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The Christian Civic League of Maine's Mike Hein calls Pam's House Blend:
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He is "praying that Pam Spaulding will "turn away from her wicked and sinful promotion of homosexual behavior." (CCLM's web site, 10/15/07)


Ex-gay "Christian" activist James Hartline on Pam:
"I have been mocked over and over again by ungodly and unprincipled anti-christian lesbians."
(from "Six Years In Sodom: From The Journal Of James Hartline," 9/4/2006, written from the "homosexual stronghold" of Hillcrest in San Diego).

"Pam is a 'twisted lesbian sister' and an 'embittered lesbian' of the 'self-imposed gutteral experiences of the gay ghetto.'" -- 9/5/2008



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(Concerned Women for America's radio show [9:15], 1/25/07)

"A nutty lesbian blogger."
(MassResistance radio show [16:25], 2/3/07)


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who monitors yours Bevis ?? Just thought I would drop you a line,so the rest of your life is not wasted.
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On Angry Black Women

by: TerranceDC

Thu Jun 19, 2008 at 13:10:05 PM EDT


I read about this foolishness over at Jack and Jill Politics, but I just wanted to break off a piece for myself.

Well.

TerranceDC :: On Angry Black Women

I've noticed something. No one seems to seems to question whether the angry white men that swept Newt Gingrich and the Republican majority into power in 1994 were justified in their anger. It's assumed that whatever they're angry about they have a right to be angry about.

But not so for the so called "angry black women." Their anger is somehow less "real" and less justified. Perhaps that that's because being angry is a privilege in this culture. Anger, if you are a minority, is dangerous. If you are a woman, or a person of color, gay, etc., your movements must be calm, your voice must be modulated, and your anger must ever show.

Joy is permitted. You may sing, dance, camp it up, and celebrate in your joy. It is a performance, sometimes a command performance, demanded of you even in the midst of despair. Suffering is permitted. It, too, is familiar and non-threatening. It can even be reaffirming to those looking upon it; reaffirming their power and privilege. Sadness is permitted. You are allowed to mourn, and to moan, keen, and cry in your mourning. Fear is permitted. Your fear -- wide-eyed screaming of stunned silence -- is familiar, and recognizable.

You are allowed all of the above, especially in response to another's more "real" anger, but not your own anger. Anger implies entitlement -- to material goods, to power and privilege, or a certain kind of treatment. Anger implies a right to expect something, and is a justifiable response to not receiving one's due. And you aren't due that which you'd have a right to be angry about having been denied.

That's why someone like Cal Thomas can look at someone like Michelle Obama and ask "What's she got to be angry about?" The "angry black woman" has far less of a claim to her anger than the angry white male has to his. After all, what has she been denied that she was ever due in the first place? And whatever she may have seen denied to others in her family or community, her anger is taken as a kind in ingratitude for any degree of success she's enjoyed — no matter how hard she make have worked for it, and no matter against what odds.

In other words, be glad we let you get that far, girl.

I don't know Michelle Obama, but I've known many Michelle Obamas — strong, smart, beautiful, formidable black women who have (as an old hymn says) often "made a way out of no way" for themselves, their families, and their communities. They are passionate about the injustices they've experienced, and those they've seen heaped upon people they love; passionate enough to do something about it. That passion can be taken as anger.

And taken thus, it can be frightening to some people. Perhaps because they worry that the passion they interpret as anger is justified. And because they worry that what Maya Angelou said may be true.

Sometimes people are at your feet, and as the winds of fortune change, they'll be at your throat.

So, I ain't mad at a sistah, but maybe some people worry that someone's got good reason to be mad at them.

Crossposted from The Republic of T.

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Glad you ended with Maya Angelou
The first thing that I'm always reminded of when reading about this topic is hearing Dr. Angelou described as an "angry black woman" back when she read her peom "On the Pulse of Morning" for Bill Clinton's inauguration.

(If you don't remember it or are too young, check it out on YouTube.com: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v... )

How anyone could read anger into Angelou's words is still a mystery to me. It just mede me believe that some white people will always see the passion, intelligence, and conviction of an African-American as a threat. Sad.

Thank God most of the people like Cal Thomas will be dead in 20 years. His fear and bigoty belongs in a damp, moldy grave.

When you look for the bad in mankind, expecting to find it, you surely will.

- Abraham Lincoln.


Nostalgia Trip
That beautiful poem brings back memories.

A group called Delicious, Inc. sampled Angelou reading that poem, and made a dance track out of it.  They used to play it all the time at a club I went to back then in the early nineties.  Back when I was young and tasting freedom for the first time....

"Our Liberties We Prize and Our Rights We Will Maintain" -- Iowa state motto


[ Parent ]
and we can't even be seen...
  It's so funny on blog threads to be called  wild eyed and foaming at the mouth, by people who can't see me. After I told them I'm a black woman. Only after I gave that descriptor have they come up with their own.

Angry black women are easy to mock, ridicule...and that happens too.
 Our skin is thicker than anyone recalls or recognizes. And that's ok.

 Terrence is paying tribute to our blog mistress and how well he knows us black women.
Dr. Angelou, or most of us are not about anger...but NO NONSENSE!
Otherwise, how would we have grown up to BE the Maya Angelous and Michele Obamas and Lena Hornes, Pam Spauldings and... you get the picture.

   As Paul Lawrence Dunbar says in his ode to the human face before them.

"We wear the mask that grins and sighs..."

   


thank you for those words, T
It's amazing at how narrow a range of emotion that minority women, particularly black women, are allowed to be taken seriously. What might be seen as eccentric or blown off as a "tantrum" by a white male executive is seen as dangerous, explosive, damaging, mentally unstable behavior by a black woman. "Surely you couldn't trust her to work the boardroom with that attitude."

And poor Barack Obama - the man can't ever show anger lest he evoke visions of a black brute coming after them (or their daughters).

As I've mentioned before, my mild-mannered, oddly non-accented affect on the phone with vendors who don't know me otherwise, usually results in visible shock when we meet and they see I am not white. These people aren't bigots, of course, but their "lack of imagination" (to be kind), gets the best of them.


Say what?
Let's look at the images we see of black women on television, he says.

OK.

Oprah. Oprah. Oprah. Oprah. Oprah. Oprah. Oprah. etc.

Whoopie Goldberg.

Various pop singers (and forgive me for not knowing [or caring, much] which of them qualify as "black"): Beyonce, Norah Jones, etc.

Angry?

Not so you would notice it.

What one finds, is that if you look for angry black women, you will find angry black women.  Fair enough (though, as others have noted, not particularly significant).

But as a generalizable observation?  Pure poppycock.


Now vs. The Old Days
Once upon a time, there were women like Nina Simone. She could actually express anger and still be allowed mainstream exposure.

Nowadays, there's a tight lid.


[ Parent ]
Black Transwomen Get Smacked With It As Well
As a proud African-American transwoman blogger, I've been hit with that 'angry' tag more times that I care to count in GLBT circles.  

When anger is dismissed out-of-hand within our communities...

...because of the external characteristics of an angered individual, without looking to evaluate the merits of why the angered individual is angry to begin with, then we've failed ourselves within our civil rights movements. It's especially horrible when it happens within LGBT circles -- we should know better, given our communities' history.

I know you're aware I consider you one of the most important bloggers on issues of race and gender. I definitely believe people should be paying attention to your writings, whether or not they believe your angry because of your race or gender identity; whether or not they agree with your opinions. You provide us all with important perspective that we, at a minimum, need to pay attention to.

Monica on the web:

* Transgriot
* The Bilerico Project (Monica's Profile)

-----
~~Autumn~~

As if there were safety in stupidity alone.
--Henry David Thoreau


[ Parent ]
Thank You, Autumn
Just wish I was going to Denver for the convention  ;)

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