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Address your e-mail to
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the editors to [email protected]. You must include your address and daytime
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phone number (for confirmation only).
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A
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Complaint From Your Hick Readers
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In the Oct. 23 "Today's Papers," Scott Shuger writes of a Washington
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Post piece referring to the "Bubba vote" and notes that "this is a perfect
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illustration of the truism that there's still one group in this country that
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'respectable' people, even (especially?) sophisticated newspaper people, are
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allowed to slander--Southern white males. Hey, Posties , time to rework
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that style-sheet."
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Having recently read (with
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some annoyance) Michael Lewis' Day 3 "Dispatch"
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from the Microsoft trial, I had to wonder whether
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Slate
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's style
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sheet had anything to say about this subject. Lewis described Microsoft's John
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Warden as having an "overripe drawl" and being "Southern"--but yet notes he is
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from Indiana. Through the rest we get Lewis' sensitive transcriptions of "a
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booming hick drawl," culminating in a contrast to Jim Barksdale, who, we are
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told, has escaped hickdom--he "retains only enough of the piney woods patter to
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offer a passing imitation of a good ol' boy when he needs to." (As an aside, I
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wonder how many times the word "hick" recurred in that short piece?)
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Lewis is
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most exposed in his transcriptions. At the end of a string of them, he quotes
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Warden as pronouncing modems "mode ums." Maybe I'm just another piney woods
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hick, but don't we all pronounce it like that? I guess I'll close by quoting a
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comment by Lawrence W. Levine (in Black Culture and Black Consciousness )
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on transcriptions of 19 th century black speech made by whites:
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Even when the
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pronunciation of a given word was precisely the same as that of the collectors,
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their desire to indicate the exotic qualities of black speech led them to
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utilize such misleading and superfluous spellings as wen for "when," fo'k or
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fokes for "folks."
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-- Tom
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Freeland Oxford, Miss.
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I Love
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Lewis
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I just wanted to send a clap
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on the shoulder to Michael Lewis for his Day 3 Dispatch from the Microsoft
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trial. It had me in stitches. What wonderful caricatures he drew of the people
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involved; he brought to life the dynamics of the barely sheathed claws of the
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interactions in the courtroom. It was refreshing to have coverage that pointed
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out, so humorously, the boys' foolishness and one-upmanship that characterize
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this case.
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Thanks for
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a great read.
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-- Heidi
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Housten Bellevue, Wash.
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Slate Fouled Up
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This morning my "Morning
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Delivery" e-mail included the Day 3 Dispatch from the Microsoft trial. The end
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of the article features a prominent "F**k you." I have filters that keep me
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from being subjected to that sort of language in my e-mail. I expect more from
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your publication than the language used by spammers looking to sell me
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porn.
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Foul
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language is a sign of low intelligence. Your writer went for a cheap, shocking
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joke instead of thinking of a clever analogy. You can do better.
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-- Ann
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Porter Lubbock, Texas
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The
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Inescapable George (H.) W. Bush (Jr.)
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Surely I'm
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not the first to inform
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Slate
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that the governor of Texas is
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George W. Bush, not George W. Bush Jr. (See the Oct. 16 "Chatterbox" and "Black Like Whom?" by Brent Staples.) The former president is
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George H.W. Bush. Thus Ann Richards' jibe: "He's missing his H."
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-- Dick
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Lavine Austin, Texas
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Editors' note:
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Thanks for the reminder. We've now corrected our error.
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Black
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Clinton Myths
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I normally do not write to
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the editors of magazines to voice my opinion, because I don't think it will do
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any general good, but at this point I can't see what good being silent does. I
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am a black American and have found it strange that the media have concentrated
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so much on how African-Americans feel about Clinton. It has been my experience
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that our community is only brought into the discussion after every other angle
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has been covered and, people are being pressured into the "right" opinion. I am
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tired of reading that Clinton is somehow black or at least as black as any of
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our other public officials.
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As I read Brent Staples'
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"Black Like Whom?" I saw at least several assumptions run through his
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commentary on my community and public sentiment about us. One assumption is
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that at least 91 percent of African-Americans feel the same way about Clinton
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for the same reasons: He is black, he is great because he comes from a single
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parent home, or he has a similar background, so we can understand him
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better.
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We are not a single-minded
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community that values or devalues Clinton's private adulterous conduct.
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Whatever our general feeling is about Clinton's behavior, why are we being used
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at the tail end of the blitz of political inquiry as a rallying tool to bring
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more people out to vote, to produce more negative opinion against Clinton, and
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to reaffirm the idea that we somehow don't know what is really going on?
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The second assumption that
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comes out is that we don't understand what is happening when a political
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candidate courts our community on one issue and then targets us on another
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issue. Staples runs through a litany of economic gains that have brought
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African-Americans closer to some kind of economic stability (what stability
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that is or what marker he uses to measure that stability is unclear), which
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African-Americans credit Clinton for providing.
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Staples appears to contrast
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the middle-class black community from the lower-class community when it appears
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to fit his framework but to ignore it when it does not fit within his argument.
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It is hard for me to believe that he would ignore the education or criminal
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justice facts--or that African-Americans would ignore the dropping numbers of
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students in college and graduate school programs, the rising level of blacks
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incarcerated, or increasing number of jails. The failure to include the
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holistic view seems even more astonishing given our position in this society,
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when the author reviews what is being said and who is asked.
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I realize that we tend to be
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held up for our nonmainstream views on issues such as the Los Angeles riots,
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O.J., Willie Horton, and a million others. We normally will turn the tide
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against whomever we advocate for or in defense of, but when it comes to the job
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approval rating for the president of United States, it seems like the media
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attention focused on us is misplaced. If our opinion were valued throughout
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this process, I think the media would have noticed a marked difference in how
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we feel about this president, this administration, and the process he has gone
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through in order to reach this phase in the impeachment inquiry. On this issue,
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I doubt that our approval rating is going to bear on the ultimate question of
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whether the entire public will rally around the Republicans as they move to try
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Clinton in the Senate. The negative perception surrounding our community was
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invoked too late in the game for it to do Clinton's opponents any good.
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I end my
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e-mail as I began it, by asking if the author truly believes that a few chicken
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wings given to black preachers, a few honorable mentions and awards to a couple
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of black poets, or visits and speeches to commemorate historic memorials and
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visionaries within the black community are enough to lead blacks to rally
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behind a president who has allowed our community to lose whatever gains were
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given to us by a browbeaten Congress of the war-torn 1960s. And if he does,
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does he think we are gullible enough to buy it as a true understanding by a
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president of our collective blackness?
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--Genevieve Banks
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Odenton, Md.
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True
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Grits
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It was
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quite a surprise to read Brent Staples, the self-appointed expert on what it
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means to be black in America, say in "Black Like Whom?" that "all
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African-Americans have Southern roots." He'd better brush up on history as well
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as geography.
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-- Helen Hopps San
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Miguel, El Salvador
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Brent
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Staples responds: Genevieve Banks claims to have read my essay "Black Like
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Whom?" but seems to have missed its central arguments. She accuses me of
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assuming that African-Americans like Clinton because he is "black." But I argue
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from the beginning that black affection for Clinton stems from: 1) a widespread
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sense among blacks that the economy is doing better by them than ever before;
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2) a deliberate Clinton program to court black churchgoers who make up the
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heart of the black middle class; and 3) Clinton's intuitive understanding that
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the black middle class is basically conservative on the issues of crime, unwed
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motherhood, and welfare. Ms. Banks further accuses me of ignoring black school
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dropout and incarceration rates. To this, I plead guilty. Those factors are
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irrelevant to black approval ratings with respect to Clinton's
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presidency.
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Helen
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Hopps has me dead to rights, however. I did not intend to say that all
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African-Americans have Southern roots. But most do. It may surprise you, Ms.
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Hopps, but the majority of black people--about 55 percent--still live in the
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American South. As late as 1940, nearly 80 percent did. Not much before that,
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the ratio exceeded nine in 10.
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Address
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your e-mail to the editors to [email protected]. You must include your address and daytime
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phone number (for confirmation only).
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