Opinion A Long Overdue Truth About White Women

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A Long Overdue Truth About White Women​

Let’s be real — many white women are not friends or allies to Black women. They never have been. That’s the truth, plain and simple. And as Maya Angelou once said: “When someone tells you who they are, believe them.”

Black women, we must believe what white women keep showing us.

On November 5, 53% of white women did what they’ve always done: voted for whiteness. I thought, foolishly, that the majority of white women might support Kamala Harris’s bid for the presidency. But no — they once again reminded us who they truly are.

So now Black women are being asked to show up on January 18 for another Women’s March to protest Donald Trump’s presidency. We’re supposed to stand shoulder to shoulder with white women and chant that we won’t go back.

Here’s a suggestion: Just say no.

Tell any white woman who asks you if you’re going that she should protest with her white sisters and mothers and cousins and aunties. She should convince them not to “go back” because 53% of them seem just fine with doing so.

And Black women already did the work. We did what the majority of white women refused to do: 92% of us said no to putting a convicted felon — who accused Haitians of eating cats and dogs and called for the Central Park 5 to get the death penalty — back in office.

Black women voted for reproductive rights, health, and justice. What did white women do? As Melanie Campbell, president and CEO of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation, recently said, “There was a majority of white women who voted against democracy, against women’s interests, for a racist, for somebody who is proud to have taken away our right to choose.”

White women weren’t a friend or ally when their husbands were raping our ancestors. Instead, they cruelly and spitefully took out their frustrations with their white husbands on Black women. They demanded the inhumane beatings of Black women and insisted on the sale of mixed-race children — their husband’s children — because they looked more like him than their own. Those children, enslaved by white women, were often given to their daughters and sons as “gifts,” forcing them to serve their half-siblings and perpetuating the cycle of exploitation.

It was white women who made Black women breastfeed their children so they wouldn’t have to “suffer” such an indignity. They made Black women and girls sleep at the foot of their beds, catering to their whims — all while they feigned helplessness and basked in the power of their positions as slaveholding mistresses. They treated Black women as mammies, caretakers, and playthings for their children, never considering that we had children of our own — children we could barely mother because of them. Despite all this, during the Suffrage movement, white women had the audacity to expect Black women to advocate for their right to vote.

Getting the right to vote in 1920 didn’t cleanse racism from the hearts of white women. In 1923, as Brent Staples pointed out in the New York Times, “When the black suffragist and civil rights leader Mary Church Terrell petitioned her white sisters for help, they responded that the disenfranchisement of black women was a race problem — not a gender problem — and beyond the movement’s writ.”

Just a few years later, in 1923, Women of the Ku Klux Klan was formed, and more than 250,000 white women became members in the hate group’s first four months.

And I wish white women would spare us their performative tears — those crocodile tears that have historically led to Black men being lynched by white private citizens or killed by police.
White women won’t admit it, but they’ve benefited more from affirmative action and diversity, equity, and inclusion hiring than Black women ever have. In every sector, from the womb to the workplace, it’s the labor and suffering of Black women that has brought white women closer to the glass ceiling. But they won’t own up to that.

Meanwhile, Black women have learned the hard way not to trust white women they work with. “Our data tells us that Black women are having their worst experiences when they report to white women,” Cierra Gross, the founder of Caged Bird HR, recently told Notable Careers magazine.

Don’t fall for solidarity marches. Don’t fall for blue bracelets and white women’s “check-ins” to see how we are doing. We don’t need fake allyship when white women, who once again, smiled in our faces while clinging to the protection of white male patriarchy and white supremacy — institutions they mothered into existence.

This doesn’t mean Black women don’t have work to do to get ready for Trump. In a recent speech, Barbara Arnwine, president and founder of the Transformative Justice Coalition, said, “We gotta talk about how we fight, how we become a fighting formation, how we are able to know that these battles are going to come, that these kind of things are going to be said, that these kind of attacks are going to be launched.

So, let’s focus on keeping ourselves and our community safe, healthy, and united. Let’s figure out what steps we need to take that will benefit Black folks first and foremost because we are firmly in the crosshairs, and 53% of white women voted for a man who would all too willingly pull the trigger.
 
I remember twenty years ago black feminist leaders were writing about how 'intersectional feminism' was bullshit, and just a rallying cry to get black and brown women onside with the demands of white women, who always insist that what they want and need must be addressed first before anyone else can get a word in.

I hadn't realised until now that the fourth wave apparently fucking forgot this fact.

Intersectionalism is bullshit, there's no such thing as an ally, you're on your own now kid. I am sorry in the last twenty years some white lassies managed to get you to swallow the kool aid. Again.

You have to play for your own team. No exceptions.
 
Let’s be real — many white women are not friends or allies to Black women.
Nothing captures the expected subservience better than capitalized Black and lowercase white.
They never have been. That’s the truth, plain and simple. And as Maya Angelou once said: “When someone tells you who they are, believe them.”
Is Maya Angelou the only nigger writer they ever talk about?
On November 5, 53% of white women did what they’ve always done: voted for whiteness.
You unapologetically vote for blackness.
I thought, foolishly, that the majority of white women might support Kamala Harris’s bid for the presidency.
The onus is on the party to put forward a worthy candidate. If they don't, the party does not owe them their votes.
But no — they once again reminded us who they truly are.
Imagine speaking this critically about black women collectively. Unashamed racist whore.
 
It was white women who made Black women breastfeed their children so they wouldn’t have to “suffer” such an indignity. They made Black women and girls sleep at the foot of their beds, catering to their whims — all while they feigned helplessness and basked in the power of their positions as slaveholding mistresses.
Oh fuck off with this. I’m a British white woman of utterly common descent. Nobody I’m descended from, and nobody they ever encountered in their entire lives did any of that. We were treated like disposable serfs, our children sent under cotton gins or up chimneys or down the pit, where they were injured and killed at horrendous rates. You can fuck off.
Read this article. Look at the pictures in it - see the absolute, abject poverty? You can take your accusations of white privilege and shove them up your arse. I’m sick of it. You live in America, where you have the most freedom and most earning power of anyone on earth. Fuck off, to the far side of fuck and then fuck off some more
 
Imagine speaking this critically about black women collectively. Unashamed racist whore.
I’d appreciate seeing articles detailing upon what is blackness very much. I strongly suspect blackness is egotism incarnate. The more blackness a person has, the less capacity to model the mind of another human in their own, which is to say being incapable of empathizing not only with political opponents but other negresses as well.
 
White women won’t admit it, but they’ve benefited more from affirmative action and diversity, equity, and inclusion hiring than Black women ever have.
I only hear this from black women who "jobs" exist entirely due to DEI, and who'd screech and fight any suggestion that DEI programs and mandates be wound down. Strange they'd be so rabidly attached to something they complain about not benefiting from.

“Our data tells us that Black women are having their worst experiences when they report to white women,”
I would like to hear about the experiences of White women (or men, or any other race for that matter) reporting to black women. Lol.

Carmen P. Thompson, when not blogging about the evils of Huwite women, apparently has other hobbies like teaching random historical fantasy classes at Portland Community College (all variations of "White people be evil, pls pay me"), or writing books about how Whiteness is totally made up but also the greatest threat to black girl magic or whatever.

In her faculty picture below, it is unconfirmed whether she took a break from her usual mood of "tired" to indulge in some cracklin' cocaine:
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This was written by a genuine moron, an actual threat to society and themselves. This retard complains that 53% of white women voted for trump and then bitches that they show up to protest trump anyway. Does this cretin think it's the same women who voted for trump that are now showing up to protest? This lack of logical thinking is actually scary to me
 
This reads like satire.

I don't want to re-litigate slavery, but she really makes the actions and institutions of a small number of white men into white women's problem throughout time and eternity.

To wit, I would be genuinely interested in knowing how she thinks a white woman married to a planter with many slaves (so the top 1% of antebellum Southern white society) was supposed to treat the house neighbors, and I would like to know how she thinks this white woman was supposed to treat her husband's black and enslaved blood relations.

I've read a lot about slavery. I am educated on the topic.

If you were a slave, the number of "jobs" available to you was limited. Some "jobs" were pretty good and some of them sucked, but you were going to have a "job." Some "bosses" were pretty good and some of them sucked, but you were going to have a "boss."

She's throwing shit at white women for having house neighbors, when if you were going to be a slave, being a house neighbor was way better than being a field neighbor. Ask a woman whether she'd rather hang out in the house caring for a bunch of white kids or chop cotton all day, she'll laugh at you for asking such a dumb question.

And I don't know what she thinks the ideal was for the master's bastard kids. Sell them, you're a monster! Give them to their relatives, you're a monster! Sit there and look at them every day and get pissed off, you're a monster!

This woman needs to put down "Gone With The Wind" and pick up some actual slave narratives. These were real humans dealing with other real humans.

Read some; they're interesting!

 
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