Obviously, Inevitably, The White Devil Did It
So, anyway, as you may have heard, at a recent awards ceremony, a black millionaire celebrity slapped another black millionaire celebrity. The root cause, however, has only now been discovered:
This is about a much larger systemic issue rooted in white supremacist culture designed to police the behaviour of Blacks amongst the who’s who in Hollywood and beyond.
Respectability politics suggest that equity and fair treatment require that Black people — both inside and outside of Hollywood — conduct ourselves in a manner deemed acceptable to whites. Furthermore, expressing any emotion other than complacence, apathy, or agreeance directly violates those norms, disqualifying Black people from receiving the same equitable treatment that whites enjoy as a birthright. And sadly, there is a large group of Blacks who have internalised this toxic messaging.
You see, when Mr Will Smith, a black millionaire celebrity, publicly assaults Mr Chris Rock, another black millionaire celebrity, on live television, and is promptly given a prestigious award, for which he is applauded, and is then seen celebrating triumphantly at the award after-party, this is somehow proof of victimhood, of being racially “policed” by “respectability politics” and other works of the White Devil. Mr Smith, we’re told, is “not receiving the same equitable treatment that Whites enjoy as a birthright.”
Readers will note the implication that any black viewers who regard Mr Smith’s behaviour as not entirely optimal are merely parroting views “deemed acceptable to whites,” having somehow “internalised” the “toxic messaging” of “white supremacist culture.” For what it’s worth, I don’t have strong feelings on the incident one way or the other – it all seemed rather farcical – but I doubt my first impulse would be to suggest that black people who disapproved, however much or little, are merely aping whitey and don’t know their own minds. But such is wokeness.
The author of the piece, published in Forbes, is Maia Niguel Hoskin, a “writer, activist, and college professor,” whose areas of supposed expertise include “oppression, difference and mental health,” including “racial battle fatigue,” and who claims, modestly, to “facilitate cultural consciousness.” As a self-styled “speaker of truth,” she is, of course, schooled in “critical race theory.”
And so, Ms Hoskin tells us that she does not condone violence, while insisting that responsibility for violence must be shifted from those who indulge in it, provided they are black, and attributed instead to the insidious, all-pervasive, yet oddly nebulous, power of pallor. The “racist system that was designed to incubate his and so many others’ frustrations.” And which, in ways never quite specified, compels very rich comedians to tell bad jokes, and makes very rich actors slap the people who tell them. This, we’re assured, is “white supremacist culture.”
And the way to be scrupulously “anti-racist” is to erase any agency or expectation of self-possession from people with brown skin.
[ Expanded via the comments. ]
when going respectable places the black people seem to be dressed better on average than the white…
That would fit with my understanding that blacks are more likely to say “Sir” and “Ma’am”.
I seem to recall that Thomas Sowell, when he was teaching college, rejected the growing custom of students addressing professors by their first names. He said (more or less) “You will address me as ‘Mister Sowell’ and I will address you as ‘Mister [fill in name]’ “.
Still not seeing any bikinis, though.
Well…see…it’s kinda like the nude beach thing…anyone you work with that would wear a bikini into the office… We did have one woman whom I’m thinking of, a contractor no less, DBA, would wear what effectively looked like a beach coverup. And flip flops.
And on the irony note… I myself got dressed down, so to speak, by one of our useless VP karens a year or two before this, for wearing sneakers into the office. In my defense, this was on a Friday after already having worked 45+ hours that week and I was not getting paid to be there at that point. Just saying I don’t speak as a fashion snob.
Even the Mafia and Al Capone wore a suit.
I’ve seen an early 20th-century photograph of yard workers in hats, vests, and suit-jackets driving rivets in the hull of a battleship.
[ Compiles ephemera, presses ‘save’; demands peeled grapes. ]
in 30 years people will dress for work as if headed to the beach.
Still not seeing any bikinis, though.
Perhaps blogging thongs will catch on.
Perhaps blogging thongs will catch on.
?
I’m sure someone back then said if such attitudes were to persist, in 30 years people will dress for work as ifheaded to the beach
A little searching and I found the place I remembered “Pinnacle Peak Steakhouse” — whose marketing was “where a working class man can take his family for a steak dinner at prices a cowboy can afford.”
And it looks like they’re still in business.
I really don’t think casual dining is behind the ubiquitous move to slovenly dressing. A lot of businesses have even abandoned “casual Friday” because too many people thought “casual” meant “come to work in clothes you wear to work in the garden”.
Pinnacle Peak didn’t aim at competing with high end steakhouses, like “Fleming’s”. And yes, we dress accordingly when going to places like Fleming’s. It’s nice to dress up.
I really don’t think casual dining is behind the ubiquitous move to slovenly dressing. A lot of businesses have even abandoned “casual Friday” because too many people thought “casual” meant “come to work in clothes you wear to work in the garden”.
Behind the move? No. A big part of the move, yes. And from the last I worked (pre-damnpanic) my boss dressed like a teenager every day. T-shirt and jeans. His employees (likely) all had six figure salaries. Here’s a though….Maybe they can go to dress-up Fridays? I noticed in the Speakeasy thing that seemed to be starting to trend before the lockdowns, young people dressed up a bit. I think that may have been the greater idea behind the speakeasies was to get people to dress properly before you let them in.
And from the last I worked (pre-damnpanic) my boss dressed like a teenager every day. T-shirt and jeans.
I retired Jan 2020 (timing!) from the San Berdo DA office. My office in Rancho Cucamonga was actually inside the courthouse so we never had casual Fridays because at any time one might have to appear in court and the courts are fairly strict on dress codes not just for attorneys, clients & staff but even for the public coming in to watch proceedings.
That said, I’d say “dress up Fridays” would be a great idea, especially coupled with date-night fancy dining after work.
All this fatiguing interaction with Whitey never seems to include a desire to return to Africa.
It was driven by (and is being driven by) the IT industry. It was a trope that the guys who knew how to keep the VAX in the basement running could get away with dressing and acting like they were still in university and continued on with Microsoft and Google deliberately cultivating that attitude for their own benefit.
The more IT becomes part of everyday business operations instead of just those weird guys in the basement, the more the lax dress standards have infected the rest of the business.
It was driven by (and is being driven by) the IT industry. It was a trope that the guys who knew how to keep the VAX in the basement running could get away with dressing and acting like they were still in university
Yes, likely a big part of it. The thing is/was…Back when I started in the programming business (not my more configuration/operations/do nothing job in the space biz, which was jeans and t-shirts) the dress was jacket and tie. In Florida, a jacket is bloody ridiculous, especially in the summer. The tie in the summer as well. For coders who were hardly ever customer-facing, it was just dumb. And given the ridiculous overtime required, because nobody anywhere seemed to know what the hell they were doing…something like 80% of all software projects failed…or so the story went…the casual Friday move did make considerable sense and reduced grumbling about the OT. For every day desk work, ties are overkill. They are a bother to fuss with etc. But what the big bother is with requiring simply a collared shirt, casual dress shoes, and casual dress pants (which depending on where I am weight-wise I find far more comfortable and cool than jeans) is I simply do not get except, as you say, perpetual college feelz. Of course you womens…YMMV. Stockings of course…
[ Adjusts bow tie. ]
” Adjusts bow tie. ”
*shows appreciation for fine Gentlemanly Style by ordering odds’n’ends for der neu Bronco via Amazon linkage*
what color tie goes with flip flops?
Of course you womens…YMMV. Stockings of course…
Unless it’s some summer frock for a backyard BBQ, or a tennis dress actually worn on the court, then dress=stockings. One can get away with bare legs under a full-length gown but I cringe anytime I see some starlet sashay down the Oscars, et al, red carpet in a barely-there shift with bare legs stuffed into eff-me-pumps. It looks cheap, unfinished, and unpolished, no matter how many thousands of $ of designer shift they’re wearing.
Just, ick.
[ Adjusts bow tie. ]

[ Hurries home, returns appropriately dressed for the debut of the Friday Ephemera. ]
Ah. So we’re putting on the Ritz?
Super-duper!
“then dress=stockings.”
Guess I should shave the ol legs, then?
On the topic of sartorial decay, I recall seeing photos from the 1920s of a state fair. Even the carnies were wearing trousers, suspenders, collared, button-down shirts and occasionally hats. The fairgoers were even better dressed.
what color tie goes with flip flops?
As long as your flip flops match your belt your tie can be any colour you want. ;-p
As long as your flip flops match your belt your tie can be any colour you want
http://www.007minute.com/jbm/episodes/minute-019-collars-and-cuffs/
court, then dress=stockings.
Sooo….I’m in this meeting, oh about twentysomething years ago when I first noticed this change in decorum. A moderately pretty lass is sitting up front in a knee length skirt. Nothing unusual or flashy…except…well, the way that pump dangled on the foot at the end of that…hmm….be thankful my language skills kinda suck because I could write a sonnet about that calf. Fortunately the meeting wasn’t terribly important. Something to do with our 401(k) IIRC. I’m not complaining, mind you but again YMMV.
Guess I should shave the ol legs, then?
You can create a really interesting moiré pattern if you don’t. Not that I would have any (ahem) first-hand knowledge of such things…
His joke in the Oscars was pretty pants, but the nonsense that followed was hilarious. Maybe they could have a mass brawl next year…I think that would be appropriate.
On the one hand, you’ve got better luck at a BET Awards backstage or after party. On the other, the Oscars are being engineered to look like the BET Awards so they’ll only be a few years behind.
Maia Niguel Hoskin, a “writer, activist, and college professor,” whose areas of supposed expertise include “oppression, difference and mental health,” including “racial battle fatigue,”
She’s a grifter and an idiot but she’s not alone…
https://twitter.com/libsoftiktok/status/1510072011577389056
An enjoyable philosopher is Bill Vallicella. Now he has retired from academy “to live the eremitic life of the independent philosopher in the Sonoran desert”.
His blog post are intelligent, humorous, pertinent and often original. Of course, he despises wokeism.
https://maverickphilosopher.typepad.com/maverick_philosopher/