William Parcher
Show me the monkey!
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2005
- Messages
- 27,482
Possibly because not ever choosing black kids is a pretty damn racist thing to do. It's racially discriminatory.He chose.
Possibly because not ever choosing black kids is a pretty damn racist thing to do. It's racially discriminatory.He chose.
I guess in a zoology lesson it is important to point out that humans are definitely not animals. Or primates, of course.I don't. Firstly, because a teacher isn't "one of the guys," and shouldn't act as such. But more importantly, because a teacher shouldn't be insulting students, even playfully. In today's world that's seen as inappropriate and usually bad for students. Having a good, joking relationship with kids is a good thing, but it's entirely possible to create that kind of relationship without basing it around insulting comparing students to animals. I know that very well firsthand, as it's the only way I was even remotely able to be successful as a camp counselor - I worked best with older kids I could build a joking, but respectful and positive, relationship with. And again, when it came to pictures and things like that, we would always be doing the goofy things with the students and not to them. I don't know if you'll recognize the difference or not, but it's significant.
After decades it seems we have come back to the only workable solution again being "separate but equal".Possibly because not ever choosing black kids is a pretty damn racist thing to do. It's racially discriminatory.
If being "mindful" means considering race primarily in every thought, word, and deed with which one interacts with another human being how is it functionally different from being "racist"?That’s a common trope but its not about guilt for sins of the past. And lets not think our racist past is dead and buried because it is not.
I am never going to use that expression with a black person because I am mindful. There is a whole lot of comedy based around this from Basil Fawlty (not mentioning the war) to David Brent and Larry David. Do you try to move past or draw attention with a fumbling apology? But this case of staging photos and captioning them provided plenty of tine for reflection, didn’t it.
After decades it seems we have come back to the only workable solution again being "separate but equal".
We don't know how the class reacts and that's what matters. The whole class might burst out in laughter when they finally get to see the Monkey Do slide. Maybe they Roll On The Floor Laughing Their Asses Off. ROTFLTAO!it's not even worthy of a slight chuckle.
We don't know how the class reacts and that's what matters. The whole class might burst out in laughter when they finally get to see the Monkey Do slide. Maybe they Roll On The Floor Laughing Their Asses Off. ROTFLTAO!
And about as worthy of taking offense to when used innocently.Nope. It's more like we've come to the workable solution of "stop making stupid jokes when they can so easily be interpreted as racist."
Seriously, the way some are defending this you'd think that "monkey see monkey do" is the pinnacle of humor. In the best possible execution and interpretation, it's not even worthy of a slight chuckle. It's several levels below the picture of a cat hanging from a branch captioned with "hang in there."
Possibly because not ever choosing black kids is a pretty damn racist thing to do. It's racially discriminatory.
Yes, you should reject your [straw] philosophy. The step of labeling four black students as monkeys was actually taken.And about as worthy of taking offense to when used innocently.
One could juxtapose the kittens "hang in there" with an image of a lynching and be extremely, offensively, racist. Without taking that step, however, the argument seems to be that the kitten is racist because that step could be taken. I reject that philosophy.
Do you do so? Do these kids receive that? Does anyone in this generation even do that?
Assuming This teacher is in his 40s or 50s, even his generation didn't do that (in mainstream America, more of a relic from the 50s and 60s).
Debasing the dignity of black people is a serious problem. Monkey see, monkey do is not. That is a colloquialism of mimicry.
Tell me, when people mention monkeys, you say your thought jump to black people? Mine sure don't. I doubt this teacher's did.
Certainly. In the context of the innocuous and widely known expression of "monkey see-monkey do" with further overtones that humans of every "race" zoologicaly share a great deal with our monkey and gorilla cousins, and even further context that the same had been done to students of other races which indicates that the example was one of humans place in the animal kingdom and not simply black humans place in it.Yes, you should reject your [straw] philosophy. The step of labeling four black students as monkeys was actually taken.
I guess in a zoology lesson it is important to point out that humans are definitely not animals. Or primates, of course.
My grandparents used to call Martin Luther King, Jr., long after he had been murdered, a "troublemaker."Having lived through the 1960s I am reminded by a very common response by those in opposition to the civil rights movement at that time, "Its all those outside agitators! We whites and them "racial slurs" got along just fine until those communists, Jews, and Northerns came down and started putting ideas into their heads."
My grandparents used to call Martin Luther King, Jr., long after he had been murdered, a "troublemaker."
Yeah, I don't think that's how they meant it (obviously). It's particularly disheartening given that they were 1st and 2nd generation children of immigrants who should have known something about discrimination. One of my great-grandfathers never even spoke English.And indeed he was!
Achieving justice is a whole lot of trouble! Especially for those who were already on the top of the heap previously...
Yeah, I don't think that's how they meant it (obviously). It's particularly disheartening given that they were 1st and 2nd generation children of immigrants who should have known something about discrimination. One of my great-grandfathers never even spoke English.
If being "mindful" means considering race primarily in every thought, word, and deed with which one interacts with another human being how is it functionally different from being "racist"?
No, I'm questioning whether this was racist symbolism at all. A racist certainly cannot say anything remotely like this. A regular person could, IMO, without being thought of as a racist.
I was serious about that question I asked you. When someone says monkey, why do you think of black people? I think of monkeys. I don't mean that as a slam, btw. I mean, are you making a concious effort to be hyper viligant about the perception of racism?