The rumor mill in the White House is just as extensive as the one in
Hollywood. It’s astonishing how one video clip of an FDA employee who
happened to be dark skinned, talking about a light skinned family,
posted on a conservative blog by Andrew Brietbart as proof of this
employee being racist, during the tea party vs. white house debate as
to who is more racist, would result in the forced resignation of this
employee, Shirley Sherrod, before anyone considered that the video was
just a clip and not the entire speech. Now I could take the time to
talk about this incident more thoroughly, who she is, what she said,
what “they” said. But I’m not going to do that. You can just do what
obviously many pushing her to resign didn’t do, google it. For me,
it’s shocking that things even got this far. Ironically the full
video that the clip was taken from was actually about racial
reconciliation and not racial discrimination. So what I’m going to
talk about is the stupidity of a false cultural, or actually, a false
race indicator that has led to wars, deaths, laws, and the resignation
of Shirley Sherrod. Please see this link for the full video.
http://www.naacp.org/news/entry/video_sherrod/
Racial discrimination. I know, that’s not a complete sentence. But
it is a term that can fill the mind with a multitude of ideas,
experiences, stories, historical dates, etc. A term that opens the
door to so many levels of ignorance. It is amazing that in a
civilized society with nothing but mixed races this still exists.
Even more amazing, is that grown men and women in political roles that
manage such a society continue to use this as a way of political
manipulation.
Maybe I’m idealistic, or just absolutely insane, maybe even
idealistically insane, but I have never understood how the labeling of
one’s skin tone was ever to be an indicator of one’s race. Especially
in a country that has evolved into one of immigrants from all over the
world, with different skin tones, accents, and physical features. I
can’t remember the last time I looked at someone and said “Oh, they
must be Mexican.” Yes, I said Mexican on purpose. That is one of my
favorites, because I am consistently confronted with people in the
restaurant business who think Mexican’s have specific skin tones and
physical features. I speak Spanish, and many of the employees who
work in the “back of the house” are at least second generation
American, or Peruvian, or Guatemalan, or Ecuadorian, or human being.
Yet, even people in an authoritative position will call “them”
Mexicans. Even I have to separate “them” to make this point.
It is absolutely ridiculous to consider a group of people separate
because of the way they look. The common thread between them being
what again? Because if I remember correctly we all have the same main
components. The reality is you can have a fair skinned or dark
skinned Mexican, Guatemalan, Peruvian, African, French, Chinese, all
of the above, or again, just simply a human being. Absolutely
shocking to consider that we are all human beings who simply have
different skin tones, hair types, eye colors, heights, and
geographical locations that we were born in.
Now, I hope it isn’t too obvious that I distinguish skin by tone and
not color considering the fact that black is not a color, and although
white is a combination of all colors in the color spectrum and has
been argued as technically being a color, I have never met someone who
actually matches the Crayola crayons of white or black. We were all
born on the same planet. I know it sounds hippiesh, but it is
nonetheless a fact. And yet the separation of land is a
distinguishing factor of laws, culture, living standards, and skin
color? Does skin color have anything in common with the words laws,
culture, living standards? Did I mention that skin color does not
actually exist, but instead what people are referring to is skin tone?
This is important because when you start realizing that there is no
skin color, but only skin, that has different tones you realize that
we all have the same thing, coming in one package that is either
lighter or darker, with freckles or without, hair or no hair, rash or
no rash, etc.
For some reason the words skin and color together have a place in many
people’s minds. I don’t get it. I never will understand how people
can be so ignorant to how the world has evolved, how people have mixed
together, how a person can have European, Asian, African ancestry and
yet have the lightest to darkest skin tone. Maybe I’m rambling, and
this has no place on this blog. But when I think of culture and the
law I can’t help but make the mistake that so many others make and
fall into the race card. I can’t help but notice how culturally we
are constantly bombarded by this idea of skin tone being a color that
distinguishes race. For me, I’ve never seen black, white, light,
dark, those factors are not an automatic trigger to any thought
process I have ever had.
I appreciate culture. I don’t just appreciate it, I eat, drink, and
experience culture. But I don’t get why so many are unable to
appreciate these differences and instead have a fear of these
differences to the extent that labeling them is a necessity. To the
extent that our own white house hears a dark skinned woman talking
about a light skinned family and doesn’t take the two second click of
a button to pull up the entire video and hear her say it’s about the
poor vs. those who have, and not about black or white.
Liana E. Reyes