostly they're sort of shocked and puzzled by the more virulent shades of racism. Also, it's a little anomalous for Emmett because since he's growing up in the East Bay he sees more interracial marriages than almost anywhere else in the country.

I think every black kid Emmett's ever played with on a baseball team was biracial. Racial distinctions seem a bit more arbitary in that environment. Maybe it's a bit like Hawaiian Hapa culture? I'm not sure. But it's not much like growing up in Florida in the 70s.

I guess the main thing I see for them is that race is not a marker of Other, but just of distinction. Especially around the Bay Area where it's not just Black/White, but also a wide variety of Asian, and Hispanic and Indian and Middle Eastern.

Like, Matilda was totally excited to have her teacher Ms. Ekta bling her out with a bindi for Diwali. It's different and interesting but not completely exoticized because you're around it so much more.