treesinger
<font color=blue>Runs in fear from the <font color
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2002
- Messages
- 1,774
Originally posted by wdwdvcdad
It's one thing to love your heritage. It is another to put it before your love of country. By hyphenating America with some other country, that is what you are doing. If you were born in another country, that is one thing. If you were not, you are just looking for attention...trying to separate from the whole. My family had to fight for its rights, too. Get over it.
I'm with you, EXCEPT for the GET OVER IT thing. Whether or not you think it is right to dwell on the past, no one has the right to tell someone that they don't have the right to be offended at how their ancestors were treated.
I, for one, am an advocate of moving on and looking forward. Remembering the past, but not letting the past unduly influence my future. If someone else wants to make that choice, who am I to say that they can't?
Getting back to African Americans. Is it because Blacks in this country were called all sorts of names, most not pleasant, that African American came into play.
There's a better way for me to say this. Lemme see. Blacks in the American past were treated as inferior outcasts that were at best tolerated in early America. They were called many names, and even the nicer ones carried the inflection of disapproval. Hence African American was taken on so that Blacks all over the country could emphasize that they are AMERICANS indeed, not a skin color or anything else.
So my question is, was the term African American actually created to emphasize the fact that Black are Americans too? If so, than anyone's idea that the hyphen separates Blacks from being American is getting it completely wrong.
And Robin, I'm not offended if you don't answer me. (I'm sure you were kept awake at night worrying about my feelings right?
