Excruciatingly Woke
In today’s competitive grievance culture, unearthing new sorrows, or reheating old sorrows, can require prodigious, indeed bewildering, feats of contortion. And so, in the pages of The Atlantic, we find one Alice Ristroph railing at the heavens. First, a little context:
On August 21, 2017, a total solar eclipse will arrive mid-morning on the coast of Oregon. The moon’s shadow will be about 70 miles wide, and it will race across the country faster than the speed of sound, exiting the eastern seaboard shortly before 3pm local time.
Clouds permitting, it should be quite a thing to witness.
It has been dubbed the Great American Eclipse, and along most of its path, there live almost no black people.
There we go. If that one caught you off guard, here’s another:
As the eclipse approaches, the temperature will fall and birds will roost, and then, suddenly, the lights will go out. For each place within the path of totality, the darkness will last a minute, maybe two, and then daylight will return. Oregon, where this begins, is almost entirely white. The 10 percent or so of state residents who do not identify as white are predominantly Latino, American Indian, Alaskan, or Asian.
This goes on for some time. It’s an attempt at symbolism, I think. A beverage may be useful.
It is a matter of population density, and more specifically geographic variations in population density by race, for which the sun and the moon cannot be held responsible. Still, an eclipse chaser is always tempted to believe that the skies are relaying a message.
The message, it seems, is that people – specifically, black ones – aren’t arranged geographically as Professor Ristroph would wish.
From Oregon, the eclipse will travel through Idaho and Wyoming… Percentage-wise, Idaho and Wyoming are even whiter than Oregon… The few non-white residents of Idaho and Wyoming are not black — they are mostly Latino, American Indian, and Alaskan.
Perhaps this demographic bean-counting is all building to some kind of point, a moment of profundity.
From Kansas, the eclipse goes to Missouri, still mostly bypassing black people.
Surely a contender for The Most Woke Sentence Yet Uttered.
Moving east, the eclipse will pass part of St. Louis, whose overall population is nearly half black. But the black residents are concentrated in the northern half of the metropolitan area, and the total eclipse crosses only the southern half.
If you laughed at that, tittered even, you’re a terrible, terrible person.
Eight miles north of the path of totality is Ferguson, where Officer Darren Wilson shot Michael Brown three summers ago.
And inevitably,
After Greenville and Columbia, the eclipse goes out where so many slaves once came in: Charleston was the busiest port for the slave trade, receiving about 40 percent of all the African slaves brought into the country.
Ah, this must be it. Stand ready with the righteous seething.
In Kentucky, Tennessee, and eventually South Carolina, the eclipse will finally pass over black Americans. Even here, though, the path of totality seems to mark the legacy of slavery and the persistence of segregation more than any form of inclusion.
And so we’re told, repeatedly and at length, that for much of its journey, the Moon’s shadow “travels over white people only,” and that the eclipse will “narrowly miss Tryon, the birthplace of Nina Simone.” The point of all this is, even now, somewhat unobvious, not least given the large numbers of people planning to travel across the country to experience the alignment. Beyond, that is, the fact that some people aren’t choosing to live where Professor Ristroph thinks they ought to, and who thinks this while listing historical wrongs and attempting to solicit some pretentious collective guilt for the acts of strangers long dead, thereby signalling the author’s own, all-important moral elevation, and implicitly, her social status:
America is a nation with debts that no honest man can pay. It is too much to ask that these debts simply be forgiven.
Yes, guilty, forever.
Though it occurs to me that trying to propagate pretentious, collective guilt – an act of psychological malice – and thereby exalting oneself as tearfully compassionate and high-minded, at least among fellow pretenders, isn’t a particularly noble activity either. And when there’s an opportunity to experience a bit of cosmic perspective, a moment of possible awe, what you really want is some contrived racial grievance-mongering to sour that moment and bring you down to Earth.
Professor Ristroph is of course an educator, a graduate of Harvard.
Via dicentra. [ Edited for clarity. ]
Not a lot of people know that the Moon actively discriminates against black people. Or would it be more ‘correct’ to blame the Sun/patriarchy for it? And the eclipse thingy is totally excluding all the women in Europe! (Still tittering at the article.)
Someone please edit the “Old Man Yells at Cloud” meme to read “Old Woman Yells at Moon”.
When did celestial objects become racist? When did the author of this original piece become an idiot? Ye Gods preserve us!
Well, the Moon *is* white, so what should we expect?
sigh…
Lisboeta,
It all makes sense now: we refer to the phases of the Moon by its lit area, excluding – to the point of near-invisibility – the dark area. And that’s why the Moon’s shadow passing across the Earth is, er, racist?
Meanwhile, when did ‘Alaskan’ become a race?
Tell me again why Harvard is considered an “elite” educational institution?
That story, by the way, came from “Democracy Journal,” which has more amusing fodder such as this one: http://democracyjournal.org/
How Should We Think About Inequality?
Research on Seattle’s new minimum wage has cast doubt over whether $15 an hour really gave a raise to low-wage workers. An article in Boston Review offers unconventional advice for progressives arguing over that finding: Change the subject.
Destroys small businesses and impoverish minorities? But what about inequality!
Maybe she’s auditioning for a job at ESPN? That would explain it.
the path of totality seems to mark the legacy of slavery and the persistence of segregation more than any form of inclusion.
Are any of these people *now* being *forced* to live where they live because of their skin colour? Because if they’re not, what’s her point?
And Eskimos….and Quebecers, and the Sami, and …..
I’ll give her the benefit of the doubt. Maybe she’s trying to point out how silly most racism accusations are?
If the eclipse covered many black communities, it would represent a conspiracy of Whites to deny blacks sunlight.
Are any of these people *now* being *forced* to live where they live because of their skin colour? Because if they’re not, what’s her point?
And likewise, of the tens of thousands of people who’ll be travelling across the country to experience the eclipse, are black people – unlike those “Latinos, American Indians, Alaskans, and Asians” – being singled out for exclusion? And so the point, it seems, is for Alice Ristroph to let us know how woke she is, and therefore superior.
With respect to Oregon, Ristroph’s diatribe should be read in conjunction with this from The Atlantic.
As far as the St. Louis metro area is concerned, the county immediately south of St. Louis which will be completely immersed in totality is roughly 95% white and named for notorious slave holder Thomas Jefferson. Coincidence? I think not.
Blacks constitute about 14% of the total American population. So yeah, a random straight path across the country is likely to give you that kind of result.
But hey, why be sensible when there’s an opportunity to blame whitey for something?
I didn’t read the essay. Does she call this the “cracker eclipse?”
Whoops, I meant to say The Christian Science Monitor for the Oregon article.
Having more than a passing acquaintance with Ft. Leavenworth, this caught my eye.
Actually, the black population is 10% less than Kansas City, Kansas (as opposed to the real Kansas City on the east side of State Line Road), and about the same as the other two largish cities, Topeka, and Wichita. Yes, it is more than the state average, but seeing as how 90% of Kansas counties have more cows than people, this is hardly surprising.
Regarding young Bradley Manning, he was not in the U.S. Penetentiary at Leavenworth the city, that is strictly a civilian slammer. He was in the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks (being the Army specific prison and after pre-trial confinement in the Joint hoosegow) on Ft. Leavenworth, the fort.
One would expect that a lawyer would know the difference, but then the whole article demonstrates that Harvard educated coastal self-proclaimed “elites”, are both provincial, and ignorant.
Tear down the moon.
I got a degree in astrophysics from QMC, London. That is all.
Bad enough that someone not suffering brain damage can conceive of an article like this; far worse that it should appear in a purportedly serious publication.
Did you notice that the tag on the Ristrophe article is “science”?
I got a degree in astrophysics from QMC, London.
Reading that tale of woe must have been particularly painful.
[ Slides jar of pickled eggs along bar. ]
I am a terrible, terrible person. 🙂
I am a terrible, terrible person. 🙂
The coat made of puppy fur is a big giveaway.
The virtue-signalling has gotten so ridiculously competitive, the Progs are politicizing a lunar eclipse. Great merciful Zeus, what a great time to be alive!
It has been dubbed the Great American Eclipse, and along most of its path, there live almost no black people.
The Great Racist Eclipse, then? >_<
It has been dubbed the Great American Eclipse, and along most of its path, there live almost no black people.
I failed to note earlier that this is a blinding flash of the obvious as along the entire path once past Portland there live almost no people of any hue till you get to Kansas City and St. Louis, and not a hell of a lot of people of any hue after till it skims Chattanooga and hits Charleston.
Our self-proclaimed coastal betters truly have no idea how vast Flyoverlandia is.
Obviously, the sun will be the next victim of White supremacy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IyjJbhuwGkU
Actually, what we know of the Moon from rock samples returned here, it that it’s black – or nearly so. A sort of very dark grey comes to mind… It only looks “white” in the massive sense when illuminated strongly, owing to the crystal structure of basaltic minerals haveing some reflectivity.
Would that make her any happier? I doubt it. She’d find some excuse for racist white people having banished the “black” Moon from the Earth.
This article is fourth months and 17 days late.
It seems to me that the eclipse passing mostly over white people is a good thing. We are, after all, physiologically suited to low-sunlight environs.
Allowing idiots to self-identify is one of the many benefits of free speech.
“Meanwhile, when did ‘Alaskan’ become a race?”
Probably about the same time “Muslim” did.
“Blacks constitute about 14% of the total American population. So yeah, a random straight path across the country is likely to give you that kind of result.”
That’s what I’m getting from it. Prof. Ristroph has inadvertantly made the point, at some length, that there aren’t very many black people in America. I’m sure the neo-Nazis will be very grateful for her “research”.
Stand down folks. I declare Poe’s Law. The author (and xer editor) forgot the smiley faces at the end. Xer’s just funnin’ with us.
[ Slides jar of pickled eggs along bar. ]
Don’t trust the pickled eggs. Other stuff goes in that jar.
the Progs are politicizing a lunar eclipse
It’s a Solar eclipse. The Lunars are commonplace.
Well, if it makes her feel any better, in my area the weather’s supposed to be clear Monday and, as a suburb of a huge military base, we have more black people in the area than you can shake a stick at.
Somebody mentioned Eskimos, or whatever you are supposed to call that ethnic group this week; I believe they’re classified as Asian.
This week.
I think the article should have addressed the scandal that black people, in general, have to travel to see the Northern Lights.
I didn’t think the article was unreasonable. It was a look through US history, focussing on the experience of blacks. The path of the eclipse was a contrivance to hold it together. Naturally it feels slightly artificial – if the author had used the device of “let’s pass along the 42nd parallel” it would be equally artificial. David’s excerpts are out of context, and I didn’t get nearly the tone of righteous snowflake indignation that he presented when I actually read the article. Professor Ristroph explicitly states that of course heavenly bodies are not racist, and never implies that the path of totality disadvantages or discriminates – it is just a narrative device. I would give Professor Ristroph a pass on this one.
When did the author of this original piece become an idiot?
I’m guessing the process started earlier but was certainly completed upon graduation from college.
Whenever I read such idiocy, the idiocy itself really doesn’t concern me much. Oh sure, in the time the author spent drafting it, writing it, and proofreading it, you would think that their idiocy would occur to them. But then, such is life. No, what really impresses me, with published pieces anyway, is that at least one editor, quite possibly a staff of editors read it and decided it was worthy of being published in their esteemed journal, paper, what have you.
As time goes by, I am developing a deep appreciation and even admiration for bad ideas. It seems that people are always trying to stomp them out. Editors are hired, committees are formed, boards of directors are appointed, centers of knowledge are created, entire departments and bureaucracies consuming millions, nay, billions of dollars all in the concerted effort to wipe them out. Yet they’ve persisted. You gotta admire the pluck.
The path of the eclipse was a contrivance to hold it together.
Yes, obviously. But the word contrivance doesn’t fully convey the author’s labouring of a slim and loaded pretext – that people aren’t arranged geographically as Professor Ristroph would wish – or her apparent determination to elicit some pretentious collective guilt, or collective resentment, and to associate that ill-feeling with a phenomenon that most will regard as positive. It takes a certain chutzpah, one might say shamelessness, to exploit a rare and often moving astronomical phenomenon as a pretext to race hustle and thereby signal one’s own personal elevation. Just as saying, earnestly, that the eclipse is “mostly bypassing black people,” as if it were symbolic, takes a certain obliviousness.
[ Edited. ]
It’s less than a contrivance. I too thought that she should have written something like: “When I throw a dart at a map of the US, X times out of 100 I hit a spot that has fewer than 14% black people”, with a real value for “X”. The whole eclipse thing is wrong on so many levels, not least that she appears to give a gloss of profundity over a dirt-simple matter. There are many reasons why the various races are distributed unevenly across the country, many of which come to mind when you consider that she included the Inuits.
“Blacks constitute about 14% of the total American population. So yeah, a random straight path across the country is likely to give you that kind of result.” This won’t satisfy the author. Every state, city, township, block, must be 14% black. If not, the only explanation is racism.
Naturally it feels slightly artificial…
I think what you mean is utterly asinine, devoid of anything vaguely factual to back it up.
Let us ignore for a moment that there is nothing peculiar about the path of the eclipse, or any eclipse, unless for some cosmic reason it went retrograde, or took a left at Albuquerque. From Portland to Kansas City the path is about 1,700 miles and completely crosses four states that have a grand total of around a whopping 8 million people, or about 2.5% of the total population. Despite her tidbits from history, there is nothing to prevent the entire black population of St. Louis from moving to Casper, Wyoming, so, no, the path wouldn’t remind anyone normal of any damn thing except maybe the last eclipse.
From there she rambles into a barely cloaked diatribe against the Electoral College, non sequiturs like the link between Cassius Clay the elder and Mohammed Ali, and an incoherent rant about the just war theory:
Of course, that was taught by no one, except maybe the leftist clowns at Harvard law, and among other things, ignores, or more likely displays ignorance of, preemptive war doctrine.
Regardless, what it all boils down to is this:
IOW, typical boilerplate America sucks lefty boilerplate.
Are any of these people *now* being *forced* to live where they live because of their skin colour? Because if they’re not, what’s her point?
That she’s better than you because she cares so damn much. It’s always the point.
Does this mean the fault is in our stars?
“I didn’t think the article was unreasonable.”
Perhaps not, in your mind. But you have been one-upped:
“Allowing idiots to self-identify is one of the many benefits of free speech.”
TLH wins the interwebs this week.
I still think it’s ego addiction. This guy just has a stronger habit than even his fellow proggies.
Well, that and he saw the words “Great” and “American” together and began salivating.
It has been dubbed the Great American Eclipse . . .
. . . . and will be remembered as the total solar eclipse of 2017.
Following this, we will have a total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024 visible from Texas to Maine.
Yes, now is indeed the most important moment, but now still occurs in the context of everything and everywhen else.
Good Lord, David, are you losing it? How did did you miss this?
Yes, the skies are relaying the exact message that An Eclipse Chaser wanted to receive. Jeez, self-centered much?
Following this, we will have a total solar eclipse on April 8, 2024 visible from Texas to Maine.
That means the two paths will cross as if in an elongated X, just like in a Confederate battle flag – if that isn’t rayciss, then nothing is.
I just checked Everyday Feminism and am disturbed that they found no way to scold us about this problematic eclipse.
Maybe EF should have a conversation.
The solar eclipse draws a path of total darkness in an area of near-total whiteness,
WE MUST MAKE PEOPLE LIVE WHERE I SAY!
How did you miss this?
I was probably too chafed by the assumption that the total solar eclipse – which for many will be a moment of wonderment – will be improved and made more relevant by grafting on lots of incongruous racial politics.
And possibly the fact that I was supposed to be going shopping and was in a hurry.
“Oregon, where this begins, is almost entirely white.”and one of the most blue voting states in the country…fascinating.