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Why Non-Black People of Color Need To Stop Blaming Black People for Their Erasure: A Lesson in 26 Tweets

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by Mia McKenzie

 

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This morning on Twitter, Cate Young and I shared some thoughts on #OscarsSoWhite and the unfortunate ways that too many non-black people of color approach issues of media representation. Namely, the tendency to blame black people for erasure of other people of color—”But blacks still get nominated more than (insert non-black PoC)! Stop erasing us!”—rather than blaming, you know, white supremacy.

 

Black people don’t hold the power in Hollywood. We’re not the ones erasing non-black people of color.

 

Funny thing (not funny ‘haha, funny ‘OMG why are y’all like this??’) is that the same non-black people of color who demand inclusion from black people are mysteriously silent when black people need support. Like folks who, when Daniel Holtzclaw was convicted, said, “But would they have gotten justice if they were (insert non-black women of color)???” but had never even mentioned the case or stood up for the black women victims in the entire year preceding the trial.

 

The thing non-Black people of color seem to have a hard time understanding (besides the fact that we don’t work for y’all) is that black hyper-visibility is not a privilege. Hyper-visibility of black people doesn’t translate into less systemic anti-black racism or more justice for black people. For example:

 

Yeah, that’s not how it works.

So, in 2016, how about less NBPoC demanding black labor and more actual solidarity? Because Cate’s right: #OscarsSoWhite is a great opportunity for all people of color to come together for change. The Oscars may not be the biggest issue we’re dealing with (it’s not) but if we can get this right, maybe there’s hope for real solidarity on the issues that matter most.

 

Cate Young is the creator of the feminist pop culture blog BattyMamzelle.

Mia McKenzie is the creator of Black Girl Dangerous.

 

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