Same Level As The Dumbest Black Man example essay topic

757 words
"The Fact of Blackness" Fanon My response to this article was an eye opener. After Fanon got away from the huge mind boggling words, I kind of felt for an extremely short second what it actually felt to be a black man. I myself am a unique mixture of races and I was fortunate to have grown up in such a way that I experienced my two main cultures vividly. I can laugh with George Lopez, and feel the pain, anguish, and laughter that are associated with a Mexican American heritage.

The same goes for Larry the Cable Guy, I can laugh at what he says in his stand comedy routine, because I can relate with my Anglo culture. Going back to how Fanon explains his anguish of being labeled, it's understandable, I've been there, but unlike Fanon, I learned to how to run with racial comments. However, I'm not black and cannot relate to his culture, or how bad for his time it must have been for an average black male. I start with saying blah. I cannot in my mind imagine what it was for Fanon growing up, but he never embraces love for who his is.

The racial slurs and dehumanization is in my opinion not reason enough to write hatred for what you are born into. Not once does he state philosophy on why it's ok to be what he is. Instead he places himself into an "infernal circle" that he is embraced by white people in spite that he is black, but when he has an enemy they claim that it is so not because he is a black man. My own experiences tell me that every bit of what he says is true. I work at an inner city Walgreen's, and I'm told to watch certain people because they look suspicious, when in fact the only crime they commit is being a minority.

I'm sometimes told to not spend too much time on a Mexican customer, because they don't contribute enough money to our store, and to focus on our money crazed white customers, who never get questioned opening up products. I used to get stopped In Walgreen's when I was a freshman in High School. I had to leave my back pack at the door and only one of my companions could come with me at a time. However, I would see plain as day, white students walking in the store at leisure with their book bags on.

I grew up in a farming community where I was an honor student, jammed into class rooms with the rich white farm kids; I always got looked at funny in those classes because my last name didn't fit in logically with being smart. It was weird being considered that it was a strange exception that a person of color could learn at a high level. I had no level of space to make a mistake because they expected it. The same way Fanon speaks of high profession African Americans such as doctors, lawyers, and such. I now work where there is a high percentage of Spanish speaking Mexicans that come trough my store. They get mad at me for not speaking fluent Spanish; all of a sudden I'm utterly white for the first time again.

I ask, do I fit in? No, I don't, I'm a strange monkey in a white bias community, but by simple location I lose it all and become a rich white person somewhere from the Suburbs. However, do I hate it? No I don't, I'm always up to be both, I may not fit in but I don't care either, I'm embraced in my own "infernal circle", but I use it to grow. In the end Fanon illustrates how it feels to have people think upon what and who he is, and them being wrong. He shows how he's stuck by always contradicting what he does by the mere fact that he cant do what he does, or know what he knows because he's black.

Fanon also makes a point to say that he is black and logically the dumbest white person is at the same level as the dumbest black man. To Fanon, I hear you and embrace what you have to say because it still goes on today inside and outside the black man..