Submariner said...
David Mills, you're right that acid remarks don't assail the quality of your argument. But the tacit avoidance by you and Byrdeye to address the historical evidence provided by Craig Nulan and Michael Fisher effectively places you in intellectual limbo.

The irrefutable fact is that blacks in America made remarkable progress after the Civil War. (I'll leave in abeyance the antebellum era.) Read the memoirs of U.S. Grant. See the BookTV After Words interview with Philip Dray, author of Capitol Men. Until very recently, two parent households were the norm for black folks. Paul Robeson, despite a pristine academic career and graduating from law school alongside a future SCOTUS justice, couldn't be gainfully employed as a lawyer. So that shit about K and R games is wack.
From the Thirties to the Fifties Sal Mineo, James Cagney, Elvis Presley, and Marlon Brando were the portraits of delinquent youths and hard-boiled criminals. Read colonial American and Shakespearean English descriptions of the Irish.
During this past election cycle, even Barack Obama and his entrenched middle-class supporters were featured as the Giant Negro, a chimerical delusion of insecure white psychopaths. I spoke to nurses who told me straightfaced that their husbands were arming themselves and stockpiling their households for inevitable racial conflicts.
In the end, if you can't muster even ten minutes to scroll through some linkes, then it's doubtful that you'll ever make a sincere effort to examine Derek Bok's Shape of the River or Adam Fairclough's A Class of Their Own. You and Byrdeye will remain content to exist in an Aristotelian universe comprised of an intellectual silo.