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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    Racism differs from society to society

    http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20 ... 057051.asp

    Racism differs from society to society

    7/17/2005

    By CLARENCE PAGE

    Mexico and the United States have many more important things to worry about than the cuteness or offensiveness of Memin Pinguin. The big-lipped, big-eared, bug-eyed, black-skinned pickaninny cartoon character recently sparked international outrage when it popped up on Mexican postage stamps. It was the biggest uproar between the two nations since, well, the last one. That, you may recall, came when Mexico President Vicente Fox said that Mexican emigrants take jobs that "not even blacks want to do."
    Both episodes brought condemnations for insensitivity from White House spokesman Scott McClellan and black activists such as the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton. Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa also called the stamps derogatory.

    All of which brought proclamations of bemusement from Fox, who wondered aloud what all the fuss was about. "They don't have information, frankly," he told the Associated Press. "All Mexico loves the character," he said, including himself. Indeed, many Mexicans and Mexican-Americans have pointed out that Pinguin, born in the 1940s as a comic book that still sells briskly, is as cherished in the Mexican national identity as Mickey Mouse or Bugs Bunny on this side of the border. It certainly is no more offensive, many argue, than those all-American characters Speedy Gonzales or the Frito Bandito.

    Yet, the Pinguin flap offers lessons about how differently people from various cultures and nationalities define the largely artificial construct we call "race" and how differently we define what we think is racist.

    Some American editorialists have howled that Mexico has a lot to learn about racial sensitivity. Maybe so, but Norteamericanos have much to learn from Mexico's experience, too. Today's Mexico did not emerge out of the burdensome racial baggage of the Yankees. It had different racial baggage.

    Unlike America's system, enslaved Africans in Mexico could buy their freedom and give birth to children who were in turn free to marry anyone of any racial origin. Mexico abolished slavery decades before the United States and never enacted Jim Crow-style laws.

    Mexican historian Enrique Krauze, author of "Mexico: Biography of Power," described Mexico's tradition of racial egalitarianism in a recent Washington Post op-ed essay. Famous Mexican leaders of African descent, he noted, included Jose Maria Morelos, who became the second commander of the Mexican rebels in their War for Independence (1810-1821), and his immediate subordinate, Gen. Vicente Guerrero, who became president eight years after Mexico won its independence from Spain.

    Since race had ceased to have much meaning in Mexico's heavily "mestizo," mixed ancestry, society, the country abandoned counting people by race in its national census decades ago. But the downside of that willful color-blindness is that it contributes to the very real sense of invisibility felt by many black Mexicans. As Juan Angel Serrano, 41, a cattle farmer who heads Black Mexico, told Chicago Tribune foreign correspondent Hugh Dellios in Costa Chica, a region heavy with black Mexicans, "(other Mexicans) just don't see us. People ask us where we're from. They say we can't be from Mexico."

    The "Memin Pinguin" postage stamp has sold out and, happily for offended black folks, no further printing beyond the original 750,000-stamp issue was scheduled. Rev. Jackson suggested that Mexicans commemorate some real-life black heroes on their stamps. Good idea. They do have more than a few.

    As for us African-descended North Americans, we might want to look at some of the images of black life that we encourage with our consumer dollars here at home. Then we might ask ourselves: Is Memin Pinguin any worse than some of the gangsters and hoochy mamas that we promote in our hip-hop videos?
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    HEY EVERYONE!! You need to click on the article. Clarence Page, the author of this "strange" editorial is Black and writer for the Chicago Tribune.

    Well.....I don't know where to begin with this one other than to say, Mr. Page, I strongly advise you keep your future opinions about racism in Mexico to yourself. Mexico exterminated your race in Mexico. That may be why they were the first to abolish slavery.... there weren't any "slaves" left. The policy to inter-marry and become a free person was designed to "breed it out".

    Perhaps you'll enjoy Mexico where the United States Government intends to ship all retirees under the new North American Community Plan of the Security and Prosperity Partnership Pact with Mexico and Canada.

    Obviously, retired Americans will not be able to afford to live in the United States.

    You barked up the wrong tree, Mr Page. "Gangsters and hoochy mamas" shown in Hip Hop Videos are expressions of art. Whether it suits your tastes or not, these are expressions of the people by the people and has nothing to do with racism, YOU MORON!!

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  3. #3
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    You barked up the wrong tree
    Does that mean we can count on your support for giving dogs the right to vote?
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  4. #4
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Oh, yes, JP...American Citizen Dogs, Cats, Pigs, Horses and Goats!!

    Won't it be cute, JP, political buttons, hats, vests, jackets, leases, collars, food bowls....custom made voting booths, machines.....oh my gosh....it will be a WHOLE NEW INDUSTRY!!

    All American Made, you ask? But, of course!!



    JP....we'll have the "cutest" elections in the whole wide world!!!

    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
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