Originally posted by DirtyMartini
I am willing to grant that saying the word "noose" is not racist.
With respect to the OP, I am willing to grant that asking if someone knows how to tie a noose is not necessarily racist. Also, school administrators tend to overreact, so the kids may well have gotten a raw deal.
I am willing to grant that the aftermath of the Jena incident has been overblown, six kids did beat up another kid, they shouldn't just get to walk. However, the beginning of that saga, the hanging of a noose in a tree on the grounds of the Jena school, was a racist act. Since that story revolves around a noose and that story has been on 24-7 rotation on the news, nooses have become, in the current US culture, a symbol that stands for lynching. Therefore, any mention or depiction of a noose must be understood, in the current climate, as potentially inflammatory. While that may be beyond the intellectual grasp of the high school students involved, it is pretty obvious to any remotely politically aware adult.
The point of my previous story is that either I was unaware of the potential symbolism of the noose at that time, or, hopefully, that the symbolism was not as strong/not present at that time.
I am willing to grant that saying the word "noose" is not racist.
With respect to the OP, I am willing to grant that asking if someone knows how to tie a noose is not necessarily racist. Also, school administrators tend to overreact, so the kids may well have gotten a raw deal.
I am willing to grant that the aftermath of the Jena incident has been overblown, six kids did beat up another kid, they shouldn't just get to walk. However, the beginning of that saga, the hanging of a noose in a tree on the grounds of the Jena school, was a racist act. Since that story revolves around a noose and that story has been on 24-7 rotation on the news, nooses have become, in the current US culture, a symbol that stands for lynching. Therefore, any mention or depiction of a noose must be understood, in the current climate, as potentially inflammatory. While that may be beyond the intellectual grasp of the high school students involved, it is pretty obvious to any remotely politically aware adult.
The point of my previous story is that either I was unaware of the potential symbolism of the noose at that time, or, hopefully, that the symbolism was not as strong/not present at that time.

Symbols have meanings. I definitely agree that banning their expression is stupid and probably counter-productive, it's silly to think "Oh, it's just a piece of rope/piece of wood set alight/geometric shape on a red background/etc., what's teh big deal?" If someone uses a symbol with a racist history with racist intent, s/he deserves to be called out on it.
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