Tag Archives: african american

PROBLEMS WITH THE STANDARDS OF BEAUTY

BLACK BEAUTYStandards of Beauty

BY: Samori Swygert

I do have a concern about the adoption and embracing of Eurocentric standards of beauty.  This statement is not to downplay or disparage the physical attributes of European or White Americans.  However, for blacks, I really enjoy embracing and endorsing our cultural beauty.  There is nothing wrong with cultural pride.  For centuries blacks had to conform to the norm that was forced on them.  Time has progressed and the message of what are acceptable social standards has taken on a more subliminal undertone.  This undertone can brainwash and condition unwitting patrons and consumers of pop-culture and ordinary citizens, if you’re not careful.

First, black people are black because of the pigment melanin.  Second, by nature our hair has the true curls (however society downplays it as “naps”).  When you turn on your television or log onto the internet, you will typically see an overwhelming number of images portrayed as beauty to sell a product.  TV commercials will advertise products such as hair conditioner, shampoo, makeup, lipstick, and etc.

You can go to your local grocery store and look at the magazine stand and observe the various lingerie lines by Victoria’s Secret.  When you’re driving down the street, it’s nothing to observe the side panel of a bus advertising the latest Calvin Klein, or Abercrombie and Fitch display.  However, you rarely see an equal amount of advertisement of black women in this capacity.  There are some, but the few are not representative of the majority.

Typically, when black women are portrayed in these ads and commercials, they are typically women of a lighter hue.  The majority of commercials that have black women don’t have dark skinned women equally represented as their lighter sisters, and let alone the white woman.  This is not me talking nonsense, just turn on the TV and observe.  Why is that? I’m just keeping it ethno-statistically real!

Society has become indoctrinated with what is acceptable, but it’s based on a standard that the rulers of society dictate.  When years progress to decades to centuries, it’s easy to become conditioned and not understand why you do what you do.  Why must a man, especially a black man, shave is his beard or goatee?  Why is it quietly expected that black women have straightened hair or a weave?  Why must a black man cut his dreadlocks to have a job at an important business or law firm?  These physical characteristics that may be cultural, religious, or plain taste, have nothing to do with job performance.

Would you rather have a clean shaved, crew cut person that mismanages your retirement account, or a black woman with a natural curly afro that can increase your portfolio worth by exponents?  Why do we place so much on the external appearance, when it’s the intrinsic skills, ability, knowledge, and performance that ultimately counts.

How have we let standards of beauty equate to expertise or quality partners?  How have we been led to deny our own cultural representation on a day to day basis to conform to what somebody feels is socially appropriate, or tastefully biased?  I think as long as you are not offending somebody physiologically by your presence, or impeding the daily business operations, then you should be okay.  This means be hygienic in your appearance and performance of your duty.  Surgeons wear hair caps and scrubs to prevent accidental contamination or transfer of bodily matter during a surgery.  Cooks wear hair nets to prevent long hair from entering their meals.

Why do women prefer a fake weave over their natural God given hair?  I think part of this is subliminal brainwashing and acceptance of social norms in a Eurocentric culture.  Many believe that their hair texture is not what beauty looks like.  This is why Asians are making billions each year in the beauty product industry.  Also, have you ever noticed that some black entertainers seem to have a certain skin complexion one day, and then you see them in an ad or commercial and they are a shade or two lighter?  The change in skin tone is not the camera filter or lighting all the time. Many times these entertainers are festooned with makeup, and some entertainers even use skin lightening regimens.

I say be proud of who you are, whether black man or woman.  A person should love you for you, point blank period!  You should be hired, and given raises based on skill base and job performance.  We all have natural beauty, and we need to get back to embracing it.  I’m proud to say that I’m seeing a lot of my sisters going back natural and they look AWESOME!  The irony is that pop-culture is mimicking what comes to us naturally.  How many non-black women do you see have buttocks implants, and breast augmentation?  How many non-black women are having Botox parties for fuller lips, and go to tanning spas and spend hours at their local beach for a tan?  How many white men do you see walking around with dreadlocks?  Not all whites and non-blacks want to adapt our cultural attributes but there is evidence of their interest in our beauty.  Let not your psyche be tricked by commercials, movies, videos, magazines, ads, internet pop-ups, and bus or subway advertisements.

The take away message is self-pride, knowledge, and ownership!  When you own a corporation, product, service, school or institution, you then dictate what you expect your advertisements to look like.  This message champions the reason why we need more black owned businesses.  We can complain all we want about not be hired or represented equally by non-black business, but until we start running our own companies, we will always be subjected to another person’s preferred perception.

 

The Flyest Black Woman- Bessie “Queen Bess” Coleman

BESSIE~1Dr. Samori Swygert

Who is Bessie Coleman, and why is she the flyest black woman to me?  Bessie “Queen Bess” Coleman was the first African American Female Aviator, and entertainment pilot.  Bessie Coleman was born January 26, 1892 and died April 30, 1926.  American History makes a big fanfare about Amelia Earhart, but Bessie Coleman got her pilot license the same year Amelia Earhart got her first flight lesson in 1921.

Ms. Coleman has a very intriguing story.  She was born in Atlanta, Texas in 1892.  Her parents were Susan and George Coleman.  Her family moved to Waxahachie, Texas.  The family sharecropped cotton to live, sadly the father left and retreated to the Choctaw Reservation of Oklahoma.  The mother commandeered the family reigns and continued providing by picking cotton, and enrolling Bessie and her siblings in the labor.  Her mother purchased books for Bessie from a traveling library that graced the town twice a year.

Bessie’s interest for flight was sparked when she moved to Chicago to stay with her brothers in 1917.  Based on my readings, one brother was a Pullman Car Porter, and her other brother (Johnny) was a cook for Al Capone.  Johnny was a World War I veteran that amazed Bessie with all his combat stories.  She got a job in the beauty industry and worked as a manicurist.  She was trained at the Burnham’ School of Beauty Culture.

Ready for lift off!

Working as a manicurist in the local barber shop, she overheard countless tales and stories from African American World War I veterans.  She learned about the discrimination that black pilots experienced in the New York 15th and Illinois 8th black fighter regiments.  These two groups had fought in France.  She decided that she wanted to fly, so she quit her job. She looked for aviation schools that could teach African Americans and women.  America didn’t furnish the training institutions to accommodate her demographic (black women).  However, France did, and the French had female pilots in World War I.  Bessie started a Chili Parlor on 35th street and Indiana Avenue, and got two prominent African American investors, Robert Abbott (founder of Chicago Defender) and Jesse Binga (founder of Binga State Bank) to fundraise capital for her plans.

By the time Bessie was 24 years old, she had mastered the French language, sailed to Le Crotoy Somme, France, and matriculated into Condrau School of Aviation. 1921 the Federation Aeronautique Intenationale awarded Bessie her international pilots license, and this was the first ever granted to any American woman! 

Bessie honed her skills and moved to Paris.  When she decided to return to America, she ordered a 130 horsepower Neuport de Chasse plane  to be delivered to America, just in case America prohibited her from acquiring one within the country!  Unfortunately, the ugly double-headed monster of racism and sexism in America denied her employment in commercial aviation.  Frustrated she went back to Europe, and sharpened her skills.  She did advanced training in Germany, Holland, and Switzerland.  She flew 220 Horsepower Benz motor planes.  She was said to be an “ACE PILOT” by countless European aviation companies and stuntman.

Remembering her African American Roots

She returned to America in 1922 performing Nosedives, figure eights, climbs and other difficult flying maneuvers.  She would even take black audience members on her flights for $5 rides.  Bessie was so bold that she even parachuted out of her planes in airshows.  She never forgot her roots of African American inspiration.  During her flight exhibitions, she paid homage to the 8th Regiment of Illinois that she always heard tales about as a manicurist.  The band leader of the 8th escorted her to her plane, and they serenaded the audience with Jazz music as she flew through the heavens.

Keeping true to her African American roots, she returned to Waxahachie, Texas.  Historically speaking, the South was far from ready to see a black female pilot.  However, her tenacity weakened the system.  She was permitted to perform, but there was a catch.  African Americans were not allowed to see.  Bessie said she would not perform unless they permitted African Americans to enter… and they did!

She gave back to her community by giving speeches to African Americans at churches, schools, and other available venues.

Tragedy Strikes

1926, Jacksonville, Florida, the Negro Welfare League had invited Bessie to perform and honor her.  The availability, and accessibility of planes to African Americans had many restrictions and limitations at the time.  Many instances she had to fly refurbished, repaired, lower quality planes.  Sadly, the day before her show, she died in a practice run with a white co-pilot/mechanic.  Bessie was sitting in the back without a seatbelt, and was ejected from the plane.  Her mechanic died also died in the crash.  Sources say that an unsecured wrench had slid into the gearbox and jammed it.  Bessie tragically fell 500 feet.

Three funerals were performed in her honor and remembrance.  Her body was transported by train from Jacksonville to Chicago, and thousands swarmed to pay tribute.  Pastor Junius C. Austin conducted the services.  It is said he chastised the community for lack for financial support in helping her acquire quality standard planes.

Bessie wanted to start an Aviation School for Black Women, but tragedy struck and intercepted her dream.  However, I feel her dream, hard work, diligence, faith, fortitude and execution was enough.  I also love the fact that she came back to her community to enhance it.  I reread her story, and I really almost came to tears….for real.  However, she is another prominent example of our rich heritage.  Let’s continue to carry the torch and fly to higher heights.  The story of Bessie Coleman also highlights the greatness of our black women.

This makes her the flyest Black Woman to me! We’ve got to redefine the title Queen B, because Queen Bess was granted this decades ago.  Rest In Peace Bessie Coleman (January 1892- April 1926).

Source: The African American Century by Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Cornel West

Here are two YouTube videos to checkout:

1.  Bessie Coleman

2. Bessie Coleman: An American Hero

Fox News contributor calls for arms to combat the “knockout game”

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By: Dr. Samori Swygert

This is a wake up call and word to the wise.  This “knockout game” is not a joke!  To all the youth and young adults out there that are engaging in this sick psychotic form of entertainment, BEWARE!!  We already saw how one individual was shot with a 40 caliber  handgun twice!  Well the dog whistle has been blown and you have now been marked.

I happened to run across a tweet by a Fox News Contributor, Katie Pavlich, her twitter post said ”With all the knockout “game” news I highly suggest people take @nra‘s Refuse to be a Victim…”.  Katie Pavlich is a conservative news pundit with a Twitter following of over 85,000 people.

This program she referenced is sponsored by the NRA, and provides training and instruction on firearm use.  This is an indicator that people are not willing to tolerate this type of violent activity, and are ready to take up arms to defend themselves.  So, to all my young people, stop playing around with your life because other people are not!  Many individuals have been waiting for this type of behavior to have an excuse to execute young black kids.  Moreover, this is blatantly wrong, point blank period!  This fuels the flame for stand your ground laws.

We saw the sad and unfortunate outcome of Trayvon Martin, and he was just minding his business when George Zimmerman instigated a deadly altercation.  However, with the news spreading about youth playing a potentially deadly game for enjoyment, many black youth are setting themselves up to be profiled for execution.  Fear alone can make an armed person use a firearm in an unwarranted circumstance just off a perceived threat.  This animalistic game makes all innocent and harmless black youth potential targets when walking in a group, just because the word is out.

Approximately 85,000 individuals now have a seed planted in their head about getting armed and prepared for violent encounters.

Parents I encourage you to get this message out to our children, nephews, nieces and other family members to stop this foolishness.  If a youth gets killed from participating in this behavior, people are well within their rights to defend themselves at all costs to save their lives.  The black community can not and will not rally behind you and vouch for you under these circumstances.  I myself am angered at this nonsense.

Okay village, lets develop some more engaging and constructive activities for our youth to participate in to cultivate their interests, develop ideas, and provide opportunities for success, because this is not it!

  1. http://inagist.com/all/403686528012267520/?utm_source=inagist&utm_medium=rss
  1. http://refuse.nra.org/find-a-seminar.aspx

The importance in salvaging the African American legacy

Black-History-Month-300x202

by: Samori Swygert

It’s imperative that we pick up the baton and carry the torch that was carried by our ancestors.  Our posterity and future is completely dependent on what we do now.  Our elders are dying, and our legacy, heritage, and tradition is dying with them.

Many people ask, “why does a lot of your writing revolve around Afrocentricity?”.  First, the answer is because we need the most help right now.  Secondly, all other cultures embrace all their cultural heritage without pushback from their own.

Dr. Claud Anderson says, “you can walk down the street of Chinatown, Little Italy, and Little Havana”.  We can walk by synagogues and yeshivas.  You can see America’s traditional representation by schools like: George Washington University, American University, or go to Manhattan and shop along Avenue of the Americas, or visit the Jefferson Memorial, Columbus Circle, the Washington Monument, see Mount Rushmore, Kennedy Space Center, visit the Lincoln Theatre, open an account with Bank of America, and we still have sections that fly the confederate flag with pride.  I applaud these other cultures for the protection and preservation of their legacy, because you are supposed to!

What are we leaving as evidence for African Americans, and what will we do to foster a continuum of African American excellence?

Our communities and institutions are in disarray and disrepair. The important thing to remember is, this can be fixed!  Why would any other race help us, if we are not actively trying to improve and ameliorate our situation?

 President Barack Obama encouraged us to pull ourselves up by the bootstraps, and to stop moaning and groaning. This is why I assert an African American stance in my writings.  Let me be clear!  I’m not talking about developing racism, and hatred. This is about repairing, rehabilitation, and restoration.

My answer is simple and a reiteration of many that have gone before me. We must continue the focus on education with application, foster innovation, and have cultural loyalty.  Our kids must focus on nothing else but learning and application.

The following are my reasons for this stance.  We complained about the verdict of the Trayvon Martin case, and how officers are acquitted of offenses in cases like Rodney King, Oscar Grant, and countless other court cases.  These illustrate the necessity of more African Americans in law school.  This ensures that we have equal representation with our judges, defense and prosecuting attorneys.  We also saw the makeup of the Zimmerman jury pool.  This is why we need to avoid prison because we need more eligible blacks to preside on the jury of our peers.  We’ve also seen how a Pennsylvania judge got busted for taking financial deals to railroad black defendants to jail.

Our children need education to fill positions in banking, real estate, and finance.  This ensures that banking institutions are not conducting biased business and housing loan denials to qualified African Americans.  This reassures fair hiring is being practiced.  We’ve witnessed Bank of America being fined $ 2 million dollars for discriminatory hiring practices that resulted in the denial of over 1000 qualified African American job applicants.

We need our children to enter the political arena.  The more mayors, governors, senators, representatives, supreme court justices, and etc, potentially increases the representation of our concerns and presence in the American political system.  We need blacks that can filibuster the same way Ran Paul can for hours on end.  We need influential black lobbyist and watchdog groups that can keep the community abreast of political issues of grave concern.  This is best illustrated by laws like Stop and Frisk, cumbersome Voter ID laws, striking down sections of the Voting Rights act, the rolling back of Affirmative Action, and even the accessibility of funds for HBCUs.  Yes, we need more African American politicians!

Our children need to continue seeking degrees in education.  School after school is being closed all across America.  The emergence of charter schools are ubiquitous.  This implies that we need more African Americans as teachers, principals, chancellors, superintendents, and school board personnel.   Dr. Juwanza Kunjufu has pointed out in several studies that more effective learning occurs when the student and teacher share the same ethnicity.

There are teachers of various ethnicities that are excellent, because I’ve had some in my educational experience.  However, I feel that a more genuine interest is innately exhibited when a teacher can see themselves in the students they instruct.

 A good movie to watch and serve as an illustration is the Dead Poets Society.  You can see  the passion Robin Williams’ character exudes in the education of his students.  You can also see that there was no black child in that movie either!  Moreover, you can see how positively this type of educational setting was received, because it won as Best Film and Best Screenplay in the USA and the UK.  This illustrates how white America viewed culturally devoted educational instruction as positive.  African American teachers may be more understanding of particular behaviors, whereas teachers of other ethnicities may attribute a child behavior to mental disorders and recommend a psych evaluation for your child.

 We need more African Americans in the healthcare field.  How would you fill knowing that your doctor is examining you with biased eyes?  Of course not all physicians are bigots, but you would be a liar and fool to say there are none, when there are still open KKK rallies, Neo Nazis, and Skinheads.  There is a bit more comfort in knowing that ideally your physician, nurse, pharmacist, and other healthcare practitioner is providing the best care possible uninfluenced by skin color.  We also need more African Americans in the science and research fields, to produce more data and research on how new drugs and procedures work on our genotype and physiology.  I won’t go into how the Tuskegee experiment was conjured.

Lastly, we need to control our entertainment.  Once we gain control of entertainment, we will be navigating to a brighter future.  This guarantees proper and positive representation in the media.  Our commercials will have equal representation and advertising of our own businesses.  The business owners decide upon the number and type of actors in their commercials and movies.  We can control our image and depiction as movie characters, and control the content of our music. This creates positive imagery for our children to emulate and seek higher heights.

If America is so upset, tired, and concerned about the poor, uneducated, welfare, thug-like, baby momma blacks, then this is all the more reason to support salvaging a positive African American Legacy.  This is all the reason bigots shouldn’t sabotage our decision to improve ourselves unless they want to see us fail.  The more positively independent we become, the less we are the perceived burden.  I feel it is timely and appropriate that we do for self and salvage our legacy via these means.   What do you think?

You can also read this at: http://www.kulturekritic.com/2013/11/news/samori-swygert-importance-salvaging-african-american-legacy/

Genetically Modified Babies: Is man playing God?

Genetically-Modified-Babies-300x252By: Dr. Samori Swygert

We’ve arrived at a benchmark in our science and technological advances.  The scientific community has already mapped and sequenced the entire human genome.  This allows for breakthrough cures, remedies, and treatments.  Stem cell research and gene therapy is giving individuals with life threatening conditions another chance at a healthy and fruitful life.

However, with each new discovery comes the potential for corruption, and perversion of an initially noble motive.  According to an article in the Wall Street Journal, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has granted a California based company a patent for a technique that allows them to specifically target and select gene traits for babies.1

 The author, Gau Tam Naik, explained that the company, 23andME, will be able to select genes for hair color, eye color, and etc.  The potential donor of an egg or sperm can be screened for any genetic abnormalities, and predisposed genes.  This was already being performed in fertility clinics but on a more nonscientific basis.  Potential parents could preview profiles of donors and make choices based off info supplied to their profile, but they never had the donor’s full genetic sequence!  This new patented technique will screen out individuals with undesirable traits.  This gives potential parents choices on both disease related traits, and cosmetic non-disease traits.

According to the article, Catherine Afarian, a spokeswoman for the company, indicated that cosmetic trait selection is not the premise for this patented technique.  However, even though that is not the intention, the patent approval is there and this can be practiced in the future, legally.

Positive Implications

As a healthcare practitioner that sees critically ill patients on a routine basis, I understand the role and importance in genetic testing and engineering.  Many patients and an overwhelming demographic of the U.S. population suffer from genetic diseases such as: Down Syndrome, Sickle Cell Anemia, Huntington’s Disease, Cystic Fibrosis (CFTR gene), Breast Cancer (HER2 gene), and specific Diabetes types.   These advances can save many lives, and prevent many diseases if implemented and utilized appropriately.  This can save money, cμt health insurance premiums, and give a peace of mind to parents.

My Concerns

Several concerns come into play when I think about the potential perversion of such a powerful scientific capability.  I think of this wave of obsession with Botox lip injections, Breast Augmentation, Gluteal (Bμtt) Implants, and the physical and psychological impact on individuals.  I think of eugenics and Hitler’s Nazι experimentations to breed a so called “superior race”.  I think of the silly recurrent debates of light skin versus dark skin, “good hair” and “bad hair”.  How will this affect our love relationships and marriages when it comes to family planning?

This reminds me of a novel I read by Aldous Huxley called, Brave New World, and individuals were no longer being born, but bread in lab and assigned to a particular social class based on genetic superiority or inferiority that was predetermined by the ruling class.

Moreover, as science continues to progress, the potential to gain an advantage comes into play if more discoveries of intellectual and physical traits can be illuminated. Based on the current financial predicament, those that have adequate finances to use this service may have a “one up” on individuals that can’t afford to get the appropriate genetic remedy, and once again, poorer children would suffer unnecessary health conditions based off the lack of money.

I think of ethnic cleansing, and the current climate, and racial tension in America today.  WE HAVE A SEVERE RACE PROBLEM THAT HAS NEVER BEEN SOLVED, AND PEOPLE ARE SCARED AND UNWILLING TO MATURELY AND PUBLICLY ADDRESS IT.  I feel this denial, and avoidance to have a mature public discourse on the resolution of racism in America will be the main downfall of our nation.

The article also says that “a patient would first specify certain traits that he or she wants in a child, and based on the patient’s own genetic profile, a computerized system then performs inheritance calculations pertaining to the traits of interest and identifies one or more preferred donors for the recipient”.

I think this concept applied with the specific medical purpose of disease management has a place, but I also fervently believe that strict and stringent governance, guidelines, reviews, and audits should be routinely enforced to restrict abuse of this power.

What are your thoughts on this?  Please read the article by visiting the link below.  God Bless, and have a wonderful day!!

Reference:  http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303492504579113293429460678