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“People of color,” once politically correct, is becoming a way of obscuring difference.
This is a black woman's take on how she feels "of color" should not replace "black" in describing her race. A well written article, but she is missing the point of how society, specifically leftist society, views her race. She's questioning why white people refer to her race in a certain way.
While people of color may not have risen to the same level of prominence as minorities just yet, there is a growing sense that the former should replace the latter when specifically referring to people who aren’t white
Very observant, and quite correct. Tune in to NPR and there will be an "All Things Considered" that mentions black and "of color" interchangeably.
Suggesting that newsrooms or corporate boards need to hire more people of color when there are specifically no Latino people or Southeast Asians on the payroll suggests that any nonwhite person will do, that we are all the same and bring the same experience to the table.
A minor faux pas here, the proper term for Hispanics is "Latinx". I heard this pronounced on NPR as "lateen-ex". Rhymes with Kleenex. Don't call them Latinos, because that would be a war on women. That aside, as far as your nonwhite role in political correctness goes - it doesn't matter that a black may bring something different to the newsroom than a Latinx. You are nonwhite, and that's all that matters. Your racial significance isn't that you're black - it's that you are not white. Your racial identity, as defined by white leftists, is largely based on its interaction with white people. That interaction is characterized as victimization.
It’s a term that, in many ways, still centers whiteness and suggests that anti-blackness doesn’t exist in Latino communities or that anti-immigrant sentiments don’t exist in black American ones. A term that has happily been co-opted by vice presidents of diversity who think there is a way to make a space welcome to nebulous “people of color” without addressing issues specific to different communities.
The only "community" that matters is the nonwhite community. She is spot on with "centers whiteness" - in order to be classified as nonwhite, we start with whites, and make a comparison to your race. Nonwhite and "of color" are both white-centered terms (perfectly leftist and politically correct) that make your blackness significant only when compared to white people.
This is a black woman's take on how she feels "of color" should not replace "black" in describing her race. A well written article, but she is missing the point of how society, specifically leftist society, views her race. She's questioning why white people refer to her race in a certain way.
While people of color may not have risen to the same level of prominence as minorities just yet, there is a growing sense that the former should replace the latter when specifically referring to people who aren’t white
Very observant, and quite correct. Tune in to NPR and there will be an "All Things Considered" that mentions black and "of color" interchangeably.
Suggesting that newsrooms or corporate boards need to hire more people of color when there are specifically no Latino people or Southeast Asians on the payroll suggests that any nonwhite person will do, that we are all the same and bring the same experience to the table.
A minor faux pas here, the proper term for Hispanics is "Latinx". I heard this pronounced on NPR as "lateen-ex". Rhymes with Kleenex. Don't call them Latinos, because that would be a war on women. That aside, as far as your nonwhite role in political correctness goes - it doesn't matter that a black may bring something different to the newsroom than a Latinx. You are nonwhite, and that's all that matters. Your racial significance isn't that you're black - it's that you are not white. Your racial identity, as defined by white leftists, is largely based on its interaction with white people. That interaction is characterized as victimization.
It’s a term that, in many ways, still centers whiteness and suggests that anti-blackness doesn’t exist in Latino communities or that anti-immigrant sentiments don’t exist in black American ones. A term that has happily been co-opted by vice presidents of diversity who think there is a way to make a space welcome to nebulous “people of color” without addressing issues specific to different communities.
The only "community" that matters is the nonwhite community. She is spot on with "centers whiteness" - in order to be classified as nonwhite, we start with whites, and make a comparison to your race. Nonwhite and "of color" are both white-centered terms (perfectly leftist and politically correct) that make your blackness significant only when compared to white people.