Showing posts with label race. Show all posts
Showing posts with label race. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

Narcissistic Personality Disorder In The Black Community

This article (from 11/2011) claims concludes that 97% of African American men suffer from narcissistic personality disorder.  This is based on the field work of two experts interviewed by the article's author, Deborrah. 

READ IT HERE

Saturday, August 12, 2017

Possible 2017 White Guilt Movie Of The Year is DETROIT

All the signs were there, and the violent beat-down film has made an early move to the lead for possible white guilt film of the year.  Of course official announcements of the voters will be announced at our 2017 MMM and JP Film Critics Awards late late in the year.
To date, neither MMM or JP has even seen this udder piece of junk, but we do reckon watching this film will only finalize our current position so no rush.

This article supports this early thrust to the top for the film DETROIT:

The film ‘Detroit’ has good intentions. We all know how that tends to work out.


 

Fifty years ago this summer an urban rebellion took place. 159 riots erupted in African-American cities across the country. The civil unrest took place in cities like New York, Atlanta, Chicago, Birmingham, and Boston.  The worst riots that summer were in Newark, New Jersey and Detroit, Michigan.
The movie “Detroit” attempts to capture the eponymous riot of 1967.
“Detroit” shows how the past is present or as novelist William Faulkner has said “In fact, it’s not even past” in terms of the killing of unarmed African-American males and the unflinching impunity bestowed to police officers by focusing on the brutal confrontation at the Algiers Motel the evening of the riot.
While summer flicks are known fondly as “popcorn movie season” the film “Detroit” is difficult to digest.
The dynamic duo – filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal – who brought us the 2008 Oscar winning action-filled war film “The Hurt Locker” has once again collaborated in transforming a real life event into high art with “Detroit.”  However, with raw depictions of street violence, inexplicable scenes of an aggregation of law enforcement –  Detroit police, Michigan state troopers, national guardsmen, and private guards – descending on the Algiers Motel, and the constant images of the racial tropes, ” Detroit,” critics have rightly stated, is “disappointingly one-dimensional” and “unnuanced.”
More vocal critics have posed this question: Who was the film’s intended viewing audience?
“Detroit” is “a movie for white people. For some white viewers, Bigelow’s film may invoke horror, even righteous anger. But with a white audience so firmly at its core, the images of violence in the film, designed to be visceral, in your face, and to inspire outrage and disbelief, inspired nothing in me but pessimism and spiritual exhaustion. The violence isn’t shocking. It’s just sadly familiar, and that isn’t interesting or illuminating to me as a black viewer in 2017,” Huffington Post senior culture writer Zeba Blay stated.
I, too, was spent after viewing the film.  My spouse left the theater shaking and crying, conveying how demoralized she felt. Reverend Emmett Price, my co-commentator on our weekly Monday segment “ALL REVVED UP” on WGBH Boston Public Radio stated, “It was two hours and 23 minutes of the muting, maiming, torturing and murder of black bodies. That’s the movie.”
Because both Bigelow and Boal are white queries abound about cultural appropriation and exploitation, asking whether white artists can sensitively and appropriately depict black pain and oppression.
Bigelow, knowing she didn’t have the cultural heft, asked herself that question, too.  “I’m white, am I the right person to do it? I thought, ‘Am I the perfect person to tell this story? No’,” she told Variety.  “However, I’m able to tell this story, and it’s been 50 years since it’s been told.”
With good intentions (and I convey that without sarcasm) as a way to leverage her white privilege Bigelow wanted to expose today’s indiscriminate death sentence black men (Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, Trayvon Martin, Philando Castile, etc.) encounter too often with white cops that’s hauntingly similar to what black males encountered with white law enforcement officers five decades ago in the 1967 riot. Bigelow’s high hopes was that the film would spark our country’s needed dialogue on race; therefore, emphatically stating to The New York Times, that ”to do nothing was not an answer.”
Bigelow felt given her filmmaking crops and a top-notch all white crew with one renowned black consultant (Detroiter and scholar Michael Eric Dyson) she was equipped to tell the story.
Sadly, she wasn’t. The balance between depicting the horrors of racism without valorizing or demeaning black trauma was eclipsed in “Detroit”, inviting an avalanche of African-American movie and cultural critics to chime in.
New York Times critic John Eligon, for example, stated that “Bigelow found herself engaging in another basic journalistic practice: immersing herself in unfamiliar lives and experiences, and trying to make sense of them.”
It’s too simplistic to say that stories of people of color should only be the province of people of color. Wasn’t a similar polemic once expressed about Shakespearean plays having only white actors back in the day?
Bigelow’s problem, for me, is that she didn’t tell a good story, because she did not have the complete history of the riot, but told the story, nonetheless.
Perhaps, had Bigelow had access to John Hersey’s book The Algiers Motel Incident – which has police records, series of interviews from survivors, witnesses and families of the slain men – she might have presented a better narrative.
Instead, Bigelow did what she does best – an auteur-driven film – displaying her vast cinematic skills to obfuscate her lack of knowledge and absence of a plausible narrative arc.
With graphic images of white barbaric cruelty inflicted on black bodies, the main character is -unquestionably – violence. The emotional arc of “Detroit” being black helplessness, the film evokes anger rather than thought, political action, and coalition building in this era of “Black Lives Matter.” Bigelow not only fails at Screenplay 101 she tanked her efforts to make a difference.
How much of Bigelow’s passion to tell the story of the 1967 Detroit riot – especially in the way she did – was out of white privilege, white guilt, arrogance, or ignorance, I’ll leave it up to the viewer to decide.

Monday, November 21, 2016

How "White Guilt" Ultimately Gave us Hillary and Trump

 
Carl Jackson
Posted: Sep 01, 2016 12:01 AM
 
Now that we know “anti-establishment” Republicans aren’t necessarily pro-Constitutionalists, the question many are still asking is “how did we get here?" The answer can be summed up in two words: “white guilt.”
So what is “white guilt?” It’s a false sense of shame imposed upon white Americans by left-wing radicals like president Barack Obama and the late Saul Alinsky as a way of advancing their goal of wealth redistribution through social justice. Essentially, it highlights America’s “original sin” of slavery and racism as a tool to shame whites into an anti-American mindset.
Read the rest here!

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

White Guilty Post of the Week: Did Race Issue Bring Trump to the Voters?

In March, Slate wrote a pretty darn good article discussing America's backlash against the racial politics of President Barack Obama. Also, in March, Ken Burns discussed the role of race in Trump's candidacy.
“We are in a retrograde moment,” Burns explained, “in which the dog whistles of race that have been with us — we can’t pretend now that a phenomenon of the kind of racial innuendo that’s happening right now is somehow new and we’re shocked, shocked that this is happening.” - KB



Monday, April 11, 2016

GALLOP SHOCK: US WORRIES RACE RELATIONS PEAKING

U.S. Worries About Race Relations Reach a New High

by Jim Norman

Story Highlights

  • 35% of Americans are worried a great deal about race relations
  • Number has more than doubled in past two years
  • Race relations still ranks low among issues causing worry
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- More than a third (35%) of Americans now say they are worried "a great deal" about race relations in the U.S. -- which is higher than at any time since Gallup first asked the question in 2001. The percentage who are worried a great deal rose seven percentage points in the past year and has more than doubled in the past two years.

Trend: Race Relations Worries Are Growing in U.S.

READ THE REST HERE

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

FBI Director Talks Racial Tension Between Police and People of Color

Today the Director of the FBI gave a speech to attempt to provide some answers to better policing.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Ferguson Needs To Stop White Guilt

Tonight, Mr. Midnight Movie is irate over the riots in Missouri. To him, there are a wild bunch of narcissistic political game players that are impacting this horrific scene. Take a listen and leave some comments if have nothing better going on in your life.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Biggest Black Nazi Propaganda Film In History: Higher Learning

1996 film by John Singleton is reviewed by Mr. Midnight Movie.

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Early Trailer Review: Dear White People

Check out Mr. Midnight Movie discuss his thoughts on the upcoming film Dear White People...

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Happy Martin Luther King Jr. Day

"I too have a dream, where all men are able to legally obtain the services of the same hookers that tainted the name of Martin Luther King, Jr.  He should not have been subjected to the ridicule that he faced at a time when he was trying to make America a better place to live." - Mr. Midnight Movie


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