As a Black woman, I’ve been indoctrinated to believe that Black vernacular, hairstyles and ways of expression are unacceptable at work.
Oh boy.
Black vernacular
Black vernacular is southern vernacular - and southern vernacular is in turn English peasant vernacular from the 1700's.
If you're saying 'It do', 'It be', 'It ain't', you're speaking the way lowly wretches of England's underclass once did. Your tongue is colonized and there is nothing you can do about it. Every trace of your African origin has been beaten out of your language so thoroughly that you don't even know it's gone.
Black hairstyles
The hairstyles that will get you in trouble are not 'black hairstyles', they are black American 'LOOK AT MEEEEE!' hairstyles. You don't see these hairstyles in Africa. And for the most part we didn't see them in the west until the 70s, with the worst styles not appearing until the 80's after the black american family unit had been destroyed and the war on drugs had created a massive black market (pun unintended) and sucked a generation of black teen boys into street drug gangs.
TL;DR VERSION:
The things black Americans center their identity around have nothing to do with being black. They are the fabrications of destroyed, derascinated people clinging to anything and everything that they can use to separate themselves from everyone else. It's truly a pitiable state of affairs.
They know nothing of themselves or their own history and suck down whatever some marxist academic tells them.
As a Black woman, I’ve been indoctrinated to believe that Black vernacular, hairstyles and ways of expression are unacceptable at work.
Oh boy.
Black vernacular
Black vernacular is southern vernacular - and southern vernacular is in turn English peasant vernacular from the 1700's.
If you're saying 'It do', 'It be', 'It ain't', you're speaking the way lowly wretches of England's underclass once did. Your tongue is colonized and nothing you can ever do about it. Every trace of your African origin has been beaten out of your language so thoroughly that you don't even know it's gone.
Black hairstyles
The hairstyles that will get you in trouble are not 'black hairstyles', they are black American 'LOOK AT MEEEEE!' hairstyles. You don't see these hairstyles in Africa. And for the most part we didn't see them in the west until the 70s, with the worst styles not appearing until the 80's after the black american family unit had been destroyed and the war on drugs had created a massive black market (pun unintended) and sucked a generation of black teen boys into street drug gangs.
TL;DR VERSION:
The things black Americans center their identity around have nothing to do with being black. They are the fabrications of destroyed, derascinated people clinging to anything and everything that they can use to separate themselves from everyone else. It's truly a pitiable state of affairs.
They know nothing of themselves or their own history and suck down whatever some marxist academic tells them.