Director Blue has a history lesson on race

Posted: July 23, 2010 by datechguy in Uncategorized
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in this post. With one exception it’s pretty good, but lets take a look at the exception because it deals with the future of race in America.

DB hits Shirley Sherrod Maybe it’s just me, but if I had my father murdered in my teens by the Klan I might just have a chip on my shoulder for a bit. The fact that the chip is in any way off her shoulder is the amazing thing. Yeah her actual positions are wrong but I’m inclined to give her more of a pass.

More importantly it explains why in terms of race it will be another 60 years at least before conflicts concerning it are nipped in the bud. Consider:

To someone like me born in ’63 I look at this country and see us way past these things, but to those born just 10 years earlier who lived though a fight, this is not only something they experienced in their youth but their parents and grandparents told them about it and that will stick with them. That’s human nature, as long as the stuff of the 60’s and before is in living memory there will be people who carry it (and for some like Jackson, Sharpton and unfortunately the NAACP will make their living off of it) and let their opinions be shaped by them.

It will not be until the living memory of those times are gone that the next generation will be able to advance. The real danger here is that the race hustlers manage to keep the ball rolling or revive it in the same way that Griffith’s Birth of a nation did for the Klan.

Oh and if you want to understand how that can be done, read Roger Ebert’s review of the Birth of a Nation, it should be read by anyone who wants to understand film and history. (Ebert’s political views are nutty but he knows film)

Comments
  1. -You’d be wrong to think with the wave of a wand, that racism in this country was cured by the passage of the Civil Act. (….i’m guessing that’s what you’re thinking)
    It’s a long road to go from the Jim Crow days (yeah i’m old enough to remember the “Colored Only” sign at Sears in downtown Fayetteville in the early ’60’s)
    to a “post racial” climate you hope is already here.
    Yes, we ALL have access to jobs and housing. But think for a moment about all those people living in any inner city ghetto. Not having access to a car precludes you from MOST educational and well paying job opportunities, and most conservatives are loath to support any sort of public transit. So what is a person to do in this situation?

  2. My mom still lives there, near Eutaw Shopping Center. We moved there upon our return from 3 years in Germany way back in 1967.
    I live on the other side of Ft. Bragg, near Vass. I still see and hear those C-130’s roar overhead on their way to Normandy DZ.