School Suspensions Disproportionately Target Black Girls

Thoughts

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Keep negging me brehs, black women will still suffer :manny:


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Anna Nzinga

One of the great women rulers of Africa, Queen Anna Nzinga (circa 1581-1663) of Angola fought against the slave trade and European influence in the seventeenth century. Known for being an astute diplomat and visionary military leader, she resisted Portuguese invasion and slave raids for 30 years. A skilled negotiator, she allied herself with the Dutch and pitted them against the Portuguese in an effort to wrest free of Portuguese domination. She fought for a free Angola until her death at age 82, after which weak rulers left the country open for the Portuguese to regain control.








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Blackking

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7 Adjectives to Accurately Describe Black Women Other Than 'Strong' and 'Independent'
For years one of my favorite lazy-Saturday rituals was to go to my local thrift store and shop. On one particular Saturday I went to the store in the afternoon, and the radio was playing.

"Fellas, call in and tell me two things you love about Black women after the commercial break," the DJ said.

When I heard that question, my stomach immediately tightened. Even though I hadn't yet heard any of the listeners' perceptions of Black women, I already knew in my gut what they were going to say.

"We're back," said the DJ. "Caller, you on the line? What do you love about Black women? What two qualities do you love about Black women?"

"I love me a strong, independent Black woman," the first Black male responder said.

By the time the third Black responder uttered that same term, "strong Black woman," I was in the coat section and in a bad mood.

"Why are those the only damn words that come to mind when describing Black women?" I asked myself.

Intellectually I knew the answer: The intersection of race, class, and gender for Black women in this country has meant having to reconcile a legacy of slavery and the creation of dehumanizing tropes and stereotypes like the "strong Black woman," created by the white patriarchal engine to systemically control our reproduction, destroy our families, and distort to ourselves and our men. And the truth is that Black women had to be many things, one of which was strong, to endure the ravages of slavery and Jim Crow. I also understand that this is why we as a culture value this attribute at the expense of so many others.

But there is far more to being a Black woman than being strong and independent. So, shortly after leaving the thrift store, I created my own survey and asked approximately 75 Black women to describe themselves. While I was disappointed to see that Black women too had internalized many of the same stereotypes that have been paraded as truth, I found it refreshing to see that many Black women understood the complexity of their human experience and were able to articulate that complexity by choosing words that more fully and accurately encompasses what it means to be a Black woman.

Here are seven of the ways the Black women I surveyed see themselves that, thankfully, have nothing to do with being strong:

1. Fashionable: Some of us love to look good and smell good and love to be on the cutting edge of fashion trends. Others are always watching how we put colors together and how we tend to our hair.

2. Spiritual: Many Black women describe themselves as women of faith whether they identify as Christian, Muslim, Rastafari, Santero, or "not religious but spiritual." Many Black women strongly believe that they are connected to a higher being and that there is someone out there larger than themselves.

3. Family-oriented: Black women are often the ones to remember the birthdays, send the Christmas cards, and plan the family reunions. Family fuels a lot of Black women's happiness and sense of belonging.

4. Funny: Most Black women love to laugh and make their friends and families laugh. We push back against that "ABW" ("angry Black woman") stereotype.

5. Happy: Just as many of us are funny, often we're also happy people with healthy emotional dispositions and worldviews. This happiness also comes from our ability to be grateful.

6. Sexy and sensual: Many Black women embrace their sexuality and femininity. They feel desirable; they see the beauty of their skin tone, their features, their bodies, their natural smells, and their hair.

7. Intelligent: Black women see themselves as cognitively well-endowed. They believe that Black women are able to juggle the matrix of life because of our ability to think quickly and creatively.

What adjectives would you use to describe Black women beside "strong"?
 

Opus

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They get suspended more because when cacs do shyt they give them a pass.

I went to white highschool. They'd steal prescription drugs from medicine cabinents, even forge doctors prescriptions from physician parents. Drink vodka out of water bottles in class. Cheat like hell. Steal shyt from the school, even hack records etc. They'd get caught too, but they weren't suspending or expelling anyone.

Way it goes is a cacs suspension is a brehs expulsion. And a cacs detention is a brehs suspension. Let's not play respectability politics here. If we acknowledge racism exists than why wouldn't it be at play when they are disproportionately suspending the young sisters.
 

Will Ross

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White kids always get suspended less than black kids this is nothing new.
Just like whites get less time in jail. But the fact is the avg black girl is not getting suspened and the ones that do are trouble makers.
 

Thoughts

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dont generalize us..

i have never shat on a black women on this site..

some of youl nikkas are downright pathetic..

There you have it LADIES...and gentleman, then when he can't get a "sista" to "act right", he gonna be lurking in PAWG threads.
You ain't no KING to these "QUEENS", and that's your problem LITTLE nikka! How the fukk you gonna be a "KING" and you can't even spot FLAWS in your "QUEEN"?

...you pyramid and Egpyt nikkas kill me, ain't had a DNA test in your life claiming Egpyt, meanwhile we got queens like Anna Nzinga on the front lines.

You the muthafukking PROBLEM nikka! YOU! Not the white man, YOU!

Start here nikka...at least the first 5 mins.
 
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