Reparations for Black People Should Include Rest - Darkies lazy because of racism

https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/d3bbay/sleep-gap-black-slavery-reparations-black-power-naps

Reparations for Black People Should Include Rest

Just as sleep deprivation was used as a means to control slaves, the modern-day "sleep gap" weighs down many Black people today.

As we brace for 2019 and stack up our resolutions, Broadly is focusing on finding motivation for the hard tasks that await us—like getting out of bed. So, throughout January, we're rolling out Getting Out of Bed, a series of stories about all things related to rest and resilience. Read more here.

This piece is part of the an issue of Black Power Naps Magazine created as a collaboration between Broadly and artists niv Acosta and Fannie Sosa, which aims to interrogate racial equity and promote rest and healing among Black people. Read more here, or pick up a print copy at Performance Space New Yorkthrough January 31, 2019.


“What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? Or fester like a sore…” asks Langston Hughes in the haunting lines of his poem, “Harlem.” Written nearly 70 years ago, Hughes’ words remain just as relevant as ever.

“Harlem” is typically read as referring to Black aspirations—the crushing of dreams, and particularly, the promise of racial equality by American society at large. However, his words here may apply to literal Black dreams as well. A growing amount of research has found that Black Americans experience significantly less slow-wave sleep—the kind required for actual, rejuvenating rest—than white Americans. The lack of slow-wave sleep can cause serious mental and physical health issues, including premature death. This disparity, or “sleep gap,” has been the subject of numerous studies, some of which have found that Black Americans are five times more likely than white Americans to get less than six hours of sleep per night, are more likely than white Americans to feel sleepy during the day, and on average get an hour less sleep per night than white Americans.

There’s no scientific consensus on what, specifically, causes the sleep gap. Asreported by The Atlantic in 2015, however, leading theories point to both experiences of discrimination and structural inequality—aspects of one’s environment that make one feel unsafe and insecure—as root causes. As Benjamin Reiss pointed out in the LA Times in 2017, Black Americans have lacked access to sufficient sleeping environments since slavery: “Aboard the ships of the transatlantic slave trade, African captives were made to sleep en masse in the hold, often while chained together. Once in the New World, enslaved people were usually still made to sleep in tight quarters, sometimes on the bare floor, and they struggled to snatch any sleep at all while chained together in the coffle. Slaveholders systematically disallowed privacy as they attempted round-the-clock surveillance, and enslaved women were especially susceptible at night to sexual assault from white men.”

Just as sleep deprivation was used as a means to control slaves, the modern-day sleep gap continues to weigh down many Black people, like me, today. I can feel it in me: It breaks my spirit, as I exist in between half-conscious states; never fully awake or asleep, never able to distinguish between the two. This may be the true power of racism—its force encompasses everything, seeping into our dreams at night and deflating our capacity to envision a better future. How can the radical Black imagination rebel against a system that so thoroughly seeks to destroy us? What would a future look like where we are liberated, reparations are paid, and we can finally rest?

Last year, I attended an exhibition called Black Power Naps that begins to answer those questions. After debuting at Matadero Madrid Contemporary Art Center in Spain, where I saw it, the exhibition has since travelled to Performance Space New York, where it is on view through January, 2019. The ongoing project by Black Latinx artists Fannie Sosa (referred to as Sosa) and niv Acosta presents a series of interactive installations that invite Black visitors to lie, nap, relax, and play, providing “deliberate energetic repair,” as the artists put it, on the dime of white cultural institutions.

I and many other Black people are constantly aware of our Blackness in hyper-white environments, including art institutions. Elijah Anderson, a prominent ethnographer and Yale lecturer, describes us as “black interlopers” in his 2015 essay, “The White Space”: “When present in the white space, blacks reflexively note the proportion of whites to blacks...and... may adjust their comfort level accordingly; when judging a setting as too white, they can feel uneasy and consider it to be informally ‘off limits.’” As W. E. B. Du Bois suggests, we experience double consciousness, where we simultaneously become aware of both our Blackness, and the responses to it, in white spaces. The surveillance our bodies experience in art institutions—from being followed around in their gift shops to being watched by the gaze of their gallery attendants, and all amidst an undiverse collection of artworks and workforce—informs our feelings of exclusion. But perhaps Black Power Naps does something different: It is designed with Black people in mind, inverting a white art institution into a “Black space,” where the Black body is the center around which all the show’s installations conceptually orbit.

To enter Black Power Naps, you must take off your shoes. Removing one’s shoes is an act associated with sacred places—a symbolic gesture of leaving the world’s toxicity behind. Once inside the room, you see six “healing stations” before you, each “invented,” as the artists put it, to evoke different bodily sensations through physical contact. Each is adorned with silks, satins, and chiffons in delicate pastel hues to create a cozy cocoon of a room. The stations include the “Black Bean Bed,” a pool filled with uncooked black beans, designed to soothe someone experiencing a panic attack. If you lie in the pool, the beans swallow your body while cooling the skin, enveloping you in comfort. The “Air Swing,” meanwhile, is a swing surrounded by three silent fans intended to increase the amount of oxygen you breathe in and, effectively, improve sleep. And the “Atlantic Reconciliation Station” is a water bed intended to help descendants of enslaved people forcibly brought through the middle passage—or pushed off ships along the way—reconcile with the ocean by reminding them that, as the artists explain, the ocean is an “adoring entity that has always had our back.”


These stations unwind the behaviors that white cultural institutions tend to impose on visitors, training us to keep our bodies to ourselves (don’t touch the art!) and avoid others. Here, you get to touch, lie on, and be intimate with the art. The invitation challenges the respectability politics and surveillance culture informing what it means to be a Black body in an art institution—or anywhere at all. The artists describe it as “a pleasurable citizen space.” Here, the Black radical imagination is in control.

In the background of the exhibit, a recording of the artists reading science fiction texts written by Black trans women plays so softly that it’s inaudible. You can’t consciously hear it, because you are not supposed to. The soundscape is intended as subliminal messaging designed to program empathy into white visitors, the artists tell me. “It’s cataclysmic, based purely on theory and the vibration of it, and trying to find the right kind of vibration with white people,” Acosta says. Sosa adds, “It’s like a device that provokes hyper-empathy in white people, planting this neurological map that they don’t have. They’re reprogrammed to interpret reality in a different way.”

Numerous studies have shown that white Americans believe Black people experience less pain. With this attempt to close the “racial empathy gap,” white people, for once, become the spectacle—the ones being scrutinized under the Black gaze.


When visiting the exhibition in Spain (like many other European nations, Spain has yet to apologize for its role in the transatlantic slave trade), attendees were greeted with text that boldly declared the artists intention, which provided context to the installation’s purpose. I was struck by the number of white visitors who still seemed oblivious to this mission, taking selfies with the collection’s “LIBERACIóN Y REPARACIóN” LED sign.

The various apparatuses in the exhibition, framed by the language the artists use to describe them, evoke a hybrid between a Black pleasure room and a laboratory. In doing so, it calls upon and reimagines a history of Black bodies being tortured under the guise of “experimentation” (think, for instance, of theTuskegee experiments, or the story of Henrietta Lacks). These stations, too, are “experiments,” but ones rooted in facilitating reparations for Black people. They are also reminiscent of initiatives led by the Black Panther Party, whose services included free healthcare and breakfast programs for Black people; demonstrating that Black Power activism can take many forms and that Black art is inherently political.

Black Power Naps complicates the idea of reparations for Black people, reminding us that reparations are not solely about money, but also time. Time is an asset in capitalism; it is, in itself, a kind of privilege that has translated into financial wealth for white people. If we reframe centuries of unpaid slave labor as sick leave, annual leave, or overtime, then we, the descendants of the enslaved, are heavily owed. We also have reason to be restless, angry, and, as Hughes predicts in “Harlem,” ready to explode. This sentiment is shared by the artists, who believe a call to action means “ front lines existing in our bedrooms as well as in the streets.”

Time, as we know it, is a colonial invention and forms the backbone of American society, making the racial distribution of time inherent to white privilege. As whiteness dictates freedom, education, pleasure, and social mobility, have you ever wondered why so many of those considered to be our “greatest” artists or philosophers are white men? Who among us has the access to time to make “masterpieces” or to “think,” without dealing with the impacts of oppression? Racism robs us of our time to be creative, to dream or simply be. In addition, Black people are both disproportionately incarcerated and expelled from schools in the United States and many other Western countries. If Black children were given the same amount of time as their white peers to remain in education, this would disrupt the “school-to-prison-pipeline,” a phenomenon that disproportionately affects Black youth. Our dreams are constantly deferred.

By inviting Black people to stop and rest, Black Power Naps begins to let us reclaim our time. And, in doing so, it restores our capacity to dream as Black people—to imagine a future of Black rest, relaxation, and idleness.

When was the last time you enabled Black people to rest?

TLDR: Black people don't get enough sleep because racism kept them awake.

I expected nothing less or more from Vice.
 
From the front page of Black Power Naps magazine's website:
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Black Power Naps
is an itinerant installation and curatorial initiative that reclaims laziness and idleness as power.
Departing from historical records that show that deliberate fragmentation of restorative sleep patterns were used to subjugate and extract labor from enslaved people, we have realised that this extraction has not stopped, it has only morphed.
A state of constant fatigue is still used to break our will. This “sleep gap” shows that there are front lines in our bedrooms as well as the streets: deficit of sleep and lack of free time for some is the building block of the “free world”. After learning who benefits most from restful sleep and down time, we are creating interactive surfaces for a playful approach to investigate and practice deliberate energetic repair.
As Afro Latinx artists, we believe that reparation must come from the institution under many shapes, one of them being the redistribution of rest, relaxation, and down times. In this spirit, we have also united forces with Pride Madrid 2018 to curate a festival line up that where artists are invited to perform from bed.

Emphasis mine
 
There’s no scientific consensus on what, specifically, causes the sleep gap
How do you solve a problem if you dont know what causes it.

leading theories point to both experiences of discrimination and structural inequality—aspects of one’s environment that make one feel unsafe and insecure—as root causes.
How about addressing those aspects then.

Just as sleep deprivation was used as a means to control slaves, the modern-day sleep gap continues to weigh down many Black people, like me, today. I can feel it in me: It breaks my spirit, as I exist in between half-conscious states; never fully awake or asleep, never able to distinguish between the two.
Half Conscious must have been the state you were in when you wrote this article.

like many other European nations, Spain has yet to apologize for its role in the transatlantic slave trade
Neither have the Muslims and they invented it.

Time, as we know it, is a colonial invention and forms the backbone of American society, making the racial distribution of time inherent to white privilege.
No Time is a law of the universe. You are given a finite amount of it. What you do with it is up to you.

When was the last time you enabled Black people to rest?
Every god damn day. What do you think I go into thier homes at night and start playing drums or something?
 
Henrietta Lacks was dead. She did not know that her cancer cells were used for anything. Who cares if cells were extracted from her tumor?

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrietta_Lacks

“Lacks was the unwitting source of these cells from a tumor biopsied during treatment for cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., in 1951. These cells were then cultured by George Otto Geywho created the cell line known as HeLa, which is still used for medical research.[5] As was then the practice, no consent was obtained to culture her cells, nor were she or her family compensated for their extraction or use.”
 
That's some of the silliest shit I've ever read, and I've read some silly shit. Even if white people supposedly "Owed" black people "Time", of all things, how, exactly, would they want to be repaid? Do they want us to give the entire race sick leave for however many years slavery went on? Even ignoring the assumption that the (At this point) distant descendants of people owe the distant descendants of the people that their ancestors wronged something, an inherently stupid concept in and of itself, expecting white people to somehow repay them in "Time" is just idiotic.

What do Black people like this want? Well, there are plenty of Black people who don't fall under this kind of personality, but those who do?....
-They want White people to be their slaves.
-They want the "we were slaves" angle to stay around so they can keep us that way.
-They want that angle to stay around so despite enslaving us, they still have the moral high ground.
-They want all non-ghetto living situations destroyed (cause the ghetto is their sacred land, and a sign of black culture), and have their new slave caste live in grass huts outside the cities, always ready to serve. Those we call SJW's nowadays will be the new equivalent of House slaves.

This is, in fact, me being cynical, as I'm pretty sure blacks who act this way will never be satisfied with anything they get. They're not capable of it. The whole thing is a vicious cycle destined to repeat itself. What Black's really need (American blacks at least) is a country of their own. Let them build their own towns and their own culture. This will not happen, but it's what they actually need. The people who were slaves in America, some of them may have been "kings" as they say, but they were kings whose kingdoms lost in wars to other blacks tribes back in Africa. They were then sold to Muslim Slave Traders who brought them over here to be sold. This whole mindset is still with a lot of them.

I really don'y have any answer as to how this can be solved. That's all I can say. The Melting Pot is starting to boil over, and the stew may be starting to separate again, at least for awhile.
 
I'm glad we can finally start taking about reality and deconstructing the colonial concepts of things, like time.

Soon, you will all learn how waterfalls are also a colonial construct and do not actually exist.
 
  • Agree
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Goldsmith University so you can bet she has rich parents, there aren't any struggling working class people going to that place.

Goldsmith's is where Bahar Mustafa was the union "diversity officer", the one who had to quit due to the backlash from her Tweeting about killing all white men and all that shit. But you see she was the victim as a poor woman of colour (ignore the fact she lived in a half million pound house her parents boutght for her while paying all of her tuition). Her ED is here.

The same University is the one that had the LGBTQLMNOZGZOP123!!1! group describe Soviet gulages as "“compassionate” places of rehabilitation." More on that here.

What a surprise that there is a pervasive socjus cult at one of the most expensive and elitist universities in the country, almost as if these people are operating from a level of extreme privilege.
 
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They have that. It's called Liberia. It's not a very nice place.

I admit that’s more wishful thinking on my part, but blacks will never get through their problems the way they are now. I’ve always wondered if one of their issues was white people absorbing things from them that they think are “theirs”

I don’t mean “cultural appropriation,” mind you, but look at things like rock n’roll with it’s origins in blues and country. Look at how wholeheartedly blacks took to rap when it started, and how white rappers were basically total jokes for so long.

I recall a story I once heard about Abraham Lincoln’s plan for the free slaves after the Civil War. I believe it was something about sending them all down to the Caribbean’s and letting them sort out the rest. Maybe that would have been for the best in the long run?
 
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Writer cross pollination and staff juggling. Happened a lot in the past with Jezebel but "REE PATRIARCHY" isn't generating the clicks like it did in the past. "REE WHITEY" is the new, and already beat into the ground, hotness. Fun thing is the author of this tripe lives and works in the UK.
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And is only a grad student, with a pointless major, explains a lot really. At least she's actually black I was worried this was another self hating honky churning out more garbage articles on why I need to kill myself. She's not helping the "lazy blacks" stereotype at all with this article though.

The author's instagram: https://www.instagram.com/itsjaninebtw/

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From her pics I can tell she needs and takes a lot of rest reparations:
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