Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Thu Nguyen's avatar

I think it's important that "just a white guy" tells people (especially white people) what's racist. I live and teach in the D.C. area, and one of the teachers at my school spoke at an assembly about her Indigenous identity, and pleaded with everyone to understand why calling the Washington team by their racist name was painful for her, why seeing students and faculty in the hallway wearing the gear on game day, was painful for her. She had tears in her eyes. She didn't have to stand up before us and do that, but she did, and STILL there were young white students (mostly boys) showing up in gear in the weeks and months following her speech. The only thing that made a difference actually was when our white male administrator changed the dress code policy so students would no longer be allowed to wear that gear, and when he encouraged a family to leave the school because they refused to follow the new policy. It's about power, right? Students didn't listen to our Indigenous faculty, but they had no choice but to listen to our main white guy. We've all got to do this work together.

Expand full comment
Chris La Tray's avatar

There is a level of ignorance among so many white people of middle age and older that isn't cruel or even particularly willful – it's just there and it's deep. I encountered a woman last week in Fort Benton, Montana; I suspect she was in her 70s. I had done a presentation the night before for adults and was doing two more for elementary kids this following morning. She was asking about mascots and I said they were always offensive and wrong if non-Indian teams used them. She asked about the K.C. Chiefs and I said yes, that is particularly egregious. Her answer, and I could almost see her cognitive synapses sparking and shorting out, was to say, "But we've been doing it so long!" as if that makes it okay and it was utterly unfathomable to her that it needs to change. She then followed up re: where she grew up (or currently lives, I couldn't quite figure out the distinction because my own cognitive synapses were beginning to misfire), how they were called the Warriors, and that it seemed to be okay even though "there are so many Indians there." The town is Brockton. I said, "That's on the Fort Peck Reservation though, isn't it?" and she said, "No, I don't think so."

It is.

How could she not know that if she has any connection to the town at all? How would you describe that ignorance?

Anyway. You may see the delightful "Warrior Weekly Update" right here if you care to. I enjoyed it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPoep65SJUc&t=10s

Expand full comment
27 more comments...

No posts