Showing posts with label All Lives Matter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All Lives Matter. Show all posts

Monday, July 27, 2020

Thesis-Antithesis, Goddess Corona's Mask-Charade and the New Abnormal

Greetings, Peace and Blessings to you, your family and loved ones.  My name is Nana Baakan and I have a lot of questions about what is happening in our world today. 

I am going to upload a few videos over the next few days. I just want to share with you some of my questions and get your responses.  These videos are simply opinion pieces, I make no claims of being a scientist or having any inside info.  Please take that for what it's worth, I just have a lot of questions.

Thanks to all my subscribers who stopped by and to new visitors by sure to subscribe.

 

The topic of Today's video is "Thesis-Antithesis, Goddess Corona's Mask-Charade and the New Abnormal".



 


One of the things that I do not and cannot understand is the fact that they have basically allowed folks to participate in the worse mask wearing protocols of all times. Doctors, Nurses and other medical professionals know the truth and they are silent or barely audible when it comes to alerting folks of the proper use of these masks in the first place, and then you have the Surgeon General telling folks they can use a T-Shirt, and other folks are making mask out of cloth that has holes so large all types of whatevers can get thru.

 

They are encouraging folks to wear masks like some kind of badge of honor but they are basically useless and more of a FASHION STATEMENT and a BRAND OF SLAVERY than anything else. They are improperly used, improperly handled and improperly disposed of, and the cloth/reusable ones are of not benefit except to make it harder for you to breath. What I think is criminal is that folks who are supposed to know better are not telling us this, they are simply going along with the charade. Got us all masked and it ain't even Halloween, SMDH…

 

This mask thing just raises the hair on the back of my neck.

Not sure which is more hair raising the fear, the mask, the draconian measures, the lies, the hypocrisy, the mockery, the raping of the economy, the lying so called experts, the hidden agenda, the new abnormal acceptance, the forced vaccines, the home prisons, the shutdown of transits, the snitchers, the social shamers, the uninformed big mouths, the indoctrinated MSM zealots, the carbon copy ideologues, the lack of common sense, the fear of the sun, ocean, and regular outdoors, the ultra Sharpe focus in Covid-19 while deaths from other causes are in the gazillions, the mass mania, the mass hypnosis, the staunch believers in government being there to help when they took down the towers and blamed Bin Laden, the politricks that they have played over and over again and most people believe in government now.

 

Hey. Government = mind control

Bottom line, the sheeple will be slaughtered and the oligarchs will have more wealth than they could ever imagine. And Bill Gates and Dr. Fauci will ride the hide tide slapping each other on the back and laughing at how easy it was to fool every one with this mask-charade.

 

There was once a time when the squat team would be called in to suppress a would be bank robber if a black man showed up, dressed in black clothing, a hoodie and a black mask as he entered the bank.  All types of alarms would be set off, folks would hit the floor, cash draws would be locked and security guards would tackle that black man to the ground if not kill him right there on the spot.  Today, it's commonplace, and what can anyone say about this black militia? Well, at least they are all wearing their masks.

 

Facebook fact-checkers censored this picture, saying it goes against community guidelines and all I am saying is if you are gonna wear a mask to prevent the spread of a virus, then this is the best most efficient mask to wear, otherwise you are not preventing the spread, you are simply covering your face, and preventing your spit from going out into the air and landing on someone. If you are asymptomatic, then you are not gonna carry the virus.

Now, if you are weak, tired, overworked, underpaid, stressed, and have chronic illness like heart disease, diabetes, lung disease, congestive problems, pneumonia, and various other core-morbidities, you are in a nursing home and finally you are scared of a virus that has killed barely .5% of the population wear a mask, but wear the right one, cloth masks do absolutely nothing.

 

In my next video I will present a compilation of various videos that bring out this exact point. So stay tuned.

 

An ill-fitted one allows all types of air to pass to your nose, and throat. the surgical masks have synthetic fibers that you are breathing in. Any chemicals you use to sanitize your mask, is being breathed in as well.

 

If you are touching your face, taking your mask on and off, then you are contaminating the mask. Health workers change they masks periodically throughout the day and dispose of them "properly" to minimize contamination. If you are removing your mask to eat, drink, talk, take picture, below your nose, then take the damn thing off and throw it in the trash, otherwise, you have swallowed the new fashion craze... signature masks with designs are not safe. They do not protect you or anyone from you.

 

Cheap masks are not safe either, and the N95 respirators need to be fitted. If the mask is ill fitted it is not doing anything but making you look weird. If you have a beard, or facial hair, the air is going to seep in past the mask.

 

Just ask yourself a few questions as you watch the so-called experts pontificate on this mask-charade. 

 

 If you are wearing a mask and not wearing it properly, then you are doing more harm than good. Are you touching your face? Wearing the same mask for several hours? Adjusting your mask several times. Sweating, coughing, sneezing into your mask? Washing your mask and re-wearing it? Wearing an ill fitting mask? Placing it on and off as you eat and drink? Are you lying your mask on the dashboard? Handling it with your hands? Does your mask has open spaces around your cheeks? Wearing a mask over a beard? Wearing it under your chin? Wearing it under your nose?

My point is, if you insist on wearing a mask, then wear it correctly otherwise you are defeating the purpose for wearing it.

 

Most of all folks need to use common sense. If you are a health worker, you are wearing your mask so that you do not contaminate a sterile environment, you cannot sterilize the outdoors, or any open-air environment. Health workers all know how to wear their masks properly and even they are not doing so, making tic-tok videos dancing in the most unsanitary of places.

 

The mask is a ritual, a ritual of compliance. They just want to see just how gullible people are and how willing they are to do exactly what does not make sense, and like Jim Jones they will drink the cyanide (take the vaccine) all under the guise of avoiding inevitable death. The only way to get out of here is to die, and they have us so afraid of dying that we forgot how to live in truth and light and ding-dong common sense.

Sorry for the long rant, but I just can't with this mask thing!!

 

Let  me take a moment and show you a couple of articles that can be found on the internet.

The links to these article will be in the blog post listed below. I will not quote from them, but you can read them at your leisure.

 

Don’t wear a Mask! Bill Gates – An African Perspective…, A Yorkshire Man Speaks…

https://cvpandemicinvestigation.com/2020/06/dont-wear-a-mask-bill-gates-an-african-perspective-a-yorkshire-man-speaks/

 

Masks Don’t Work: A Review of Science Relevant to COVID-19 Social Policy

https://www.rcreader.com/commentary/masks-dont-work-covid-a-review-of-science-relevant-to-covide-19-social-policy

 

Osterholm Update: COVID-19  Special Episode: Masks and Science  June 3, 2020

https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/podcasts-webinars/special-ep-masks

 

 

"Thesis, Anti-thesis, synthesis.. It's a reprogramming in motion. Turning the world upside down, to a so called new normal infested with total cognitive dissonance and Stockholm syndrome sheeple."

 

This concludes my commentary on Goddess Corona Mask-Charade.

Thanks for watching, thanks for listening, be sure to punch the like button and subscribe to my channel. Don't forget the notification button as well. It seems that may be the only way you will get notified of any of my new uploads.

Till next time, Peace & Blessings to you, your family and loved ones. 

 

 

REFERENCES:

Blaylock: Face Masks Pose Serious Risks To The Healthy

https://www.technocracy.news/blaylock-face-masks-pose-serious-risks-to-the-healthy/

 

IMPORTANCE OF BREATHING 

https://www.ftbagency.com/resources.php

 

(1) New England Journal of Medicine:

"We know that wearing a mask outside health care facilities offers little, if any, protection from infection." LINK HERE

 

(2) CAL-OSHA Regulations:

”Cloth face coverings do not protect against COVD -19” LINK HERE

 

(3) California Department of Health:

"Face coverings may increase risk if users reduce their use of strong defenses."

"There is limited evidence to suggest that use of cloth face coverings by the public during a pandemic could help reduce disease transmission.” LINK HERE

 

4) FDA - “Even a properly fitted N95 mask does not prevent illness or death” LINK HERE

 

(5) CDC — There is no scientific evidence for healthy people wearing masks. : Watch “CDC Mask Deception”

 

(6) Neurosurgeon Dr. Russell Blaylock :

”There is no scientific evidence that masks are effective. If you are not sick, you should not wear a face mask.” LINK HERE

(7) Columbia University: Psychological Harms of Face Masks:

"Many young children burst into tears or recoil when someone wearing a mask approaches. By putting on masks, we take away information that makes it especially difficult for children to recognize others and read emotional signals, which is unsettling and disconcerting." LINK HERE

 

(8) US Surgeon General Jerome Adams:

”Masks are not effective in preventing the general public from catching coronavirus.”

LINK HERE

 

(9) Dr. Anthony Fauci:

“People should not be walking around wearing masks. Masks do not provide the protection people think they do.” LINK HERE

 

(10) WHO, Dr. Mike Ryan:

”There is no specific evidence to suggest that the wearing of masks by the mass population has any potential benefit. In fact, there’s some evidence to suggest the opposite in the misuse of wearing a mask properly or fitting it properly. LINK HERE

 

(11) US Department of Labor — OSHA:

”Oxygen deficient is any atmosphere that contains less than 19.5%.” This happens when the oxygen is displaced by inert gas such as CARBON DIOXIDE and is the leading cause of FATALITIES.” LINK HERE

 

(12) OSHA 10&30 Certified Expert -  "N95 blows the virus into the air from a contaminated person.  The surgical mask is not designed for the outside world and will not filter the virus upon inhaling through it. It’s filtration works on the exhale. (Like a vacuum bag it only works one way.  Cloth masks are WORSE than none." 

 

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Black Lives Matter, All Lives Matter and Cancelling Aunt Jemima

Greetings, Peace and Blessings to you, your family and loved ones.  My name is Nana Baakan and I have a lot of questions about what is happening in our world today. 

I am going to upload a few videos over the next few days. I just want to share with you some of my questions and get your responses.  These videos are simply opinion pieces, I make no claims of being a scientist or having any inside info.  Please take that for what it's worth, I just have a lot of questions.

Thanks to all my subscribers who stopped by and to new visitors by sure to subscribe.

 

The topic of Today's video is the "Black Lives, All Lives Matter, & Cancelling Aunt Jemima."

 


As the steam engine rolls out and the cry of alarm is hoisted against racial and social injustice, something seems to be missing from the dialogue.  On the one hand the Black Lives Matter Movement is flagged with the comment All Lives Matter.  All lives matter to the point that Obama pinned an executive order that "Blue Lives Matter" as well after the series of deaths of police officers in their line of duty.  So now we have another color to add to the mix of lives that matter.  People are asked to stand for the color of the lives and make a statement about changing how these lives are treated.

 

In this video I want to talk about "All Lives" and I want to ask the question…..  When do all lives "NOT" matter? In other words as much as we see these signs going up and protests happening around the world, how is it that the lens of those who are living on this planet can be so narrow and skewed that they miss the hypocrisy of it all.


 

What am I getting at here? Well, I am getting at the unauthenticity of the outcry for whatever color of the life we are currently being smothered with.  What is the nature of the hypocrisy I speak of, you may ask? The hypocrisy I speak of today has two prongs. One is the death penalty and the other is war.

 

How many times do we say, Black Lives Matter or All Lives Matter and in the same breath call for the "chair" for someone who took a life, whomever that someone may be.  How often have these radicalized groups of protesters and opinion makers, followed their, all Lives Matter, Black Lives Matter rhetoric, with ban the death penalty.

 

You see, we as humans can come almost full circle and still miss the mark.  We miss our own double speak which is quite appropriate for the predator class who will find enjoyment in the divide and conquer strategy, polarizing the masses while knowingly understanding that the masses don't REALLY  mean Black Lives or All Lives Matter.  For if they did, then they would take a more global look at the prevailing culture to see that no life really matters to those who run this world.  And on a small scale, Black Lives Or All Lives Matter only in the moment and for specific purposes.  Indeed, they would certainly rally around the death of a murderer, encourage revenge and/or vengeance to anyone who murdered their loved one. 

 

It struck me to see the call for "frying" the police who murdered George Floyd.  How is that a resolution, especially after saying, Black Lives, All Lives Matter?  Taking a look at the crime and punishment scenario, we live among one another as human beings with little regard to how "punishment" can ruin a life.. But feel justified in that punishment because that life did something we deemed criminal or wrong. We fill prisons with millions of lives, and we do not say their lives matter.  How deep and pervasive is this movement when we do not include the systemic destruction of lives on a daily basis, vis a vis, poverty, poor education, poor health care,  etc. 

 

The beast is humongous and it needs plenty of fear and vengeance to keep it alive.  By muddying the waters, it keeps humanity at each other's throats about small issues that do little or nothing to change the status quo.  How does killing another human being who killed someone benefit the prevailing society overall or any individual family?  They said that Gandhi said, and I am not too sure he even said it, but let me just quote. "An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, will leave the world blind and toothless."

 

Change needs to go deep down into the fiber of the human construct.  If a life matters, whatever the color, then why does humanity allow, condone and support wars when innocent lives of many ethnicities are lost?  The average human is more concerned with his immediate needs and takes not into account the needs of those 7 thousand miles away.  Yet those needs maybe the needs of human beings of all ethnicities. Yet, this average human being will march and protest saying an injustice to one is an injustice to all… and not move forward with an antiwar agenda. If Black Lives, All Lives Matter why are these protesters voting for warmongering politicians who live off the carnage of the human species?  Is the cover over their eyes so thick that they cannot see the contradiction nor the hypocrisy?

 

I ask this question because Black Lives cover a wide spectrum of human beings. Human beings who have suffered under oppressive situations around the world.  I ask this question because the qualifying retort of "All Lives Matter" still does not take into account the suffering and oppressive situations going on around the world to all ethnicities.  When we narrow our focus, we only change a portion of the problem or let's say, we put a band-aide on cancer.  We are not dealing with man's inhumanity to man across the broader more pervasive perspective.  Therefore, the cry of alarm will only travel a short distance and keep the prevailing society moving forward making the most overt statement of all "No Lives Really Matter".

 

I could get into a long list of the ways that lives are destroyed on this planet, but suffice it to say that if there is a kernel of sincerity in this movement, then we will see a major change in how  societies around the world function, and in how human beings treat human beings.

 

Folks are coming out with the banner of anti-racism and social justice etc., and, missing the true essence of what this really means, they make quick adjustments and claims to  forestall the momentary ire of the masses.  I say to Pepsico, Leave Aunt Jemima alone, that doesn't fix anything.  Go deeper… get historical context and share that, improve that.  Add a caveat on the box, tell the story.  Cancelling the product will have no significant impact. I protest this change. What the ever living Fuq is happening to this world. All of a sudden it's racist? Wait till they start looking into fairy tales and Walt Disney.

 

Now, they took the rag off her head, they gave her some nice curls, and now they just wanna take her face off altogether and change the labeling? This is going a bit too far with this whole social justice bs. It's so superficial and again, does not speak or even point to the systemic racism that is pervasive within the company itself.  How about changing some of those hiring practices? How about giving more people of color a say in what goes on around there?  How about making sure that Black History month is extended to include the entire year?  How about not supporting warmongering politicians?  How about disbanding the death penalty? 

 

Some of this stuff is historical and needs to be addressed in its completeness, I never knew the story till now, and that's a good thing. Why can't you just tell the story and let folks decide if they want to purchase the product or not?

 

By now we have probably all heard the news that Aunt Jemima will lose her face and brand on all the Quaker Oats products that feature her face.  So let's go to our first article that tells the story.

 

Aunt Jemima Brand to Remove Image from Packaging

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/aunt-jemima-brand-to-remove-image-from-packaging-and-change-brand-name-301078593.html.

 

 

 

 














Before we have to get our tissues out for this heartfelt ripping at the sensibilities oration of what Quaker Oats/Pepsico see as a need to remove Aunt Jemima, let's go for a little historical context and look at this article from wikipedia.  Now don't give me the blues about Wikipedia, I was beginning to get confused over who Aunt Jemima was as the names were coming up for more than one person, so wikipedia helped me make some sense of it, so they get a shout out just this one time.  From Wikipedia we read….

 

Aunt Jemima from Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aunt_Jemima

 

 

Aunt Jemima is a brand of pancake mix, syrup, and other breakfast foods. The Aunt Jemima pancake mix debuted in 1889, the first ready-mix. By 1915 it had become one of the most recognized brands in US history, and changed US trademark law. Currently owned by the Quaker Oats Company of Chicago, now a subsidiary of PepsiCo.

The Aunt Jemima character is based on the enslaved "Mammy" archetype. On June 17, 2020, following the killing of George Floyd and subsequent protests, Quaker Oats announced that the Aunt Jemima brand would be rebranded "to make progress toward racial equality."[1][2]

 

St. Joseph Gazette editor Chris L. Rutt, of St. Joseph, Missouri, and his friend Charles G. Underwood bought a flour mill in 1888. Rutt and Underwood's Pearl Milling Company faced a glutted flour market. After experimenting, they sold their excess flour as a pancake mix in paper bags with a generic label, "Self-Rising Pancake Flour," later dubbed "the first ready-mix".[3][4][5] To distinguish their pancake mix, in the autumn of 1889 Rutt appropriated the Aunt Jemima name and image from lithographed posters seen at a vaudeville house in St. Joseph, Missouri.[4][5]

 

However, Rutt and Underwood could not raise enough capital and quickly ran out of money.[5] They sold their company to the Randolph Truett Davis Milling Company (also in St. Joseph, Missouri) in 1890, then the largest flouring mill on the Missouri River, having an established reputation with wholesale and retail grocers throughout the Missouri Valley.[3][5][6] Davis improved the flavor and texture of the product by adding rice flour and corn sugar, and simplified the ready-mix by adding powdered milk. Only water was needed to prepare the batter.[5]

 

The Davis Milling Company was renamed Aunt Jemima Mills in February 1914.[3][6] By 1915, the Aunt Jemima brand was so well recognized that it changed trademark infringement precedent, the "Aunt Jemima Doctrine".[7]

 

The Quaker Oats Company purchased the Aunt Jemima Mills Company in 1926, and formally registered the Aunt Jemima trademark in April 1937.[3] It remains one of the longest continually running logos and trademarks in the history of American advertising.[8]

 

Quaker Oats introduced Aunt Jemima syrup in 1966. This was followed by Aunt Jemima Butter Lite syrup in 1985 and Butter Rich syrup in 1991.[3]

Aunt Jemima frozen foods were licensed out to Aurora Foods in 1996, which was absorbed into Pinnacle Foods Corporation in 2004. 

 

"Jemima" character on 1899 cakewalk sheet music cover (place picture here)

 

Character

Aunt Jemima is based on the common enslaved "Mammy" archetype, a plump black woman wearing a headscarf who is a devoted and submissive servant.[8][9] Her skin is dark and dewy, with a pearly white smile. Although depictions vary over time, they are similar to the common attire and physical features of "mammy" characters throughout history.[10][11][12][13][14]

 

The term "Aunt" in this context was a southern form of address used with older enslaved peoples. They were denied use of courtesy titles.[15] A character named "Aunt Jemima" appeared on the stage in Washington, D.C., as early as 1864.[16]

 

Rutt's inspiration for Aunt Jemima was Billy Kersands' American-style minstrelsy/vaudeville song "Old Aunt Jemima", written in 1875. Rutt reportedly saw a minstrel show featuring the "Old Aunt Jemima" song in the fall of 1889, presented by blackface performers identified by Arthur F. Marquette as "Baker & Farrell".[4] Marquette recounts that the actor playing Aunt Jemima wore an apron and kerchief.[4][15]

 

Let me add here that it appears from what is reported in this article called

 

Aunt Jemima: It was Never About the Pancakes

https://blackexcellence.com/aunt-jemima-never-pancakes/

 

The inspiration for Aunt Jemima came specifically from the song “Old Aunt Jemima” written by a black performer named Billy Kersands in 1875. It was a staple of the minstrel circuit. The song was based on a song sung by slave hands. “Old Aunt Jemima” was performed by men in blackface. One of the men depicted Aunt Jemima – a Slave Mammy of the Plantation South. 

 

What I found most interesting was the number of models who portrayed Aunt Jemima in ads, on the radio and even at the 1920 World's Fair and various other venues. 

 

Performers

The African American Registry of the United States suggests Nancy Green and other individuals who played the caricature of Aunt Jemima should be celebrated in lieu of what has been widely condemned as a stereotypical and racist brand image. On Nancy Green's birthday, November 17, the registry wrote "we celebrate the birth of Nancy Green in 1834. She was a Black storyteller and one of the first Black corporate models in the United States."[27]

 

Nancy Green was the first spokesperson hired by the R. T. Davis Milling Company for the Aunt Jemima pancake mix.[3] Green was born a slave in Montgomery County, Kentucky.[5][28] Dressed as Aunt Jemima, Green appeared at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois, beside the "world's largest flour barrel" (24 feet high), where she operated a pancake-cooking display, sang songs, and told romanticized stories about the Old South (a happy place for blacks and whites alike). She appeared at country fairs, flea markets, food shows, and local grocery stores, her arrival heralded by large billboards featuring the caption, "I'se in town, honey."[5][9][28]

 

Following Green's work as Aunt Jemima, the company hired a few dozen actors to portray the role, often assigned regionally.[20] Some were relatively well-known.

 

Lillian Richard was hired to portray Aunt Jemima in 1925, and remained in the role for 23 years.

Anna Robinson was hired to play Aunt Jemima at the 1933 Century of Progress Chicago World's Fair.[3]

Anna Short Harrington began her career as Aunt Jemima in 1935.[32]

Edith Wilson became the face of Aunt Jemima on radio, television, and in personal appearances, from 1948 to 1966.

Rosie Lee Moore Hall portrayed the role of Aunt Jemima from 1950 to 1967.

Aylene Lewis portrayed Aunt Jemima in 1955 at a restaurant of the same name at Disneyland, posing for pictures with visitors.[5]

Ethel Ernestine Harper worked as a traveling Aunt Jemima, giving presentations at schools, churches, and other organizations during the 1950s in person, in print, and in media. 

 

So let's look at a few headlines the links will be in the blog post in the description below for those who wish to read the articles in total. See Below in section marked references

 

This is just a shot listing of the many articles I have read in preparation for this video.

I have done a tremendous amount of research on this thing. It had my head spinning but I still stand that they should leave it alone, it doesn't mean they are no longer racists!  Folks were asking about changing it back in the 50's and 60's and now all of a sudden they realize it has racist stereotypical overtones, give me a break!  What was really racist was the fact that none of the models were compensated for their work. And when their families sued, they lost the court case.  Remember how they copyright the "Happy Birthday" song?

 

The issue is that time and time again, they co-opt and patent a product that was not their own. Although, Nancy Green was not the originator of the recipe, her face and the face of those who followed became the brand, and that's my point, stop with this superficial "I ain't gonna be a racist, no more." And give credit where it's due, if they remove her, so they will remove the history and the impact on society not to mention the millions of dollars that that marketing scheme made General Foods, Quaker Oats and now Pepsico!!

 

Again, I must say that many of these folks who are stepping up and "taking responsibility" are making superficial gestures, they are not making significant changes that will change the face of systemic racism or social injustice.  They are simply flapping their lips to get a clap or to, because to me, if they were really sincere, they would have been at the forefront of this movement 500 years ago, or at least 20 years ago.

 

That's my take on it, and I am sticking with it.  Change will take time, but heck, we need to focus on the real problems in order to make real change, window dressing in 2020 will not make the grade.

 

Thanks for listening, thanks for watching……. And be sure to subscribe and press the like button.  Peace and blessings to you your family and loved ones.


_________________________________________________________________
References:

PepsiCo announces a more than $400 million initiative over 5 years to lift up Black communities and Black representation.

https://www.pepsico.com/racial-equality-journey

RAMON L. LAGUARTA  Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

https://www.pepsico.com/about/leadership

 

Nancy Green, the original “Aunt Jemima”

https://aaregistry.org/story/nancy-green-the-original-aunt-jemima/

 

Only Racist People Want Aunt Jemima Canceled

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-QAqEOgtDC8

 

Aunt Jemima Was a Real Person, But the Brand Was Never Black-Owned — What Happened?

http://jacksonvillefreepress.com/aunt-jemima-was-a-real-person-but-the-brand-was-never-black-owned-what-happened/

 

Aunt Jemima and the Lost Cause

Posted on June 17, 2020 by Edward S. Alexander

https://emergingcivilwar.com/2020/06/17/aunt-jemima-and-the-lost-cause/

 

Aunt Jemima brand to change name and remove image from packaging due to racial stereotype

https://www.foxla.com/news/aunt-jemima-brand-to-change-name-and-remove-image-from-packaging-due-to-racial-stereotype

 

Last 'face' of Aunt Jemima brand became first Black history teacher in Morristown

https://www.dailyrecord.com/story/news/2020/06/17/last-face-aunt-jemima-brand-became-first-black-history-teacher-morristown/3206826001/

 

Aunt Jemima: It was Never About the Pancakes

https://blackexcellence.com/aunt-jemima-never-pancakes/

 

Pancake flap: 'Aunt Jemima' heirs seek dough

https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2014/10/06/aunt-jemima-lawsuit/16799923/


Aunt Jemima's logo has changed 6 times, and its history is rooted in racial stereotypes and slavery — check out how the brand started and evolved over 130 years

https://www.businessinsider.com/aunt-jemima-history-logo-changed-6-times-rooted-racial-stereotypes-2020-6

 

A Lesson In Marketing Magic: The History Of Aunt Jemima

https://blackgirlsguidetoweightloss.com/conscious-consumerism/a-lesson-in-marketing-magic-the-history-of-aunt-jemima/

 

The Fight To Preserve The Legacy Of Nancy Green, The Chicago Woman Who Played The Original ‘Aunt Jemima’

By Katherine Nagasawa  Friday, June 19, 1:10 PM EDT

https://www.wbez.org/stories/the-fight-to-preserve-the-legacy-of-nancy-green-the-chicago-woman-who-played-the-original-aunt-jemima/52ed36eb-d4f0-4747-ac65-62b4c4150e9f

 

Can We Please, Finally, Get Rid of ‘Aunt Jemima’?

https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2015/06/24/besides-the-confederate-flag-what-other-symbols-should-go/can-we-please-finally-get-rid-of-aunt-jemima

 

AT AGE 100, A NEW AUNT JEMIMA

https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1989-04-28-8904080069-story.html

 

Aunt Jemima's logo has changed 6 times, and its history is rooted in racial stereotypes and slavery — check out how the brand started and evolved over 130 years

https://www.businessinsider.com/aunt-jemima-history-logo-changed-6-times-rooted-racial-stereotypes-2020-6

 

Old Time RadioOTRAunt JemimaVariety

https://archive.org/details/Aunt_Jemima

 

REFLECTIONS ON THE SOUTH IN POPULAR CULTURE

https://southinpopculture.com/2014/10/09/portraits-of-aunt-jemima-in-black-and-blackface/

 

The Syracuse resident that portrayed Aunt Jemima, and the racist history of the character

https://cnycentral.com/station/the-syracuse-resident-that-portrayed-aunt-jemima-and-the-racist-history-of-the-character


Great-grandson of Syracuse’s Aunt Jemima angry at her removal: ‘This is an injustice’

Updated Jun 19, 2020; Posted Jun 19, 2020

https://www.syracuse.com/news/2020/06/great-grandson-of-syracuses-aunt-jemima-angry-at-her-removal-this-is-an-injustice.html

 

All hail the popular black model and former slave who was in everybody’s home in the 1890s as ‘Aunt Jemima’

MILDRED EUROPA TAYLOR Associate Editor  Nov 17, 2018 at 08:00am

https://face2faceafrica.com/article/all-hail-the-popular-black-model-and-former-slave-who-was-in-everybodys-home-in-the-1890s-as-aunt-jemima

 

Little Known Black History Fact: The History of Aunt Jemima

https://blackamericaweb.com/2013/03/28/little-known-black-history-fact-the-history-of-aunt-jemima/

Friday, July 29, 2016

The Real Reason White People Say ‘All Lives Matter’

NB Commentary: Great article! Well written! Points well taken.


The Real Reason White People Say ‘All Lives Matter’
 07/25/2016 05:57 pm ET 

Editor-at-Large at HumanisticPaganism.com and editor of Godless Paganism: Voices of Non-Theistic Pagans

Why “Black” Makes Us Uncomfortable
Dear fellow white people, let’s have an honest talk about why we say “All Lives Matter.” First of all, notice that no one was saying “All Lives Matter” before people started saying “Black Lives Matter.” So “All Lives Matter” is a response to “Black Lives Matter.” Apparently, something about the statement “Black Lives Matter” makes us uncomfortable. Why is that?


Now some white people might say that singling out Black people’s lives as mattering somehow means that white lives don’t matter. Of course, that’s silly. If you went to a Breast Cancer Awareness event, you wouldn’t think that they were saying that other types of cancer don’t matter. And you’d be shocked if someone showed up with a sign saying “Colon Cancer Matters” or chanting “All Cancer Patients Matter.” So clearly, something else is prompting people to say “All Lives Matter” in response to “Black Lives Matter.”
Many of the people saying “All Lives Matter” also are fond of saying “Blue Lives Matter.” If you find that the statement “Black Lives Matter” bothers you, but not “Blue Lives Matter,” then the operative word is “Black”. That should tell us something. There’s something deeply discomfiting about the word “Black.” I think it’s because it reminds us of our whiteness and challenges our notion that race doesn’t matter.

The Problem With “Colorblindness”
If you’re like me, growing up, the word “Black” was always spoken of in whispers in your family. It was like we were saying something taboo. Why was that? Because itwas taboo. We might feel more comfortable saying “African-American,” but not “Black.” The reason is that we were raised to believe that “colorblindness” was the ideal for whites. We were taught that we shouldn’t “see color.” And saying the word “Black” was an acknowledgment of the fact that we did “see color.”

The problem with being “colorblind” — aside from the fact that we’re not really — is that it is really a white privilege to be able to ignore race. White people like me have the luxury of not paying attention to race — white or black. The reason is because whiteness is treated as the default in our society. Whiteness is not a problem for white people, because it blends into the cultural background.

Black people, on the other hand, don’t have the luxury of being “colorblind.” They live in a culture which constantly reminds them of their Black-ness, which tells them in a million large and small ways that they are not as important as white people, that their lives actually do not matter as much as white lives. Which is why saying “Black Lives Matter” is so important.

“Black Lives [Do Not] Matter”
“All Lives Matter” is a problem because it refocuses the issue away from systemic racism and Black lives. It distracts and diminishes the message that Black lives matter or that they should matter more than they do. “All Lives Matter” is really code for “White Lives Matter,” because when white people think about “all lives,” we automatically think about “all white lives.”

We need to say “Black Lives Matter,” because we’re not living it. No one is questioning whether white lives matter or whether police lives matter. But the question of whether Black lives really matter is an open question in this country. Our institutions act like Black lives do not matter. The police act like Black lives do not matter when they shoot unarmed Black people with their arms in the air and whenBlacks are shot at two and a half times the rate of whiteseven when whites are armed. The judicial system acts like Black lives don’t matter when Blacks are given more severe sentences than whites who commit the same crimes and are turned into chattel in a for-profit prison-industrial complex.

And white people act like Black lives do not matter when we fail to raise the appropriate level of outrage at unjustified killings of Blacks or when we respond with platitudes like “All Lives Matter.”
But we still say it. We say it because “All Lives Matter” lets us get back to feeling comfortable. “Black Lives Matter” makes us uncomfortable. Why? Because it reminds us that race exists. It reminds us that our experience as white people is very different from the experience of Black people in this country. It reminds us that racism is alive and well in the United States of America.

The New Face of Racism
Now, I just said the “R” word, so you’re probably feeling defensive at this point. You’re instinctively thinking to yourself that you are not a racist. You may be thinking that you have Black friends or that you don’t use the N-word or that you would never consciously discriminate against a Black person. But most racism today is more subtle than that. Sure, there is a lot of overt racism that still goes on. The KKK is still active and some white people do still say the N-word. But overt racism is really culturally unacceptable any more among whites today. The racism that we need to face today is much more insidious than white hoods and racial slurs. It is the racism of well-meaning people who are not consciously or intentionally racist.   

The racism that we need to face is the racism of average white middle-class Americans who would never think of saying the N-word and would vociferously condemn the KKK, but nevertheless unwittingly participate in institutionalized racism. We most often participate in racism by omission, rather than commission. We participate in racism when we fail to see it where it exists. We participate in racism when we continue to act like race is a problem that only Black people have. We participate in racism when we seek comfortable responses like “All Lives Matter.”

What We Can Do: Embrace the Discomfort
We white people need to embrace our discomfort. Here are some things we can do:
1. Recognize that we are not “colorblind.”
We can start by recognizing that we all have an “implicit bias” toward Blacks. Think you don’t have it? Consider how we mentally congratulate ourselves when we treat the random Black person the same way we treat white people. Here’s a tip, if you give yourself brownie points for treating Black people like you do white people, you’re not really treating Black people like white people.

Still don’t think you have unconscious bias, go to the Harvard implicit bias testing website and take the tests on race and skin-tone. Even white anti-racism activists like me have these biases. And they come out in all kinds of subtle ways, as well as not so subtle ways.

2. Work against unconscious bias by spending time with Black people in Black spaces.
Next, go out of your way to spend time with Black people in Black community settings. Many of us live segregated lives in which we have little to no interaction with Black people. Let’s face it, Black people make us white people uncomfortable. It’s because we’ve been socialized by a racist system to fear Black people.
Even if you feel comfortable around individual Black people, you most likely do not feel comfortable in a room full of Black people. You might have Black friends, but you probably socialize with them in white spaces. Have you ever been to a Black space and felt uncomfortable? Maybe you felt like no one wanted you there. Welcome to the everyday experience of Black people in white culture.

And when you go to a Black space, go to listen rather than lead. Learn to follow. Leading is a white privilege. Let go of it for a while and learn from those whose experience you will never have. Listen to Black people, and if what they are saying or how they are saying it makes you uncomfortable, so much the better.
3. Talk to white people about institutional racism and say “Black Lives Matter.”

It’s no good sitting around feeling guilty about white privilege. We need to do something about it. One thing we can do is to use our white privilege to dismantle it.
One white privilege we have is that other white people listen to us. We can go into white spaces and talk to white people about implicit bias and institutional racism. We can unapologetically proclaim that “Black Lives Matter.”

After the Orlando shooting, I went to an interfaith vigil in my small conservative town. Almost no one among the speakers said the words “queer,” “gay,” or “lesbian.” This was probably unconscious, but it revealed a lingering, but deep seated discomfort among heterosexuals with gayness and queerness, a discomfort that the popular use of the acronym “LGBT” obscures. Similarly, we whites are uncomfortable with Black-ness. We don’t even like like to say the word. It feels wrong in our mouths. We hide it by using code words like “inner city” or “urban,” terms which allow us to hide from our unconscious racism. We need to say “Black Lives Matter” because we need to overcome our discomfort with Blacks and face up to our unconscious bias.

Join the Second Civil Rights Movement
Dear fellow white people, we are in the middle of a second Civil Rights Movement. Most of us white people idealize Martin Luther King, Jr. and we like to think that we would have been on his side of things during the Civil Rights era. But the fact is thatthe majority of the American public did not support the Civil Rights movement while it was happening and only came to see King as a hero after he was killed.


The Civil Rights movement was unpopular among most whites when it was happening. It was unpopular because it made white people deeply uncomfortable. Today, the Black Lives Matter movement makes us uncomfortable, too. In forty years we will look back on this second Civil Rights movement and have to ask ourselves whether we were on the right side of history. If we want to be on the right side of history this time, we have to make ourselves uncomfortable. There is no comfortable way to change. And the change can start with saying this simple but powerful phrase: Black Lives Matter.