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An Apology to Black Women for Gay America ...

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Speak Your Mind is back! This week, we have a submission from blogger and News & Notes contributor Jasmyne Cannick. She writes about the "serious race issues still at play in gay America."

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Courtesy Jasmyne Cannick

At this year's State of the Black Union, Dick Gregory apologized to President Bill Clinton on behalf of Blacks for our role in allowing Clinton to believe that he was Black.

In that same spirit, I feel compelled to apologize to Charles Knipp on behalf of gays for allowing him to think that he's one of the Black women that he unsuccessfully tries to emulate. I also want to apologize to Black women on behalf of gay America for Charles Knipp.

Knipp's latest cry for help involved (Note: Graphic Image) superimposing my head on some other Black woman's naked body and then tactlessly posting it on his website for my continuing to expose his constant mockery of the Black woman.

Charles Knipp is a self-described forty-five-year-old, fat, gay white man who believes he's on a mission from God. A mission that involves mimicking Black women as his alter ego character Shirley Q. Liquor. Knipp describes Liquor as being "a welfare mother with nineteen kids who guzzles malt liquor, and drives a Caddy." The character is favorite among his core audience whom Knipp describes as being "gay men, their moms, and rednecks."

And while Isaiah Washington was unable to escape the wrath of gay America, Charles Knipp's blackface minstrel show continues to be rewarded by gay Americans to the tune of $90K annually.

Imus may have called Black women "nappy-headed ho's," but it's Knipp who routinely tries to bring that image to life onstage as Shirley Q. Liquor when she tries to recollect the names of her "chirrun" with his skit "Who Is My Baby Daddy? Cheeto, Orangello, Chlamydia, and Kmartina..."

I blame gay America, from the political leaders to the club owners, for turning a blind eye to Knipp's blatantly racist routines that in his words are performed mostly for "gay men, their moms and rednecks." We are the reason that his racist act continues to go nearly undetected on the race radar. And no matter how I feel about gay America, in particular white gay America, as a lesbian, a Black lesbian, by virtue of my sexual orientation, I am reluctantly tied to you as much as you are tied to me.

So I am just as much to blame for failing to help you understand that just because you usurp the Black Civil Rights Movement's strategies and language and proudly display photos of your leaders with late civil rights icons on your websites that doesn't mean that there aren't still very serious race issues still at play in gay America.

I should have told you that Black women continue to remain under attack in this country. And that it doesn't matter what our standing in corporate America, the White House, the media, who we're married to, what our sexual orientation is, how straight and long our hair is, or how light our skin, we are still Black and we are still under attack. Hear me.

I should have sat your leaders down and explained that it is not okay for any white man, straight or gay, to perform in blackface and mock African-American names and holidays. I should have made you understand that many of the same gay nightclubs that book Knipp are owned by the same people that donate money to many of your gay civil rights groups. I should have connected the dots for you. My bad.

It was I who forgot to explain that while RuPaul is African American, he's as disconnected from Black America as Ward Connerly. So when he defends Knipp's act, it should be taken with a grain of salt.

I should have introduced you to Angela Davis, bell hooks, June Jordan, Audre Lorde, Sojourner Truth, Alice Walker, Ida Wells-Barnett, and the plight of the Black woman. Then maybe you'd understand why Charles Knipp's act is so offensive to me as a Black woman. Then maybe you'd care.

Please forgive my shortsightedness. It won't happen again.

Blacks are so often referred to as being the conscience of America. I want you to know that from this day forward, gay America can count on this Black lesbian to be its conscience when it comes to your involuntary and voluntary racist ways.

As for Charles Knipp, some would say that you need therapy. But I say forget therapy, I'm going to tell you this for free.

I'm sorry that you weren't born one of the Black women that you so love to impersonate. I know how beautiful we are and how unfair it is that we are blessed with what your race often has to go out and pay for.

But I say to you, love the skin you're in. Most people in your situation settle for surrounding themselves with Black friends, marrying someone Black, moving into a Black neighborhood, listening to hip hop, watching BET, eating Soul Food, and voting for Barack Obama. Why don't you give it try and leave the act of being Black to those of us who are? We have enough confused Black folks out there without having to take on a confused forty-five-year-old, fat, gay white man who thinks he's Black. -- Jasmyne Cannick

1:09 PM ET | 02-26-2008 | permalink

 

Comments (Send a comment)

Who are you to decide who is or isn't connected to Black America? Ward Connerly and Rupaul are just as much a part of "Black America" as you. They don't have to agree with your politics or opinions in order to be a part of "Black America" You are not the final arbiter of who is or isn't a part of the Community.

Sent by Blake Pierce | 4:02 PM ET | 02-26-2008

ok Deaconess Cannick... you up at the lectern and got the congregation at full attention and they needs a good lesson.. so gimme some mo' preacher... gimme some mo'..knowledge may not set them free but the truth will shine in the light... bright! I gotta read your column since i have always argued that there is this element of global white gay male supremacy underneath the rainbow cloak that firmly works at denying queer/gays of colour their equal human rights despite setting up that human rights campaign affiliate group. Ask any gay white male what they are doing within their own community to eliminate systemic white male supremacy and the racism with it and you can hear the wind blow in the silence. But that is another country...as jimmy baldwin would say...

Sent by K Mjumbe | 3:45 AM ET | 02-27-2008

Preach the word, Ms. Cannick. Thank you for your words of wisdom!

Sent by Bianca Reagan | 1:44 PM ET | 02-27-2008

Jasmyne Cannick, speak truth to power !It takes real courage to put it out there like you did. I love the fact you don't mince words either, keep on, keeping on ! !

Sent by Robert H. | 2:22 PM ET | 02-27-2008

Yup, America loves her Black folks as long as they agree with the status quo. RuPaul is stuck wearing his Paul Lawrence Dunbar mask, and because white America has been allowed to live in ignorance concerning issues of race, they miss the fact that he's not speaking his truth, he's ensuring his survival in a world wher he HAS to appeal to middle-class gay white men. Too bad we have to begin the conversation at zero, it takes that much longer to reach understanding.
OK, my zero conversation starter:
Making fun of a maligned group of people in a group of privaleged people is not free speech, it's slander. White men who have no real life experience of Black women, but celebrate stereotypes of that group are committing a racist act. Period.

Sent by Kamora Herrington | 10:44 AM ET | 02-29-2008

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