Thursday, March 12, 2015

Criminals run the Community

Today we looked at the Black community's problem of crime within the communities that we live. The criminals are running many poorer Black communities and neighborhoods. They protect their territory ny creating a anti-snitch and anti- action mentality. They rule the community through fear threatening, hurting and even killing anyone who challenges them. They create an atmosphere where the dealers flourish making it fertile ground for the real money men to pillage. The money leaves our community in desperation leaving only a few who've been given a little more to perpetuate this condition. Like house slaves and those who captured Africans to be sold into slavery, they sell their souls for a buck while leading oppressed Blacks to their doom. We need to see these people in that way, as conscious or unconscious traitors fueling the oppression of Africans.

We discussed those who make excuses for these people, protecting them from harm or prosecution, allowing them to continue their campaign within the community. We discussed how these people might be worse. They have the influence and ability to attempt change, but, for some reason choose not to. They enable the criminals to further damage our community from the inside out. Making the collapse of the Black community, at times, an inside job.

Frame of Reference doesn't include finishing.

What do you do  when a generation of students share a frame of reference that doesn't include 'follow through'? Students whose definition of Black means that you stop when you meet your first hurdle. I've noticed this in my last few years of teaching. The expectation of finishing what you start has vanished, the excuses appear. At times the mindset comes from those inside of the community who've never finished. Many who have finished what they've started are veiwed as special or abnormal. It may well be a more widespread phenomenon but the affects within the Black community are magnified and have more impact than they do in a mainstream situation.
How do you engender a finisher's mindset? How do you stop the fatalism that  allows and encourages kids to sabotage their own lives when thinigs are actually going well. They're not used to things going well. what do you do???

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Crime and Punishment

Today we exmanined the chapter on Crime and Punishment in Juan William's book 'Enough'. We looked at how many Black leaders in the States (and I imagine Canada) will be quick to call out the injustices of American Systemic Racism while ignoring the damaging and much mailigned crime happening inside of the Black community. I am guessing that what he's actually saying is that until we clean up our own backyard it's difficult to call out another group about what they're doing to us. He's not dismissing the aspects of systemic racism rather encouraging those players inside of the Black community to be more active in dealing with crime within our community. When those outside of the community deal with Black people at times the sentences are much harsher and inequitable (crack sentences are much harsher than cocaine a rich man's drug). We are waiting and allowing those outside of our community to deal with our people after which, we complain about their judgements.

ENOUGH

We're going to be examining Juan Williams book 'Enough'. It is a little dated too. We are going to deal with issues of Crime and Music during this section.

Blogging for 2015 Still CAS to ME!!!

I'm blogging again, this is the first entry in quite a while. I'm teaching this class again under the newe course code CHE...I don't recognize this course code, it comprimises the ideals of the course itself. Noe witht he code CHE it can be centered around any ethnicity. The CAS code was specific to Africa. You can fill iin the rest.

I just finished asking the students 'What is being Black in Cananda?' We examinde the Invisible Knapsack,  we looked at the Cosby speech (even more interesting viewing it through a 2015 lense). We just finished looking at 'Hip Hop Beyond the Beats and Rhymes' I have been feeling that this documentary is a little 'dated', but every time I watch it it is still relevant and applicable. I was a little intrigued at the response from my some members of my class when examining the sequence on Misogyny. A boy and a girl in the class basically inferred that the girls are either asking for it or responsible in some way for their abuse because of the way they were dressed...it sparked quite the discussion. When all was said and done, everyone understood that unwanted touching will get you arrested (and it should).