okay so the skinny jeans didn't work out for me so well …

Posts Tagged ‘class


In the wake of this new attention to what many consider to be a new “class war” amongst African-Americans, which one can quickly catch up on in the media, you’re rather hard pressed to remember those better times in which Blacks had a common cause to stand up against. It is easy to look at the situation that is occurring in older rebuilt neighborhoods in our inner cities in which middle class African-Americans have returned to neighborhoods that were once impoverished to suggest that a new influx of Blacks into the middle class which surpasses that of the percentage of those in poverty is partially responsible for this phenomenon. Everyone points to the idea that we had to survive in a world with limited opportunities, and that being lumped together was actually a good thing because it forced us to find ways to get along and created an atmosphere in which we were actually more empathetic to what others had to go through. This isn’t a totally new phenomenon though; middle class, college educated African-Americans left the ghettos for old neighborhoods in a different part of town that other races were moving out of forty years ago; they did not have to live amongst the poor then, and if anything it is the children of that generation’s children who have bought into the idea that living in a rebuilt inner-city is chic, and that this is a new way of keeping up with the Jonses. This was before many were able to leave the city altogether for suburbia. These days people want to get away from inner-suburbia and neighborhoods which now have some of the crime that plagued the inner city at the time that the suburbs were being built as poorer residents from the city are leaving some of the same re gentrified areas that African-Americans are moving to.

This is a third generation of ghetto “escapee’s” that are returning back to the inner city for all of the wrong reasons, that is completely divorced from not only inner city life, but a “Black Experience” that was typical of life as an African-American as recently as the eighties. Outside of our socioeconomic condition, and the idea that increased access to mainstream society separates us there are still plenty of cultural forces that can act as a common ground to unite us. The only thing that has really changed, is if you want to connect with African-Americans that have experienced life differently than you, or do not feel that you have as much in common as the next person, you are going to have to make more of a concerted effort to be a part of the community as the next person. Personally, there are always going to be individuals who wish to use the access to high society they can purchase with the money they have to isolate themselves away from the society they once knew, and other individuals who were never poor to begin with that are just ignorant to the next man’s struggle, this is just the way that it is.

American cities have a rich history that is appreciated by some, forgotten by others. Neighborhoods go through different stages in their existence, and it is not unusual for residents to move into an area they know nothing about, not to want to know anything about the details that contribute to the character and identity of the area in which they live. At the same time, while the Black middle class returns to some of the same neighborhoods working class individuals had built up and maintained for years over a half century ago they may learn something about the sacrifices that were made in order for them to be able to live the type of life they take for granted that they probably are not that willing to explore or that enthused about confronting. If nothing else, it shows us that the hard learned lessons of life in the city have not changed, and that the spiritual undertone that took the city through the past, will unite and move the city into the future as America’s metropolis reinvent themselves for the twenty-first century.


much has been made about Bill Cosby’s statements about poor, inner-city youth. granted, Cosby may have made his statements before, and his position may mirror those of “true” civil rights leaders of the past, as his supporters are quick to point out, but at the end of the day, one cannot take his statements into consideration without taking a look at the real divide between those poorer African-Americans that are stuck in our ghettos and those that are well to do in our middle class, as well as those that have truly made it and are rich.

my own experience has been that it is easy to go with the flow and only hang around other blacks and whites as “privileged” as yourself, than to go against the grain and deal with blacks that aren’t as fortunate as you are. ideally, being college educated would have “shielded” me from having to digress and deal with the “lower class” of African-Americans. but that’s such a * joke it’s ridiculous, I mean, can you really humor me any more than I already am. for one, for such a prestigious Black university, the majority of those students came from lower, or outright poor, communities. don’t tell anyone, but there is a serious outreach program to get poor students into HBCUs because quite honestly, there are as many, if not more, middle class or rich blacks that choose to go to the public, largely Caucasian universities as it’s chic to take advantage of opportunities you formerly couldn’t because you were excluded from being able to partake of them, as opposed to building something of your own. too many of us do it these days. I found myself almost caught up in it as my own college trips included visiting largely Protestant, Christian institutions where I would be even harder pressed to find another African-American as I did in high school. Certainly I knew better.

once I did get into school though, I found that campus life was predominated by Greek organizations, which appeared on the surface to deal more with cliques and society than they did actually giving back to the communities they so readily represented. a few too many parties, a bit too much status. entirely too much rhetoric.

if we’re so happy and content with bourgeois society why do so many of us slum in the ghettos forsaking an education to learn about inner city life? Why are so many of us striving to be Kanye West? If the only thing separating the upper class from the lower class is French designers and European automobiles, as opposed to baggy jeans and the subway what difference does it make how some of us talk and act, if the rest of us are doing it in private?

i don’t question that the civil rights leaders aren’t doing all that they can, or that they’re in it for themselves, or whatever. i don’t even really have that much of an issue with what Bill Cosby or anyone else had said on the matter, or not. but i wonder, if what we have to be so proud of to begin with truly exists, or if it isn’t just a convenient way to pretend to create some type of status or differentiation between the haves or have nots, or just another illusion …

therefore if i knew better; i’d strive harder to work for that life where i don’t have to concern myself, so much, with that one could consider to be, well, an embarassment, “blight”, on what so many of us are supposed to be working to get away from. then again, it’s not quite so “bad”, yet the irony is, that one would even have to take such a thought into consideration to begin with, particularly when it was just yesterday, that so many of us were ready to die, just to enjoy much of what we take for granted, yet don’t respect, today …