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Why Can’t You Say the N-Word?

August 8, 2017 by Stacy Martinez Leave a Comment

 

Asian, Middle Eastern, and Hispanic people in urban areas have seemingly become comfortable with using the N-word as their expression of friendship with black people which is in many ways insulting. This word has never been used to describe or belittle them and there is no need for it to be part of their vocabulary.

In the Oxford dictionary black (adjective) is defined as “of any human group having dark-colored skin, especially of African or Australian Aboriginal ancestry.” However, black should be defined as people with undeniably African or Australian Aboriginal features such as wide noses, thick lips, kinky hair, and darker skin because they are the “niggers.”

Many people use the excuse that their ancestors were black to use the N-word. A “Negro” is defined as “a member of a dark-skinned group of peoples originally native to Africa south of the Sahara” also relating to black people. Therefore, if someone’s race or culture is technically not black, these derogatory terms do not apply to them.

A black person may use the term as they wish. This is a word he or she cannot escape from because it’s been deeply embedded into this country that this is what “black” is and this is how the world will always see “black.” We are the so-called “nappy haired, horse mouthed, black bucks” that white America shaped us out to be. But we’ve come to own the stigma of being black in America and we have even reclaimed ourselves by referring to ourselves as “Niggas.”

Some people feel like since they’re being friendly, it’s fine to say the N-word. But that isn’t necessarily the case. For example, if two friends from the Middle East were joking around and calling each other terrorists, it would be funny to them being that it’s a word they’ve both felt personally victimized by. However, had one of those friends been of another race, it would be seen as an ignorant remark being that other races are rarely, or never, accused of being terrorists.

Many light-skinned Hispanics that I have confronted about using the N-word say, “but my ancestors were black,” to which I respond, “good for your ancestors.” Simply put, Hispanics are a mix of multiple races and peoples, whether they be African and Spanish or Native and Spanish or African, Native, and Spanish. Therefore, that makes them not one or the other but all. You are not black, your ancestors were. You have been able to escape the same reigns of terror black people have face. There are even black Latinx people who experience racism in their countries and are called “Negra/o” because they cannot escape their black ancestry. They cannot escape because the black African blood runs through their skin and features.

For mixed race people, possibly half black and half white, it is how white passing you are that determines whether or not you have the choice to say the N-word. If your features are predominantly black, you are prone to grow up manipulated by white America, you will fear their system. If your features are predominantly European, you have an advantage and are likely to have privilege.

A black person may as well be defined as someone who is manipulated by white America at birth. Someone angered and insulted by the terms “Nigger” and “Negro.” A person whose dark skin and African features apparently defines the content of their character. A person so connected to their African ancestry that they would have either been on the plantation or in the house looking after the white man’s child. And if you can’t personally relate to any of this… You’re not black.

Filed Under: Commentary, Commentary and reviews, Culture and Entertainment, Lifestyles, race and culture, Uncategorized Tagged With: culture, opinion, Race

Donald Trump Refuses Invite to Speak Annual Assembly of the NAACP

August 8, 2017 by f.leone Leave a Comment

 

       U.S president Donald Trump has rejected the invitation to attend the Annual Assembly of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

       This continues Donald Trump’s cycle of ignoring issues in minority filled communities and puts Donald Trump’s interest and care for the African American community in the U.S in doubt. Leon Russell, chairman of the NAACP told associated press, “we have lost—we’ve lost the will of the current Administration to listen to issues facing the Black community.”

       The NAACP has been one of the most influential American associations focusing on civil rights. “During his campaign, President Trump asked us ‘what do you have to lose?’ This is the second time President Trump has refused an offer to speak at our annual convention. We get the message loud and clear.” Russell said in the same interview.

       Trump has gone on record calling Mexican immigrants“criminals” and “rapists,” along with his “great relationship with the blacks,” so his refusal was not a surprise to many people, “This president has shown no concern to help minorities in America. It worries me as an African American, not only that he refuses the invite but with the statements he’s had in the past and now refusing to speak at a conference of one of the biggest civil rights groups in america to help colored people and minorities.” This was the opinion of a resident of Carroll gardens on the issue. Another Interviewee was not so much worried as much as angered; “this president is idiotic, I am disappointed in the U.S for allowing such a person to become president and him refusing this invitation is yet another sign of his ignorance.

 

Filed Under: News

Deer Infestation in Staten Island

August 8, 2017 by T Lacen Leave a Comment

                     The deer population has more than tripled in the last six years.

 

Golf View Court locals are urging the community to place deer crossing signs warning both drivers and pedestrians after a significant increase in both traffic and health safety complaints. Staten Island Live reported the deer population on the whole island, “jumped from 24 to 793 in six years.”

Members of the community have shown concern particularly towards the intersection of 4 crossing main roads which lack guard rails to separate both the golf court and the forest to the street. A resident of the neighborhood for over ten years commented, “It’s a menace. They have no natural predators so they’re multiplying so quickly.” In the last week 4 neighbors had deer sightings on the intersection.

Some residents are taking action to try to place signs in the area. Another resident, Maria Morales shares, “Even in the daytime, deer roam and it’s not the best when you have a pet. I fear for ticks and Lyme disease.”

Lyme disease, carried by deer ticks is a possible threat to both pets and their owners. Although, not all ticks carry the infection. Deer can carry a variety of illnesses however, that should be broadcasted. Including: Anaplasmosis, Avian Influenza, Babesiosis, Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), Escherichia coli Infection (E. coli) among others according to American Veterinary Medical Association.

The city is taking action to reduce the population of the species. SiLive.com recently uncovered, “The city spent $2,778 for every deer vasectomy performed during the first year of the management program, according to Parks Department numbers.”  Some hunters have taken advantage of the nuisance, though it is illegal to hunt in the five boroughs. There has only been one deer poacher caught out of the already limited number of reports. DEC spokesman Sean Mahar according to SiLive said on the subject, “Poaching is a serious issue and DEC aggressively investigates any reports of illegal hunting activity.”

Raymond Lacen, another decade long resident of Golf View Court agrees with city’s tactics and states, “There needs to be some form of population control, or the issue will become something out of control.”

Filed Under: Featured, News

JAY-Z is Sorry!

August 8, 2017 by t.clark Leave a Comment

4:44 was released on June 30th 2017 and is Shawn Carter’s aka JAY-Z’s 13th album. It’s safe to say Jay has reinvented himself with every album he has made from The Blueprint in 2001 to Magna Carta Holy Grail (2013).

Not only is Jay a rapper, entrepreneur, label owner, and a businessman, but he is an African American married man, and father. And in this album the world gets to meet the vulnerable and apologetic side of him as he airs out his entire life to the public and puts some of it to rest.

Starting with the opening song Kill Jay Z, the grammatical context of the title, ties with the fact that Jay has decided to change his name from Jay Z to JAY-Z, putting it in all caps, and bringing the hyphen back. And from that one can assume that Jay is in fact erasing the “old Jay Z,” the very version of himself that inspired Beyonce’s Lemonade album.

In the title track 4:44 Jay apologizes no less than seven times in four minutes and forty-five seconds. Jay admits to the infidelity, to his disloyalty, to not being good enough, or mature to be the man he claimed he could be.

Not only is 4:44 the song Beyonce herself may have been waiting for but the song is what the world has been waiting for. This song says not every cheating incident has to end in an ugly divorce. This song says if JAY-Z can man up and apologize so can you guys (you know who you are). He admitted his faults and made art out of it. It becomes heartfelt for fans to see projects like these become more personal and less for publicity and radio play.

In an interview with IHeartRadio, Jay explained the making of 4:44, saying, “I woke up, literally, at 4:44 in the morning…So it became the title of the album and everything. It’s the title track because it’s such a powerful song, and I just believe one of the best songs I’ve ever written.”

There is a powerful message in every song of this album. In the Story of O.J. we see Jay’s view on black culture and how we have to stick together in order to push forward.

Smile, Jay says, in an interview with iHeart Radio, “is just what it is. There are gonna be bad times, and those bad times can do two things: they can get you in a place where you’re stuck in a rut, or it can make your future that much better because you’ve experienced these things.” This song is also the first time Jay’s mom, Gloria Carter’s homosexuality is publicly revealed with the lyrics “Momma had four kids, but she’s a lesbian/Had to pretend so long that she’s a thespian,” he reveals. “Cried tears of joy when she fell in love/Don’t matter to me if it’s a him or her.”

On other songs like Bam, Moonlight, Marcy Me, and Legacy Jay reminisces about problems in the music industry, letting go of his ego, his old days as a hustler and the legacy for the Carter family name.

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Not only is the album a masterpiece on its own, but since it was released Jay has been dropping visuals that go along with the sound one music video at a time and fans are living for it.

Filed Under: Commentary and reviews, Culture and Entertainment, Featured, Uncategorized

Donald Trump Did Not Trump All of The Latino Vote

August 8, 2017 by Macarena Aldas Leave a Comment

 

Latino Trump supporters proudly hold signs at 2016 RepublicAN convention

In the wake of the 2016 presidential election, the United States has become more divided than it’s been in the last decade. This shows America needs to learn how to listen to one another because we live in a multicultural and diverse opinionated country.

Latinos are among the fastest growing demographic in the U.S. The number of Latinos eligible to vote has grown by 4 million since the 2012 election. They were a group that the candidates had to watch out for during the 2016 campaign, and Donald Trump made his views clear during a 2015 speech when he stated, “When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. … They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people,”

This statement made it impossible to believe that any Hispanics would give  Trump their vote. Surprisingly, Trump won 29 percent of the Latino vote. Since they’re a part of a group that Trump has constantly disrespected, what made them inclined to vote for him?

Reymy Vasquez, 27, from New Jersey is among the 29 percent who voted for the Republican Party in the 2016 election. Vasquez grew up in what he called a “rough” neighborhood in New Jersey, which consisted of a mostly Latino and Middle Eastern population where people weren’t always driven to excel. He also voted for the Republican Party in the 2012 election. At first, during the 2016 race, Vasquez was going to vote for Marco Rubio. Slowly he saw his views align with Trump and he redirected his support.

Vaquez states that his primary reason for voting for Trump was tax reform. His parents are immigrants from Honduras who fought hard to get where they are and they didn’t take assistance from the government or anyone. He feels that people in this country, especially people from “rough” neighborhoods take advantage of the aid the government gives them. His family now are homeowners and college graduates. Vasquez feels that society needs to glorify those trying to make something of themselves instead of pitying those who receive from government programs without contributing to society. He feels that Trump could help manage what tax money is being spent on so he can “start putting our money where it matters most.”

On the topic of illegal immigration, Vasquez supports Trump. He feels that as illegal immigration increases, safety decreases and Americans need to take care of that problem. Just as the president once said, Vasquez himself saw “many of those [Muslim] people take up their respective flags when the towers went down.” He feels like we need to, “focus on the problems that this country is having not the problems that others are, we should worry about ourselves and not everyone else.” He believes in strengthening America’s immigration system and making sure they are aware of the intentions people have as they enter the country.

To Vasquez, Trump’s slogan “Make America Great Again” represents stability, the American Dream for truly hustling families, safety for Americans and putting America before anyone else.

Filed Under: Featured, Lifestyles, News Tagged With: Politics

Love Trumps Hate

December 14, 2016 by CARMELA MANDRY Leave a Comment

“Donald Trump, go away. Racist, Sexist, Anti-gay,” screamed thousands of protestors including men, women, and children as they marched in forty degree weather with dozens of cops trying to control yet another protest against the president-elect.

On November 11, 2016 people brought their signs and their voices to Washington Square Park to oppose the results of the election. “Not our president” was the repetition.

According to many protestors, the “love rally” quickly turned aggressive when hundreds began chanting “f*ck Trump” instead of what Sydney Miller, the host of the Facebook event, intended. Miller had hoped that the rally would remain peaceful and positive but many believe that didn’t happen.

Many attendees, including mothers who had brought their children, felt disappointed with the outcome of this “love rally.”

Jenny, a mother of three,  said she hoped to “show my girls how to spread positivity and love through what most think is the start to the failure of our nation. If I knew they’d be screaming profanity.. I would’ve never come. I fully agreed with the woman who created this event and what she hoped for but there’s no love here.” She added that she is not a Trump-supporter but she doesn’t support spreading negativity either.

While others enjoyed the rally, many expected more. “I feel like we didn’t address all aspects. I’d hope that it’d be an event to tell those who were targeted that our country loves them but I’ve only heard or seen signs for gays and women,” said Katelyn, a sixteen year old girl from Harlem. She hopes the rally creates some sort of positive change and unity.

A student from John Jay stated “Trump is a businessman. He knew what most electoral voters wanted and believed in .. maybe he didn’t even mean what was said about the Muslims and Mexicans and women but I love that we came together as one to let those targeted know we are here. Proud of Trumps’ victory though. We did it!”

Others didn’t have such a positive attitude. “I hate Trump so much . Maybe someone would take one for the team and kill him,” said a 17 year old girl from the Bronx. She believes Trump doesn’t deserve a response of love and said she hopes all Trump supporters get shot.

“Two wrongs don’t make a right. I hope hate doesn’t destroy us completely . The  world is already a dark place. We have to change. Donald Trump didn’t start the problem. These issues have been around for many many years. I don’t know what we’re going to do but making matters worse isn’t okay. I didn’t sacrifice my life for all of those years, protecting us from foreigners so that we can destroy each other from the inside,” said Lucas, a 84 year old veteran who doesn’t believe Trump is the problem. He said that he thinks the people of this nation blame whoever they can but do nothing. He continues “You can’t complain if you didn’t vote.”

Filed Under: News

Dakota Access Pipeline

December 12, 2016 by m.molina2 Leave a Comment

An unfortunate part of American history is our dark side, a side where we stray from our foundations of “all men are created equal.” From slavery to Japanese internment camps to deportation of Latin Americans, minority racial groups have been repeatedly targeted and looked down upon not just by the white majority, but the American people as a whole. Perhaps, the most notable of these infractions is one of the first, the relocation of Native Americans.

 

Proposed by Andrew Jackson and approved by Congress in 1830, the Indian Removal Act forced Native Americans onto designated land in the Midwest called reservations. Since then, many Native Americans have had to adjust to new living conditions and lifestyle.

 

Now, once again the government is paying complete disregard to Native American’s with the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. The 1,172 mile pipeline would begin at the Bakken Formation, an underground oil source in parts of Montana and North Dakota and run through South Dakota, Iowa, and Illinois. After its completion, the pipeline would deliver over 470,000 barrels of oil per day. The downside? The pipeline would put the environment at great risk, possibly contaminating the Missouri River water supply and disturbing historical territory belonging to various Native American tribes.

By failing to reconsider the Dakota Access Pipeline, the United States government is not only disrespecting the Native American community, but is also showing its lack of support for finding eco-friendly alternative energy sources. Although this oil deposit is a great economic boost, we have to remember that these resources are finite. It is a shame that our government is prioritizing economic gain rather than the well being of the American people. With global warming and air quality concerns on the rise, it is our responsibility to take action and protect our environment.

Instead of investing money into a project that eventually will be abandoned when natural resources become deplenished, the government should be investing in projects that can last forever. Natural gas and solar energy are cleaner options for our future.

Continuing the Dakota Access Pipeline will destroy the Native American community, their culture, their home, and their heritage. If their home is destroyed, then what is to stop the government from destroying ours too? The construction of the pipeline must be terminated not just for the safety of the Native American tribes who live there, but for our planet as a whole.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Thoughts on Me and Earl and the Dying Girl

December 12, 2016 by KATARINA HAJDER Leave a Comment

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews, is well worth the read.

It is a young adult fiction book that is enjoyable for any age. It is such a laid back read that with all the stresses of the world people can find time to appreciate its humor and honesty.

Even though there may seem to be many popular works of fiction depicting tragic teen love stories, this one incorporates a third dimension, cancer. It also kind of eliminates the love too actually.

Despite the incredibly raw moments of watching a teenage girl realize the severity of her illness, I mostly found myself literally laughing out loud at some of the things Greg Gaines, protagonist of the story, says in his narrations. Thankfully I wasn’t in public. One can really appreciate his tumor in the midst of all the dark times.

Simply put, it’s about this very socially awkward high school senior, Gregory Gaines, who avoids any relationships except for one friend, Earl. Greg and Earl are like day and night. Earl lives in a home that’s falling apart, literally and metaphorically, while Greg has a super protective mother. The only thing that brings them together is their love of watching movies that no one else really enjoys, and film making.

This is where the cancer comes in, leukemia to be more exact, and also another friendship. Greg’s overprotective mother makes him reconnect with a childhood friend, Rachel, after finding out that Rachel has been diagnosed with leukemia. The resolution of the battle between friendship and getting out of one’s shell is one you’ll have to find out on your own.

The most outstanding detail there is to describe about this book is the amount of second hand embarrassment it gives the reader. This may not sound appealing to just about anyone but this book is a bestseller and now a major motion picture so you tell me. In all honesty, it’s just real. Sometimes people say stupid things. Sometimes people turn themselves into hermits. And sometimes people think they are stronger than they really are.

To me, Me and Earl and the Dying Girl was nothing like I had ever read before. I usually go for the more Romeo and Juliet- esque types of romances, like the The Fault in our Stars, but reading this one felt almost so “no strings attached” that it was just like catching up with a friend.

Filed Under: Commentary and reviews

Dodgeball: The Modern Day Version of Segregation?

December 12, 2016 by Ava Talmor Leave a Comment

Were you ever scared you’d be the last one picked for a game of dodgeball in your high school gym class?

A couple of high schools around New York City show how there is a clear division between race when picking teams for school sports.

During a game of dodgeball at the Institute for Collaborative Education, the gym teacher picked one white girl and one white boy as the team captains. Both started picking people to be on their teams. Out of a class of sixty five kids, 15 percent are black, 30 percent asian, 5 percent mixed, and 50 percent white.

While watching this game of dodgeball, the team captains picked white kids, most specifically white males, first than any other race.

“I usually don’t think about it too much. I just pick who I think will make me win,” one of the team captains said. Many kids acted like this was normal.

At two other dodgeball games the next few days, the same thing happened. Most of the time, the white captain would pick a white kid first.

A couple of 11th grade black girls who were part of the game, said they began noticing that they were usually the last one picked as they got older. “When we were in 9th grade we would play all the time, but now we never get picked! None of them white boys want to pick us,” one said.

During one of the dodgeball games, as the kids were playing, it also became apparent that most white kids were trying to hit the black kids on the opposing team, more than the other white kids.

Talking to some teachers about whether or not there was a race divide in their classrooms, most of them said there was. “I think it’s hard to see that there is because it is so internalized. We live in such a segregated society, especially in America,” a humanities teacher said.

“Kids are taught at such a young age, to play with their biological race. This is a bi-product of the segregation in communities, schools and neighborhoods,” a professor at NYU said. A couple students exhibited this during an interview. “Yeah I gotta say like all my friends are black. I mean I got a few white boys in my class and we joke around a lot.” A black boy in the 9th grade said.

A recent article published by the New School, reported that in New York City 332 of the city’s 734 neighborhood elementary schools have enrollments that are more than 90 percent black and Latino. Most of these are in neighborhoods that are also predominantly black and Latino. They found 59 schools with enrollments of more than 90 percent black and Latino students in neighborhoods that are more racially mixed, that is, neighborhoods that are less than 80 percent black and Latino. These schools have a combined enrollment of 28,175 children.

“Our analysis found the sharpest discrepancies between the demographics of schools and their attendance zones in District 3 on the Upper West Side, District 5 in Harlem, and District 13 in downtown Brooklyn—neighborhoods which have undergone gentrification and where public housing sometimes abuts luxury high-rise apartment buildings or high-priced brownstones,”the report said.

From a dodgeball game to housing projects to schools and the education system, people all over NYC have been remarking about this internalized segregation. “We need to integrate everyone of all races, genders, orientation. That’s how this segregation ends,” the NYU professor said.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Min Yoongi’s Vulnerable First Mixtape: Agust D

December 7, 2016 by Samantha Sackes Leave a Comment

“I always keep two masks ready, I show the defensive side, hiding my true self. I hide myself completely, as if I’ve become a criminal; I could not take one step out of the dorm that seemed like a prison.”

Although these words are said in Korean, the meaning in English is the same. There are more lines like this in Min Yoongi’s very first, powerful mixtape, Agust D.

Min Yoongi, stage name Suga, is a 23-year-old South Korean rapper. He is one of the rappers for the popular seven-member boy group Bangtan Boys (BTS). The group’s genre is K-pop, otherwise known as Korean pop music. Their good looks, strong vocals and unique musical style have reached the hearts of people worldwide.

After the release of his fellow member Rap Monster’s mixtape, RM, in March last year, Suga released one of his own this past August. Its tracks contain Suga’s best rapping yet.

The name of the mixtape is also its title track, and it opens Suga’s story with a strong drum beat. The chorus incorporates a catchy repetition of the title. Suga also shows his creativeness in that the title of the track is a rearrangement of his stage name.

As a whole, the mixtape represents Suga’s unique artistry, compared to the youthful songs he performs with his group. His personality shines through the tracks, with the fast-paced, dark and almost angry way he raps. For example, his song “The Last” is his most aggressive and personal piece, where he talks about how he has struggled with the price of success and defining himself. “On the dark side of a successful idol rapper, my frail self stands, a bit dangerous; depression, compulsion, at times relapse.” His lyrics often shift in emotion from depressed, to hateful, to brazen. The flow of music from the keyboard, electric guitar, synthesizer and other effects connects to the lyrics as well.

Another important track is “140503 at Dawn,” which is a sort of prologue to “The Last” in which he attacks the idea of having a true self and a fake self, something most people can relate to. The rawness of his rapping touches the hearts of many, even people who do not speak Korean. His unique, soulful melodies break through the language barrier between Korean and other languages.

When most of Suga’s songs are this hard-hitting, it is easy to be surprised at his last two tracks. “Interlude; Dream, Reality” is a piano tune with a water drop effect, followed by soft drums. This is a calming song, and Suga only says the word “dream” in this minute-long song. This signifies that being able to dream and have hope is important to him.

His final track, “So Far Away,” is accompanied by female Korean singer Suran. The piano, with the electric guitar accompaniment, gives the song a desolate and desperate feel, but also somewhat hopeful. Suga’s rapping is mellow, and it matches well with Suran’s airy falsetto.

The song is about how Suga longs to dream and believes that something good will happen. Although he expresses loneliness and believes he has no one to go to when he feels anger or sadness, he includes lyrics of optimism and hope.

This choice makes the song a fitting ending to a deeply emotional mixtape, especially with the lines, “You will fully bloom after all the hardships, your beginnings will seem humble, so prosperous will your future be.” With these words, along with his skillful rapping and musical rhythm, Suga has created an emotional and impactful mixtape.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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