I always smile when I see Black Lives
Matter T-Shirts until I saw one gracing the grubby back of a white
man who had on both a BLM T-Shirt and a MAGA (Make America Great
Again) hat. I started to either take a photo or start a conversation
because I knew somebody would accuse me of making the combination up.
Instead, I wondered where the man got the shirt/hat combo. Was he
homeless and got the combo at a shelter? Was he visually impaired and
didn’t understand the contradiction? Without starting a
conversation, I was left to my imagination. It had me thinking about
the production and distribution of BLM wearables and the profit
stream they may be creating.
You
can find custom-designed, screened T-shirts online for as little as
$5 apiece, and anybody can make T-shirts and a profit. If Black
lives, Black dollars, and Black profits matter, it makes sense to
look behind the t-shirt to consider the sellers and their motives.
You might be funding your oppression by purchasing the right message
from the wrong seller.
I
think the best place to buy BLM clothing and accessories (I’ve
seen hats, bags, signs, and more) is from the BLM website,
www.blacklivesmatter.org.
Things will cost more there than they might cost from a street vendor
or another source, but the BLM site profits will fund the movement.
From the BLM site, you can also sign up to get email updates. The
second best source is a BLACK street vendor, who will at least be
able to pocket the difference between what she purchased the shirts
for and what she sold them for. Increasingly, COVID-imposed economic
hardship has motivated people to take their entrepreneurial ability
to the streets. The next best source might be BLM-friendly activist
organizations that are selling BLM stuff. It doesn’t hurt them,
though, to ask where they got the shirts and where the profits go.
The
worst place to get BLM material is from a capitalist retail
establishment like Walmart, which sells the shirts and (until June)
All Lives Matter shirts, Irish Lives Matter shirts, and Homeless
Lives Matter shirt. While taking nothing from the homeless or the
Irish, in some ways, these shirts attempt to undermine and minimize
the purpose and focus of the Black Lives Matter movement. We say
Black Lives Matter emphatically because our lives didn’t matter
when our country was founded. They didn’t matter when we were
lynched, and no one was ever prosecuted. Our lives have little value
when we are treated inhumanely, with our little girls being dragged
by their braids by rabid police officers, shot in the back, subjected
to chokeholds to the point where we can’t breathe, endured a
knee to the neck to the point of death and more. Taking the Black
Lives Matter slogan and spoofing it (Drunk Wives Matter) attempts to
minimize the racism that riddles our country.
Walmart
stopped selling the All Lives Matter shirts after getting criticism
from the BLM movement, but it still sells Blue Lives Matter shirts
and paraphernalia. It sells shirts that say Bartender Lives Matter
and Cat Lives Matter shirts as well. While no one has a trademark on
the term “Lives Matter,” satirizing Black Lives Matter
is, at the very least, disrespectful. It is antiblack hostility.
In
June, Walmart said it would spend $100 million over five years
creating a “center for racial equity.” Though its CEO,
Doug McMillon, explicitly said “Black Lives Matter” at a
June virtual company-wide meeting, the commitment was vague. Walmart,
one of the largest employers of African Americans, should put their
money where their rhetoric is and pay people fairly, provide good
benefits (including health care and paid sick leave), and
establish a center for racial
equity. With 2019 profits exceeding $123 billion in profit, they can
certainly afford to spend a fraction of one percent of those profits
on racial equity.
There
are online T-shirt companies that sell Black Lives Matter and Blue
Lives Matter T-shirts, missing BLM’s whole point. They include
Wild Bobby and Old Glory Merchandise, neither of which is
Black-owned. They are just capitalists hedging their bets, just like
the white-owned stores that offer discriminatory service but put BLM
signs in their window. Instead, why not look for a Black-owned
t-shirt company. All you have to do is Google “Black-owned
T-shirt company,” and dozens pop up.
Don’t
let the BLM movement be a profit center for predatory capitalists.
Ask questions before you buy. Buy Black.
|