To pacify society, Media Band-Aids are constantly placed on
open wounds of unhealed racism as the Shirley Sherrod incident
demonstrated. Although the William Morris Agency dropped Mel
Gibson for spewing the N-Word among other rants, Leonard Rowes new Michael Jackson
book shows Morris
executives using the
N-Word 232 times in emails he uncovered during a racial
lawsuit. And Omar Thornton
tragically killed 8 co-workers and himself after allegedly
being fired for stealing at a job where employers called
him the N-Word.
While
abolishment is preferable, the N-Word won't just fizzle-away
as an isolated expression, devoid of context. In
a peculiar historical sense, it is emblematic of a mutating
relationship deformity between Black and White America,
that society has been conditioned to not stare at too long.
The
N-Word has festered as a derivative outgrowth from an abusive
past that still stains Americas fabric of government
and society. It manifests today in disproportionate
and dysfunctional Black conditions that require remedies
beyond jobs, education, and voting. But there’s
mainstream avoidance to delve into the nitty-grittys beneath
the N-Words surface, knowing its core will unveil human
flaws and systemic failures that America has yet
to racially reconcile.
To
begin unraveling the N-Word conflict, you must understand
that distinct terminologies just don’t pop in-and-out of
a nations vocabulary by happenstance. Language
is a central element of nationhood. Phrases of both
honor and dishonor circulate the political and cultural
blood of every nation.
When
some world leaders visit the White House, they’ll flex their
sovereign muscles by using translators to interpret their
native language, even though they may speak English fluently. Whosoever
wields sovereign powers over a territory also has subsequent
access to regulate words and concepts, as well as make or
reshape history, doctrines, and ideologies. Man
has probably warred over words and ideals just as much as
territory and resources.
Understanding
the power of defining and controlling language, it becomes
clear why we weren’t permitted to read or write during slavery,
nor speak any language other than English. We
couldn’t even tap or hum to ourselves. Enslavers
would panic, not knowing the words behind the
tap and hum . . . Herein marks initial concerns to disarm
and re-channel the influences of our words and music. Now,
under the pretext of Free Speech, the N-Word is commercially
linked to a billion dollar music-genre that flaunts sex,
violence, and prison culture to our children, while were
powerless to prevent it.
Its
no mishap that we were collectively labeled with derogative
terms. Remember in the movie Roots, when Kunta Kinte was barbarically lashed (see
8 minute, 52 second video below ) until he renounced his African identity and surrendered
to calling himself Toby? Since we were considered
less than human, logic might suggest that Euro-Americans
wouldn’t care what we called ourselves . . . No,
No, No.
For
submission purposes, captors cannot allow captives to communicate
in unfamiliar languages or have unfamiliar names. As
such, all Kunta Identities had to be deconstructed
entirely. Toby vs. Kunta represented an epoch
identity/ideological struggle where winner takes all there
was/is no second prize.
African
names traditionally convey aspects of heritage, history,
and virtues. Enslavers didn’t know the meanings,
but they knew that African names encompassed more than European
names. So Toby denoted far more than a typical
European name alone. The act of renaming was
part of a larger process to psychologically transfigure
all Kunta Identities into domesticated natures that
could ultimately be trusted to be Toby-minded even when
no one was looking.
Although
Toby and the N-Word differ in perception, they are
similar in function. Yes, the name Toby may sting
less, but originally and ancestrally, we were/are no
more a Toby than we were/are a N-Word. Just
because we grew accustomed to being called Tobies, doesn’t
make the act of renaming any less unprincipled than being
called the N-Word . . . Both were dishonorable and each
equally severed and misidentified who we were/are according
to our God-given lineages.
From
slavery until recently, it was inconceivable that the N-Word would
backfire to become publicly off-limits to Whites. Now,
with its redefined use, young Blacks seize upon this irony
by saying it without compunction, which elders regard as
a Black-on-Black slap in the face of our own progress and
self-dignity.
True,
nobody should say it. However, its not that simplistic,
nor is it a Black issue alone. Riddance of the
N-Word and its assorted mis-conditions, will require Euro-Americans
to therapeutically examine and correct both themselves
and Americanization in ways they have thus far been politically
and psychologically unwilling, due to their egotism of Exceptionalism which
supposedly elevates America above other nations.
But
the lofty liberties and moralities that Euro-Americans self-profess
today, is not something portable that can be retroactively
applied to cushion the wrecking-ball impact of N-Word hardships
that they even codified into law during 31/2 centuries of
enslavement and segregation which ended less than 50 years
ago.
Remember,
the N-Word is symptomatic of our unedited historical experience
with Americanization . . . Like fingernails raking a chalkboard,
it screeches that: All Has Never Been Well With American
Democracy. So, when you factor the totality of
past relationship deformities, combined with all the present
un-reconciled complexities that the N-Word figuratively
embodies advising young Blacks to simply Don’t Say It is
like saying, hide under the bed, as a solution to escape
a raging house fire.
As
with the N-Word and all negativities in its wake; you must
not only fearlessly combat every facet and extinguish all
embers of raging fires, you must furthermore confront the
rudiment causes, and then enact preventive measures for
future protection. Otherwise, as in prior centuries,
the N-World and all its mutative outgrowths will continue
to remain just as un-abolishable throughout this 21st century.
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