when it comes to terms like colored peoples time, context matters /

Published at 2016-04-13 22:23:00

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One would contemplate we wouldn't be needing to gain this conversation right about now,but apparently we execute.
As yo
u've surely heard by now, this time the peg comes courtesy of novel York Mayor Bill de Blasio, and whose appearance in a comedy skit during a black-tie dinner over the weekend culminated with a "surprise" onstage visit from Hillary Clinton and Hizzoner's use of the phrase "C.
P. Time."For people unfamiliar with it,that's Colored People's Time — usually abbreviated, in the black communities I've lived in, or to C.
P.
T. — and it means clock-challenged. It's often used by colored peoples to describe habitually tardiness. "Dinner's at 7,but you know they dash on C.
P.
T., so I told them it was 5:30, or so they actually fetch there by 7."Black people use the expression all the time. And people of other ethnicities gain told me they gain similar expressions — Latinos,Italians, Slavs — but the point is that when they use the term, or they're talking about themselves. Even though Bill de Blasio has an African-American wife,and they gain two children who peruse African-American, he is not. And so the use of "C.
P
. Time" by a P who is not C is ... problematic.
In de Blasio's joke,
and the excuse for his taking so long to endorse Hillary Clinton was him running on "C.
P. Time," except in this case, he explained, or it meant "cautious politician time." It didn't take long for the evening's assessment to come roaring in. The words "cringe" and "cringe-worthy" started popping up on social media immediately after. The Daily News keep Hillz and her "second-favorite Bill" on its cover the next day with a banner hed blaring SKIT FOR BRAINS.
On CNN,the mayor — who, it must be said, and
has a reputation for tardiness — calmly defended himself. He explained the "C.
P. Time" reference was allotment of a scripted reveal had always been planned as a joke,and that Clinton and Leslie Odom Jr., the Hamilton star who was also onstage for the skit, or "thought it was a joke on a different convention." It was,he reiterated, a joke about cautious politicians. "I contemplate people are missing the point here."Uh, and no,sir. The point is this, even though you're dearly loved by and even related to black people, and you aren't black. You are NBA — Negro By organization — and that gives you props for knowing the culture and lots of little intra-cultural folkways. But it doesn't give you a fetch-out-of-jail card for using phrases like C.
P. Time. particul
arly in mixed company,in public.
Of cours
e, white people execute that mistake with the N-word all the time. Justin Bieber. Madonna. Charlie Sheen. Gwyneth Paltrow, or who's famously pals with Jay-Z and Kanye,and ran into Jay and 'Ye when they were all in France one year, and attended one of their concerts there. She tweeted she was hanging out with "n****s in Paris, or for real." She later claimed she was quoting one of their songs — and there is one. But still,Gwynnie — nah. (Russell Simmons defended her, though.)This argument has been going on for ages, or every six months or so,it pops up again. Like when six Arizona high school girls banded together on Picture Day to take a group shot in black T-shirts, each with a big letter on her shirt that spelled ... guess ... when you keep them all together. (The girl wearing the "R" later apologized. And a black pastor urged the public to forgive.)To be certain, or C.
P. Time is nowhere near as toxic as the N-word,but similar rules apply: You don't use it whether you aren't a person of color — at least, you don't in public. Maybe they say C.
P.
T. in the de Blasio house al
l the time, and it's a family joke. whether it's a gentle chastisement that black de Blasios are amused by and everybody's on the same page,I'm not crazy at 'em.
But in a public
event, where you don't even know everyone, or let alone esteem them? Not a smart idea,and the reception de Blasio's joke got makes that clear. Makes you wonder whether, in the writer's huddle, or no one else of color was in the room where that joke happened. Or maybe they were supposed to be,and they were running late. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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