(Latin: “reduction to absurdity”), in logic, a form of refutation showing contradictory or absurd consequences following upon premises as a matter of logical necessity. A form of the reductio ad absurdum argument, known as indirect proof.
reductio ad impossibile, is one that proves a proposition by showing that its denial conjoined with other propositions previously…
reductio ad impossibile, is one that proves a proposition by showing that its denial conjoined with other propositions previously…
These conversations about gender and race make me really nervous. I know I can't win. I know I can't help but lose. As a man, I benefit from sexism by default, in much the same way that white people, regardless of their personal politics and ethics, benefit from white privilege.
As a black man that loves black women, I often feel that I am damned if I do, and damned if I don't. This is an immutable truth that transcends race, national boundaries, language, ethnicity, and class. We men folk want to say the "right" thing, and by doing so affirm the women we love in our lives, and to offer support to those women who have mentored and guided us. I for one know that if not for the black women in my life, and those loving, interested, and caring white, brown, and yellow women that have shared wisdom, love, and guidance with me, that I wouldn't be the sexual tyrannosaurus that I am today...Ha ha! had you going for a second with that black male feminist crap didn't I?
Seriously, when men and women talk about gender, and specifically, when I talk about gender as a man who happens to be black, I feel like the character Moleman on the Simpsons: I just keep getting hit in the balls regardless of what I say, and I keep getting hit over and over and over again. I know I can't win, but hell, I will keep trying:
4 comments:
my pet peeve is when a black woman thinks she's a strong black queen JUST because she's black and a woman. you ask her what exactly makes her a queen and she'll say discrimination or she got a college degree...who doesn't face discrimination and have a college degree these days?
Or when a black woman using "strong black woman" as a euphemism for acting bitchy. As in "If you don't like me I guess you just can't handle a strong black woman!" [See Omarosa]
Anyway, good post.
How many black women does Omarosa represent?
How many black women go around referring to themselves as "queens"?
Ironically, I think that those women who most often refer to themselves as "strong, black women" tend to be among the most insecure and disempowered of our communities.
^^^^
Bingo.
I have a blind spot when it comes to formal logic and the latin terms commonly used in it, so I don't fully understand reductio ad absurdum as applied to "strong black women."
But I do understand "Thou doth protest too much." "I'm a strong black woman" is in the same lineup as "I'm not gay," "I'm more militant than you are," "I'm not racist...some of my best friends are black," "I'm a strong black man," or any other such defensive claim blared via loud voice, bumper sticker, t shirt, etc.
Whether black women are supposed to be strong or weak depends on the needs of the speakers. When the goal is to create sympathy, then black women are vulnerable, symbolically battered, and in need of protection because their self-esteem and image is under assault from black men and the mainstream media; when it comes to asserting their independence, then they are the strongest people on earth.
It reminds me of a joke (it might have been Jim Gaffigan). It was about how old people love to say how wise they are and how their life experience gives them an advantage over naive young people, but when they are inevitably swindled out of their money by a scam artist, they become "old and confused."
pronounced STRAWNG
I wish that phrase had never left the t-shirt stage.
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