Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

#browntwitterbird

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Last week, Fareed Manjoo wrote a post for Slate called “How Black People Use Twitter.” Perhaps more controversial than the article itself was the accompanying image, the familiar blue bird Twitter logo, but brown instead, holding a phone and sporting a fitted cap (see below).

slate_twitter01

From NPR.org:

“I was bound to offend people with this article,” Manjoo says. “But I thought that it was kind of worth a risk to ask and perhaps answer some interesting questions.”

His question was why so many popular topics on Twitter, called hashtags, seem to come from blacks, specifically black youth. Manjoo says he made that observation by checking out the Twitter profile photos of tweeters taking part in the popular hashtags.

“Young black people are not a group of people I see every day,” Manjoo says. “I don’t have any teenage black friends. And the fact that they were kind of part of this conversation just a click away from me was something that I was very interested in. I was seeing trending topics every day that were dominated by black people.”

Manjoo’s prediction that he would offend some folks certainly came true. The post sparked valid criticism that attempting to categorically “other” black Twitter users (while providing a stereotyped cartoon as a mascot) is a misguided attempt to “fetish[ize] something that is easily explained by human nature.”

Danielle Belton of The Black Snob says:

It’s like a black person on a bike — I’ve never seen that! Black people ride bikes? There’s a black guy on a skateboard? Black people ride skateboards?! And it becomes a sort of thing. But no, they’re on a bike and a skateboard for the same reason why anybody would be on a bike and a skateboard. There’s no special, racialized way of skateboarding or riding a bike, and that’s the same way it is with Twitter.

Debates about racial identity and stereotyping almost always contribute something of value to our communities and society as a whole. But this debate produced something new and fantastic – brown Twitter bird parodies. Birds with afros. Birds with graduation caps. Birds with dredlocks. Birds in wheelchairs.

slate_twitter01_remix1

Started by Alicia Nassardeen of Instant Vintage, the parodies went viral. Folks across the globe used Nassardeen’s parodies as Facebook and Twitter profile pics and started making their own. Why? To prove the point that is the crux of the initial outrage: black people are not a monolith.

How creative. And how effective. Says blogger and comedian Baratunde Thurston:

That’s a form of activism, that’s a form of community organizing, that’s a form of reasserting a claim to your own identity,” he says. “And countering what you see as a damaging media message.

Twitter is a powerful social media tool. To be offended by the reworking of its icon into an overly-simplistic caricature of one’s racial group is natural. To use the very same powerful social media tool to parody this offensive caricature in a world-wide rejection of racial stereotypes is activism at its best. Hats (and graduation caps) off to the world-wide #browntwitterbird revolt!

Poll: Half of Americans Want to End Birthright Citizenship

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

From Talking Points Memo:

A new CNN poll finds the public divided on whether the Constitution should be amended to end birthright citizenship. The survey of 1,009 adults reports that 49% favor changing the Constitution to prevent the children of non-citizens from gaining automatic citizenship when born in the United States, while 51% oppose such a change.

This news is as disturbing as the idea is idiotic. Nearly half of this country wants to abolish birthright citizenship, one of the core ideas upon which our nation was founded? Immigration has consistently brought new people and ideas that have shaped our very way of life. It is quintessentially American (and, one could argue, quintessentially human). Cloaking anti-immigrant bigotry behind hypocritical flag-waving is a slap in the face to the people and cultures that built this nation.

America needs fundamental changes, thats for sure. We carry with us some powerful, terrible legacies of slavery, indigenous massacres here and abroad, and the continued abuse of military might, to name a few. True patriots fight to end these disturbing aspects of our country that ultimately weaken us, not the strength and diversity through immigration that has always made us great.

Let Elizabeth Warren Protect Main Street from Wall Street

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Frustrated that the financial reform bill recently passed by Congress isn’t as strong as it needs to be? Me too! But this demands that we continue to take action, not throw up our hands and back down. We need to keep up the pressure to make sure that the folks policing the financial sector make the most out of the power vested in them, rather than use it to continue to coddle the big banks.

The Obama Administration is considering appointing Elizabeth Warren to head the recently-established Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. In addition to being the person who came up the idea of establishing the Bureau in the first place, she has a reputation for standing up to Wall Street in order to protect the rest of us.

This is why Timothy Geithner and other Wall Street insiders are attempting to block her appointment.

According to John R. Talbott:

The bill has been written to put a great deal of power as to how strongly it is implemented in the hands of its regulators, some of which remain to be chosen. The bank lobby will work incredibly hard to see that Warren, the person most responsible for initiating and fighting for the idea of a consumer financial protection group, is denied the opportunity to head it.

Please join Credo Action Network by signing their petition urging President Obama to appoint Warren to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The petition reads:

Elizabeth Warren has proven that she is willing to stand up to Wall Street on behalf of consumers and is the logical choice to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Tim Geithner is a longtime Wall Street insider, and if he’s recommending against Elizabeth Warren that’s all the more reason to appoint her.

Click here to sign the petition today!