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Just Stop Talking About Race!!

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  • Опубліковано 8 тра 2014
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    This video was inspired by:
    NBA Owner Donald Sterling tells his girlfriend, "stop bringing black people to my games"
    deadspin.com/do...
    "Leave Donald Sterling Alone" video by SupDaily06
    • Video
    "Was Banning Donald Sterling The Right Move?" video by SupDaily06
    • Video
    Leslie Jones of SNL defends her slave jokes
    www.washingtonp...
    Kim Kardashian "discovers" racism exists
    jezebel.com/kim...
    My awesome friend Phoebe Robinson wrote about Kim's revelation for xojane and it's a pretty damn good piece
    www.xojane.com/...
    Colorblindness is the new racism
    mic.com/article...
    Colorblind Ideology is a Form of Racism via Psychology Today
    www.psychologyt...
    Why There's No Such Thing As Reverse Racism
    www.dailykos.co...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,7 тис.

  • @rebeccamay7256
    @rebeccamay7256 9 років тому +17

    This is so true... I "didn't see color" until I got in an interracial relationship. I had no choice but to start acknowledging it, which led me to come to the same conclusions as you. Especially because I live in Alabama. I used to walk in stores and other public places without people giving me a second glance. Now when I walk around with my boyfriend, who's black and Puerto Rican, we get stared at all the time, and we often get dirty looks. The problem is that racists see color. If we're going to fight racism, we must fight it on their terms, by using the same line of thinking that racists do. That way we can truly debunk and eliminate racism, if that's at all possible. We have to see color because it exists. Not to mention that color can be an indication of heritage, which can be a source of pride for many people.

  • @Davidoutt
    @Davidoutt 10 років тому +336

    Being "colour blind" is a ridiculous concept. By ignoring the colour of another's skin you inherently ignore the privilege and/or disadvantages people have in society based on their race. People who "don't see the colour of someone's skin" ignore the racial inequalities that are so deep-rooted in our society and, I would argue, actually perpetuate racist ideas (even though they may not mean to do so).
    Racism is such a complex topic and can exist at even "micro"-levels and I applaud you for always talking about it in thought-provoking ways.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +53

      thumbs way way up

    • @jacobhamblin5875
      @jacobhamblin5875 10 років тому +2

      I'm pretty sure I'm one of the color blind people you talk about, and while I admit a level ignorance that should be corrected, I think I'm reasonably justified in my position.
      First off, I attribute my color blindness to my mother, who comes from a long line of racists, refusing to pass that bias down to me, which I am extremely proud, and thankful to her for. When I asked if I could invite a boy from school over, she highly supported it because she thought me having a black friend would be good for me. We've since become best friends, but when I asked my mom why his skin was different, I'm pretty sure she just said something along the lines of "that's just how some people are," because she wasn't comfortable discussing it. Around 7th grade, I started noticing people make rude comments to him, and I quickly adopted a zero tolerance policy for that, but I was often called a hypocrite being so anti-racist, no matter what race you're biased against. My general policy is that I support pride in your own race, and support events like MLKJ day, but dislike treating people differently by race, even in a positive way. I feel like people are just doing it because it is a culturally popular thing to do, and not because they genuinely lack any negative biases and possess actual appreciation for someone else's circumstances. Is that really such a bad policy, or do I not understand the topic well enough?

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +5

      Jacob Hamblin this article from psychology today explains why colorblindness is a form of racism www.psychologytoday.com/blog/colorblind/201112/colorblind-ideology-is-form-racism

    • @jacobhamblin5875
      @jacobhamblin5875 10 років тому +1

      +chescaleigh
      Thanks for the link
      A few disclaimers; when I called myself colorblind, I never meant to imply your skin or your cultural upbringing is shameful in any way, nor do I actively try to ignore someone's race. I just don't believe someone's appearance has much significance until I understand their specific context and see how they've reacted to it.
      I do however see the potential of her multiculturalism. I've always been decent at her third point, fostering personal friendships, and I'll admit I could do better about the first two points, but I'm a little sketchy on what the differences would be. My friend for instance is constantly asked if he plays basketball because he's tall, black, and athletic, and he is a good basketball player, but he's also a brilliant student, accepted into MIT and planning on majoring in chemical engineering. Should we celebrate how successful African Americans are in the NBA, or celebrate my friend's success outside of that stereotype? I don't really understand how we can celebrate both, and valuing one over the other makes it frowned upon to do the other sometimes.
      Also, I have trouble ignoring the hypocrisy of popular culture. Things like Asians making fun of whites for being dumb, whites making fun of Mexicans for being poor, and Mexicans calling Asians nerds happen all the time, and there's rarely any backlash. I don't understand how the fights for equality have grown so independent, and everyone's losing because of it.
      Now, I realize I'm just a stupid white boy who don't know nothin, and as cliche as that sounds, I really don't know much, I just don't quite see how this'll work out.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +9

      Jacob Hamblin again, i understand your intentions are good when describing yourself as colorblind. which is what i said in the video and is even outlined in that link. it's important to remember that intent vs impact. you can intend one thing and cause another unintentionally. doesn't mean you're a bad person or "don't know nothin". but again, there's nothing wrong with acknowledging race or how it plays a part in who someone is. YOU don't see it as having significance until you know the person, which is fine. but the fact is it has a lot of significance for most POC. and that's OK! the point is that you don't see it as negative. not seeing race as important (until proven) isn't the solution. being colorblind or "not seeing race as important to who you are" isn't the solution to racism and it quite simply is erasure.
      with your friend, yes, stereotyping him is wrong. i think it's possible to be proud of his accomplishments as an African American and as a good student IF that's what he wants. If his background is an important part of who he is, he has every right to talk about that or have that mean something to him. He doesn't have to pick one over the other. We can also celebrate AA's in sports without stereotyping every black person as a potential good basketball player etc. Equality is asking to be seen as individuals and not a monolith. No one is suggesting that one achievement should be valued over another. But at the end of the day equality is about equal treatment and equal opportunities.

  • @ExtraordinaryDork
    @ExtraordinaryDork 10 років тому +21

    Would a white person be able to make a video about this?

    • @planetnubia0
      @planetnubia0 9 років тому +5

      Actually yes, but you can't talk about black racism without talking about white racism which is institutional compared to black racism (rooted in animosity/spite).

    • @ecks2087
      @ecks2087 9 років тому

      Did u say white racism was institutional??

    • @AlxMar5
      @AlxMar5 9 років тому

      Christopher Shakur Yes, they did. Racism against people of color is institutional racism.

    • @Music_Lover0612
      @Music_Lover0612 6 років тому

      Stop race baiting. White people have made videos like this and only received backlash from other white people.

  • @nylina3646
    @nylina3646 9 років тому +20

    "I look to a day when people will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. - Martin Luther King, Jr."
    Seems like we are going backwards and ever farther from MLKs dream. *sigh*

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  9 років тому +22

      Mistress Midnight sigh. I can't stand it when people try to use MLK's words to stop conversations about racism.

    • @nylina3646
      @nylina3646 9 років тому +7

      Trying to stop? oh no. I'm saying lets get over it already. We can talk about it for sure. Nothing wrong with that. But the "See color" movement is racist to its core and a huge step backwards.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  9 років тому +17

      Mistress Midnight seeing race isn't the problem, racism is. there's nothing wrong with acknowledging that i'm black. that's not setting anyone backwards.

    • @nylina3646
      @nylina3646 9 років тому +4

      I agree with that. my issue isn't with seeing someones race but more the "See color" movement which says to treat people differently based on race. You know lift one up while pushing one down. That is what is taking us backwards. If someones race makes you treat them differently then that's the definition of racism

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  9 років тому +15

      Mistress Midnight people who treat others as less than because of their race are racists. you shouldn't lump those people in with people of color who acknowledge that colorblindness isn't the solution to racism.

  • @SenseiAishitemasu
    @SenseiAishitemasu 10 років тому +69

    'You can't solve a problem by not talking about it.' Lordt Jesus thank you

    • @renko1051
      @renko1051 6 років тому +4

      ua-cam.com/video/I3cGfrExozQ/v-deo.html
      It was said by Morgan Freeman you idiot. And he is right. But, a diferent person of another race say it and it´s racism "ahhhhh i am trigerred" Don´t lie, it isn´t said only for "the white demons". And it´s true, don´t talk about it bitch. There is NO problem, you are making it up, as you asian name.

    • @Tyreece190
      @Tyreece190 6 років тому +3

      Ren Ko i heard every word what Morgan Freeman said but it doesn't matter if we talk about it or not it still exists

    • @filipenegreiros9557
      @filipenegreiros9557 2 роки тому

      Its literally solved in one generation if everyone stopped talking about racism.One.

    • @allaboutthemurzic
      @allaboutthemurzic 2 роки тому +2

      @@Tyreece190 No it doesnt
      Race is a man made idea

    • @Tyreece190
      @Tyreece190 2 роки тому +1

      @@allaboutthemurzic but the prejudice still exists everywhere so.........

  • @chescaleigh
    @chescaleigh  10 років тому +111

    ugh. i'm on my phone and accidentally deleted someone's comment. I can't remember what their user name is, but if you've noticed your comment is missing, i'm really sorry. i don't delete comments because i disagree with them, it was a complete error on my part ;P

    • @MaereJaneMan
      @MaereJaneMan 10 років тому +4

      Right... An "accident"

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +71

      MaereJaneMan yeah. it was an accident. which is exactly why i posted this comment. ya know i could've....just said nothing.

    • @Logan0813
      @Logan0813 10 років тому +5

      chescaleigh I've got a question, do you prefer the term Black or African-American? I never use African-American because it sounds like "not true American". As a White man I've never heard term European-American used towards me and think it would be weird if people did.....just wondering your personal take on it.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +26

      AegonTheConqueror I don't have a problem with either. I don't think AA makes me sound any less American. My blackness is part of who I am, so just "American" wouldn't accurately describe me. that's the beauty of being able to self identify. You can choose whatever you feel most comfortable with :)

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +25

      عــصــام أحــمــد ONE channel out of hundreds dedicated to highlighting black people because we are so often left out of mainstream media is not a contradiction. not to mention, BET is owned by white people...

  • @BlackkCobra
    @BlackkCobra 10 років тому +148

    The idea that we should all treat each other as equals is beautiful, but treating other people with equal amounts of respect isn't the same as ignoring what makes them different. Equality is about recognizing people as different and respecting those differences.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +13

      AMEN!

    • @1perle
      @1perle 10 років тому

      SunMaster212 what kind of double standards? Do you have an example?

    • @juggernautk.captain5845
      @juggernautk.captain5845 9 років тому +8

      What you described is *not equality, but *equity*. Equity is not necessarily equality.
      Also, focusing on differences is what gave rise to the mass discriminating and segregation eras in human history. It is one of the biggest leaps backwards anyone could suggest, and this is coming from a minority.

    • @BlackkCobra
      @BlackkCobra 9 років тому +1

      Juggernaut K. Captain That's because the focus was _negative_.
      You need to recognize people for what they are in order to respect them.
      Imagine telling a really important woman in your life that you didn't see them as a woman. Think about what that would suggest.
      When women in the 19th century demanded equality, they didn't want you to not see them as women, they wanted you to recognize them as women and _respect_ them as women.
      Growing up as a certain race, gender or sexuality, shapes your personality and almost feels like the core of your identity. As Franchesca pointed out in this video: black people want you to acknowledge them as black. They want you to see their struggles growing up as a minority.

    • @van7915
      @van7915 5 років тому +1

      Aveline De Grandpré no equality is not seeing the difference. We see we’re all human and we respect everyone. If people talk about differences we’re going to effect the little kids the future generation who do not see skin color. If we want to solve racism stop talking about because the future generations will not have it they want even know racism.

  • @bibliophilereads
    @bibliophilereads 10 років тому +38

    I hate when people say "NOT ALL WHITE PEOPLE" -.- way to try to derail the conversation, buddy! Great video as always, your videos are always so spot on!

    • @TheClashsBadSpanish
      @TheClashsBadSpanish 10 років тому +6

      Juuso Peltoniemi Since there are "far more important things" for you to worry about than discussing racism, why are you trolling the comments to this video about racism? Where are all your IMPORTANT THINGS?
      And "white people" just means people who others would always consider white. That's all it means. Go argue about whether a tomato is a vegetable or a fruit somewhere else.

    • @TheClashsBadSpanish
      @TheClashsBadSpanish 10 років тому +1

      Juuso Peltoniemi Again, not sure where all your important things are. You're still here.
      1. You are not personally responsible for the slave trade. Okay? Congratulations.
      2. I actually don't have any white guilt--I just recognize that my whiteness has made my life easier than many other peoples' lives in ways that I'll never be able to calculate. Audre Lorde writes that white guilt isn't actually a useful thing; it just puts the focus on white people's feelings once again, instead of addressing the problem of racism.
      3. You're taking this entire discussion about racism as personally directed at you. It's not. I don't think you invented white supremacy. But trolling this page with derailing comments like "Tim Wise isn't white" seems to say that you don't want us to be having this discussion, which puts you on the side of the debate that likes to pretend that white supremacy doesn't exist. In other words, you're in perfect line with the people who say, "Just stop talking about race." Way to completely ignore the points in Chescaleigh's video because you were blinded by defensiveness.

    • @danw1374
      @danw1374 4 роки тому

      Well thats no different to the "Not all muslims are....etc" argument.

  • @Tony_BrookfieldMedia
    @Tony_BrookfieldMedia 10 років тому +19

    Conclusions
    1) race matters
    2) we are all at different stages of acceptance and development
    3) we all grow up (and move on).
    Good luck.

    • @RoronoaZoro-ii3ig
      @RoronoaZoro-ii3ig 5 років тому +2

      Tony Magik agreed

    • @allaboutthemurzic
      @allaboutthemurzic 2 роки тому

      Also race isnt real
      Its purely a man made idea
      Theres no dna evidence that backs it existing

  • @chescaleigh
    @chescaleigh  9 років тому +28

    @Byron Friday No, there's nothing hypocritical about calling my audience friends. It's quite telling that you go around leaving negative comments but don't enable the ability to reply. Hypocritical much?

  • @helloxtomorrow
    @helloxtomorrow 10 років тому +16

    Thanks for making this video! I agree 100% and have to deal with the same issues regarding inequality towards the LGBT community. It seriously baffles me when people say "I don't see the need for gay and trans people to come out to everyone. We're all people and that shouldn't matter!" Yes, that's very true. However, things aren't going to get any better for LGBT people if we just ignore their identities altogether. Like, there are countries where being openly gay is punishable by life in prison and/or death. Ignoring these problems isn't going to help us reach a solution.

  • @becathist
    @becathist 10 років тому +8

    Perfect place to share this, one of my favorite quotes in response to those who claim they don't see race. “The best way to dehumanize someone while claiming you’re not is to believe you are just the same. You erase their experiences and perspective, their struggles and obstacles, their unique way of having to deal with those things in a world that also erases them. With the words, ‘but humans are humans’ or the bullshit dramatics of ‘we all bleed red’ normal people can simply pretend that if we all did things the way they did, then everything would work out okay. But, yes, we all bleed red but you don’t treat a papercut the same way you treat a gash, you don’t treat an infected wound the same way you treat one that isn’t, you don’t treat a wound to the leg the same way you treat a wound to the gut. You are not acknowledging someone’s personhood when you ignore the very things that make their lives different than yours, and when you refuse to understand that their circumstances have given them their own perspective that is just as valid as yours. More valid in fact - their perspective about their experiences that you haven’t been through is far more valid than anything you could ever think about it.”

  • @CubanPrincezz3
    @CubanPrincezz3 9 років тому +4

    Ugh! I hate when people say, "Love is colorblind. I don't see their color. Blah blah blah."
    The color of my skin is part of my identity. If someone is colorblind they couldn't possibly know how to love me or where to start if they choose not to see me for me. In order to get to know my heart you have to look at my skin. (Ex: Racist judge you based on your skin color, which restricts them access to your heart.)
    Love is color blessed- meaning you see my color and embrace it, accept it and love it.
    Great video! Thanks for sharing!

    • @kekenah2567
      @kekenah2567 8 років тому +1

      Bro then they say "i like black ____ because" but you don't see race oh ight

    • @CubanPrincezz3
      @CubanPrincezz3 8 років тому +2

      Right! Some old guy came up to me and said, "You're pretty for a black girl, and I love your afro. I grew up in a time where black women wore their hair like this all the time."
      WHAT DOES THAT EVEN MEAN? Can't I just be pretty, because I'm a woman?

  • @wanderback
    @wanderback 10 років тому +45

    Talking and discussing and having an actual conversation can help. It doesn't do everything, but it can help. That's important.

  • @jouelzy
    @jouelzy 10 років тому +119

    Girl, you are so brave! Bless your heart cause *woo-sah*, I'm going to light some candles in your honer and say 'ashe' twenty times in hopes that the mass public get the point of this video and the depths of the message you're trying to spread without you having to respond to out of place negativity. P.S. I really like that blue background, it really compliments your skin tone.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +13

      ha! thanks doll!

    • @notrub225
      @notrub225 10 років тому +4

      Agreed, bless you for bringing these issues to the UA-cam platform. UA-cam comment threads can get so troll-y and immature! You are brave. (and funny!)

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +3

      thanks Michael Ray!

    • @Wtahc
      @Wtahc 6 років тому +2

      yeah, well done

  • @DamarisJohnsonnakomiah
    @DamarisJohnsonnakomiah 9 років тому +25

    I hate when people say they are colorblind and don’t see race. All that is doing is ignoring the plight of that race.

    • @bombria
      @bombria 9 років тому +7

      Here is my culturally white perspective on this. I, personally, look at all people as individuals. Looking at people as a representative of a race, color, creed, belief system, etc. is just plain wrong. That being said, I still feel compelled to have sympathy for those who have experienced institutionalized racism. I think this is where white culture fails. Even white people experience racism on a personal level, but most do not see the difference between personal and institutional racism. I think coming out as an atheist, while not comparable to race based oppression by any means, has at least given me a better perspective. In short, while I consider myself "colorblind" to a certain extent, we should not stop talking about racism until it is no longer a pervasive problem. So now firmly established on the Middle Path, I am ready to get run over by both sides of the argument. :-)

    • @appaalle
      @appaalle 9 років тому +4

      Ebony Atheist I'm color blind... I'm offended by your racist comment to my fellow colorblindies

    • @DamarisJohnsonnakomiah
      @DamarisJohnsonnakomiah 9 років тому +4

      appaalle colorblind ignores the plight of a person’s culture. The struggles that race go through. If I am being followed in the store because the owner thinks that all Black people are thieves and criminals...please tell me how can a Colorblind person even SEE or UNDERSTAND this situation?

    • @DamarisJohnsonnakomiah
      @DamarisJohnsonnakomiah 9 років тому +1

      appaalle Racist comment? What makes it racist if I am pointing out something that I particularly go through as a Black woman living in a state that is predominately racist. I can tell you are a White person by your response. Did I say a race? No I didn’t...so someone is obviously feeling guilt. 

    • @bombria
      @bombria 9 років тому

      Ebony Atheist: I think (hope?) that appaalle was being facetious.

  • @chescaleigh
    @chescaleigh  10 років тому +155

    @ras roe for some reason i can't reply directly to your comment....i disagree. i don't believe in "us vs. them" and if you really believe that then you truly don't know me or anything about me. i have no problem with people being confused about racial issues. that's ok! that's why i make videos, create content about race, talk at schools and respond to emails from people that are confused and want to understand how to be allies. the fact that you believe that expressing my frustration with these common derailing comments makes me, "part of the problem" says that you didn't understand this video and you're main problem with it is that....i'm talking about you. ah yes, let me "insist" on being marginalized! life will be so much better if i can just keep being oppressed! girl, bye.

    • @lochofmceo
      @lochofmceo 10 років тому +16

      You just ethered everybody

    • @rachaelvaughan1017
      @rachaelvaughan1017 8 років тому

      I have a question or opinion regarding race and I wasn't sure where to write it or if you have done a video on it since in new here. has anyone noticed how some people within any race gets upset over someone of that same race being too "light or dark" like saying someone isn't white enough or black enough and that some of the racial issue that we all have come from within are own race?

    • @rachaelvaughan1017
      @rachaelvaughan1017 8 років тому

      I have a question or opinion regarding race and I wasn't sure where to write it or if you have done a video on it since in new here. has anyone noticed how some people within any race gets upset over someone of that same race being too "light or dark" like saying someone isn't white enough or black enough and that some of the racial issue that we all have come from within are own race?

    • @joemay5
      @joemay5 7 років тому +1

      I'm white, and I'm sorry that I'm white and even though I've never met you I'm oppressing you and causing your life to be miserable. I also apologize that I work hard and studied to get where I am and it's clearly my fault that I have a good life. Black people are being oppressed by nobody, you're here talking on the internet doing what you want / need to do, earn probably a lot of money and have a great life, notice how noone is stopping you? any black / white person could do what you're doing and have a great life, however they don't or aren't because PEOPLE don't want to do certain things, such as work or learn in school, or want a proper job and prefer to deal drugs, you aren't born a drug dealer or a civil engineer, you LEARN these things from you ENVIRONMENT, its a CULTURAL thing not a RACE thing. So yes. Please. Stop talking about race.

    • @ThulaniII
      @ThulaniII 6 років тому

      Lalalaaa

  • @Ishtarthemoon
    @Ishtarthemoon 8 років тому +8

    yep, just now one of my (white) friends told me he was so 'exhausted' hearing about people complaining and bitching about nothing in response to Shane Dawson's blackface thing, when I was trying to tell him that his 'stereotypical black girl voice', while being funny, might be perpetuating a harmful stereotype that dehumanises people. I didn't present it like that, of course, but nonetheless, he didn't want to hear it so i just pointed out his privilege and said he's lucky that he can choose to ignore it but unfortunately, i can't. Thankyou so much for these videos Chesca, I'm so sorry you have to deal with people's hurtful comments but at least it shows you are reaching the people who really need to hear your message! Added to that, your voice is really powerful in helping people like me feel understood and like we are not just being oversensitive and we are not just slowly dying inside because of some 'harmless' microaggressions that come at us from all directions on a daily basis. Not that I want to be stuck in victim mentality, but it's nice to know I'm not the only one and nice to know i'm not making a deal big deal out of nothing. If we all think it's a problem then it must be because insitutional racism is still a fucking problem. And p.s. i've watched a lot of your videos on upworthy and I love what you're doing there as well!

    • @Blake4014
      @Blake4014 8 років тому +1

      +Sundal Roy Sorry, life is tough, its not full of fairies, fluffy rainbows and sunshine. It has a mean side, that means you just need to TOUGHEN THE HELL UP!. I spent many years being bullied in highschool for being different, and I learnt not to let it get to me and solider on through life. Because those who allow themselves to be weak to others, will get crushed and walked all over by others. Simple life lesson I learnt the hard way.
      I am still somewhat sensitive when people insult me for my disability, but I've learnt to rise above it and accept, that people are typically assholes and you need to find people to connect with and ignore the rest.
      I'm a white guy with a disability that made me stand out. I suffered for it, I learnt from it, I gained wisdom to understand how to deal with it. Something this channel host fails to figure out.
      Stuck in narrow scope of reality, mode.

    • @Ishtarthemoon
      @Ishtarthemoon 8 років тому +1

      ***** good for you, well done for rising above! we all have low moments and they are the ones that make it so much sweeter when we finally do rise above it. xxx

    • @Blake4014
      @Blake4014 8 років тому +1

      Sundal Roy Thanks for your kind words. Humans are defective and we just have to learn to live with that fact. x

    • @Ishtarthemoon
      @Ishtarthemoon 8 років тому

      yep!

  • @GlassWisteria
    @GlassWisteria 10 років тому +54

    Stop talking about racism is like when you put spoiled food under carpet and pretend that it's not there. You can smell it but you refuses to acknowledge that smell even exists even though it's everywhere. The racism is not going to go away if you just ignore it and racism is so deeply ingrained in society that you can't solve the problem without identifying it first.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +11

      GlassWisteria love the analogy! thank you!

  • @TeenageJesusSuperstr
    @TeenageJesusSuperstr 10 років тому +21

    Dangit! I'm happy for your job but I'm also a little selfish - cause it means I miss out on having more brilliant videos like this. :D
    Oh well. Again you nailed. Short, light, but still profound. Keep kicking ass!

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +7

      thank you! promise i'll be back sooner than later

  • @anthonys7660
    @anthonys7660 9 років тому +21

    I'm white and whenever I mention race issues around other white people they act like I'm on drugs

  • @pashawasha47
    @pashawasha47 10 років тому +13

    My favorite is "You're white so why do you even care?"
    WELLLLLL aside from the fact that my fiance is a man of color, and that our children will be people of color, I "care" about (read: am outraged by) racism and oppression in all forms BECAUSE THEY'RE SHITTY and shitty things piss me off. I'm all for handing the mic to somebody else who needs to be heard, but in a room full of white folks I feel like it's alright to be that voice for the people who aren't present.

  • @NethDugan
    @NethDugan 10 років тому +57

    Yeah, I used to be part of the 'I don't see race' crowd cause I thought that was a good thing until people online like you started to be heard in places I was at and actually, yeah. It's a band aid, it's ignoring part of you are, it's ignoring the privilege I have and so on so forth. I mean, there have been times I've literally been blind to it and not noticed but I'm really crap with people and it's taken me two years to not mix up these two guys at work though I see 'em every day (they're white, realise how that could sound in this context).
    ANYWAY. Rambling aside, used to be part of that crowd, I'm now not thanks to people like you and I'm sorry if people are harping on at you for it and kudos on sticking with it.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +23

      thanks for being able to admit that and for being open to looking at a new perspective! that's incredibly mature of you

    • @VidiMacbrian
      @VidiMacbrian 10 років тому +1

      Neth: "I'm really crap with people":
      Me too! I'll be describing this interesting person I had a conversation with and somebody will ask "How old was he?" and I'll stop short, unable to even venture a guess. There is actually something called "face blindness" that is an inability to identify different faces the way most people can. You know how celebrities will have totally different makeup and hair and lighting for a photo shoot, but most people can still recognize the celebrity if they look at the image long enough. People with face blindness can't.
      I have never said the "I don't see race" line. I did have this friend, a good looking guy, who I chatted with for two years before he made a comment about being Mexican and I was honestly surprised because it had never come across as an important part of his identity and I honestly hadn't thought about his ethnicity at all until that comment. He was just him.
      Chescaleigh: I am proud of being a woman, and a redhead. I understand that you are proud of being a black woman. Since that is part of your identity, it would be horribly rude of me to ignore it. I feel like it would be just as rude to see a black person and assume that they have struggled terribly as to ignore their skin color, though. It all boils down to getting to know a person. Perhaps the "I don't see race" comment would be better phrased "I won't make assumptions about you based on race. How do you feel your race has affected who you are? How did your hometown affect who you are? How did your first job affect who you are? Wanna gossip about exes? The people who we accept closely do affect who we are, even if we break up with them for really good reasons. If you want to talk about identity, let's get a broader picture than just our skin colors."

  • @OmgItsKriKri
    @OmgItsKriKri 9 років тому +1

    I think you're so down to earth, intelligent and eloquent. Personally I'm sick of all types of discrimination, what people seem to lack is the basic respect and acceptance that everyone deserves regardless of race, religion, sexuality and anything else that differs between people. We all have our own personal experiences, background and culture and it's up to us as people to respect each other. It really bothers me that some people have an issue with that as no one should have it set in their mind that they're superior to other groups of people and that others are inferior to them just because of the colour of their skin. We should be judged by our words and actions, not by the form nature's given us which is beyond our control and should be above our judgement, it's quite sad to think we're all created equal but mankind is what has divided us and turned a lot of weak willed individuals into hateful beings, a toxic mindset is a serious disease. Anyway rant aside, I love you and respect what you stand for. You educate and empower which is what the world needs, the ones who want change for the better need to be empowered and armed with the facts to shut the haters down and the ones who are full of hate need to be educated so that one day maybe they'll learn that the value of all life is equal and change their mind.

  • @chescaleigh
    @chescaleigh  10 років тому +313

    @Ras Roe you must've turned off the ability to reply to your comments via your google+ page. not sure how to fix that. confronting so strongly? you mean....by making a 5 minute video about people who want me to "stop talking about racism"? i don't see anything confrontational in that. why don't you pose the same question for people who insist on demanding that i be silent when i'm speaking up and attempting to promote equality for EVERYONE?. i'm not silent about any issues i'm passionate about, nor do i waste my time telling other people what they should or shouldn't be passionate about. in response to "resist not evil" nothing i've said or done here or anywhere promotes hatred or intolerance towards anyone. regardless of our differences, i treat everyone with respect. even if they don't do the same towards me. suggesting i "turn the other cheek" so to speak is silly when in reality, i do just that. i've not once used slurs or threats against people who do the same to me, and i pride myself on that. but again, speaking out against racism and asking others to respect my desire to do so is not "confronting" anyone.

    • @1991-present
      @1991-present 10 років тому +24

      ***** the answer you Need is far too long for a UA-cam comment.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +22

      ***** here ya go! "The effect of racism and sexism experienced by black women in America: Understanding the relationship between self-determination and resiliency" udini.proquest.com/view/the-effect-of-racism-and-sexism-pqid:2543252611/

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +24

      ***** and here's another journal worth reading "a response to inequality: black women, racism and sexism"
      www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/3173288?uid=3739808&uid=2&uid=4&uid=3739256&sid=21103751553701

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +10

      Nina Serina you're most welcome! it's ok to disagree with me. i don't claim to be an authority on anything, the opinions shared on my channel are just that, my opinions ;) thanks for watching!

    • @matthewblott
      @matthewblott 10 років тому +5

      ***** You stopped making sense after your fourth word.

  • @diedrecallam
    @diedrecallam 10 років тому +7

    "Eat a granola bar and do a yoga pose." LMBO

  • @Voyher_
    @Voyher_ 10 років тому +4

    I have to admit, when I saw that Morgan Freeman quote: “How are we going to get rid of racism? Stop talking about it." I was confused, because silence in every other circumstance where inequality is happening is a kind of corroboration, sanctification through inaction. But I honestly had too much respect for Morgan Freeman to dispute it, even to myself. So I just thought, "Hey, I'm a white girl in Australia. What do I know about racial oppression? I'm probably just missing something" So it's nice to know that the "stop talking about it" mantra doesn't make sense to other people.

  • @tremolo2109
    @tremolo2109 9 років тому +2

    Found this from John's playlist. Subscribed. I appreciate your style/realism/down-to-earthness. I remember as a teenager (I grew up in a neighborhood with very low racial diversity) hearing the "race shouldn't matter, just don't think of people as being a race, we're all humans," and I was all like, "Yea, that sounds right!" And then later as I grew up and got out in the world I heard "race is an important part of identity and appreciating that is not necessarily paired with discrimination," and I was like, "Oh, wow, yes, this."

  • @VictoriaFaye09
    @VictoriaFaye09 9 років тому +4

    "I make noise because I want to be heard." A-fucking-men. Here after John's video and so glad I am. This was very to-the-point without being aggressive or scaring off people who need to come and watch videos like this.

  • @DJsNeverEndingStory
    @DJsNeverEndingStory 10 років тому +8

    Hey Franchesca. I just wanna say I agree with you on these topics. Also wanted to ask; have you heard of White Like Me by Tim Wise? Part of the description of the book says:
    "It is a personal examination of the way in which racial privilege shapes the daily lives of white Americans in every realm: employment, education, housing, criminal justice, and elsewhere."
    He talks from a white perspective obviously. But also he talks about how we should be color conscious and not color blind.

    • @DIVAGIRL10101
      @DIVAGIRL10101 10 років тому

      Is white like me an answer to black like me ?

    • @scribe712
      @scribe712 10 років тому

      Juuso Peltoniemi According to Wikipedia, Tim Wise's paternal grandfather was Jewish (of Russian origin) and the rest of his ancestry is northern European including Scottish. So why do you say he's not White when he is?

  • @jasminegooden
    @jasminegooden 10 років тому +5

    Keep speaking your mind! You made so many valid points. From what I've experienced, the people who dismiss the topic of racism STILL being an issue, are the ones who secretly feel some type of way. People say one thing to your face, but like racist pictures, and hateful pages all over the internet thinking that their "privacy" settings are shielding them. I would actually kind of respect a person more if they just flat out said "hey girl, listen...I kinda have a thing against blacks." Instead, certain people want to continue to uphold this facade of tolerance that doesn't truly exist within them. I've lived in the south my whole life (Alabama), so it may be more extreme here. I'd like to know more experiences from different parts of the USA.

  • @1991-present
    @1991-present 10 років тому +17

    This vid made me subscribe. Love it

  • @JustCallMeWah
    @JustCallMeWah 10 років тому +10

    How is it possible that you have 95 views in 6 MINUTES! haha. I gotta get my channel together!
    Great video! We need to talk about it.

  • @MitchMitchellStories
    @MitchMitchellStories 8 років тому +6

    Way to go. Glad you did this video as a young person; so many younger people seem to want to dodge this issue. Yay! :-)

    • @brokenman58
      @brokenman58 8 років тому +1

      +Mitch Mitchell shes done like a thousand on racism shes still going a year or two later. would be alright if literally half of them weren't complaint about whites disguised as talks about racism lol

    • @MitchMitchellStories
      @MitchMitchellStories 8 років тому

      andrew davis
      LOL! Well, I can't comment on that but I just did one on race because... well, it needed to be said :-)

  • @just_brittny
    @just_brittny 10 років тому +19

    I actually had someone tell me that the best thing to do was mind my own business, instead of standing up against a problem. Words CANNOT explain how much I wanted to introduce her face with my awesome backhand. Instead I politely exclaimed, "Thank you for being part of the problem!"

    • @richrich7163
      @richrich7163 4 роки тому +1

      Alot of black Americans defend the racist by saying the same thing racist whites say

  • @michaelmccay7023
    @michaelmccay7023 9 років тому +17

    I appreciate your approach, your words, and your honesty!

  • @Mrs.AlbaRamos
    @Mrs.AlbaRamos 10 років тому +23

    Love this!!!

  • @MrDakotaWoods
    @MrDakotaWoods 9 років тому +22

    Totally unrelated but your teeth are so nice! Couldn't stop looking at them. Is that weird? idk

    • @tibob69
      @tibob69 9 років тому +1

      Dakota Woods That's because she's black. Black on white gives a nice contrast effect... It's art.

    • @Scoring57
      @Scoring57 9 років тому +4

      +tibob69 There's no contrast effect. We just brush our fucking teeth everyday (unlike a lot of white people)

    • @tibob69
      @tibob69 9 років тому

      Dude... I'm black...

    • @tibob69
      @tibob69 9 років тому

      +Scoring57 So you're racist comment against white people doesn't apply to me.

    • @cathy-pz2to
      @cathy-pz2to 8 років тому

      she wouldn't stop showing them on the vodeo

  • @Scixxy
    @Scixxy 10 років тому +3

    Similarly, I often hear variations on, "Why do you have to make everything about your sexuality? Man, I don't care if you're gay, straight or love potted plants, man, just don't go shoving your sexuality in our faces."
    I have, like, thirty snarky replies to that, but it mostly makes me want to shout, which, of course, would make me "one of the bad ones" and "hurting my people's cause."

  • @rachelburns9640
    @rachelburns9640 10 років тому +4

    What always makes me upset when I discuss issues about racism towards African Americans and someone says "you're not even all the way black!". Just being I'm half black doesn't mean I am any less black.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому

      ugh. i'm so sorry you've had to deal with that

    • @Kaiulani800
      @Kaiulani800 10 років тому

      Lord, I hate people like that!!

  • @haute39234
    @haute39234 10 років тому +13

    I think the hurdle of bringing up a discussion of race, and people just rolling their eyes, is a huge reason why I, and a whole bunch of other people don't bring it up at all.
    Like these people have the logic and comprehension of a toddler, and I want to have a conversation with an adult.

  • @Mowsome
    @Mowsome 9 років тому +4

    talk about discrimination because of religion

  • @MyInvisibleChyrsalis
    @MyInvisibleChyrsalis 10 років тому +46

    yes, yes, yes. love it.

    • @discoveringhealthandfinanc8328
      @discoveringhealthandfinanc8328 10 років тому +3

      MyInvisibleChyrsalis Child, where the heck are you?! I miss your videos... Hilarious! Hope all is well!...great video. I couldn't agree more. Good for you! We need more WOMEN like you ;)

    • @jackjohnson-wv5fh
      @jackjohnson-wv5fh 6 років тому

      MyInvisibleChyrsalis no no no hate it

    • @NjoyMoney
      @NjoyMoney 3 роки тому

      And what is the result? more racism since actual slavery days, lets talk more about race and lets create teams and division.

    • @voxomnes9537
      @voxomnes9537 2 роки тому +1

      @@NjoyMoney Rewatch the video. Many times.

  • @ndawon1
    @ndawon1 10 років тому +8

    OMG THANK YOU IVE BEEN WAITING FOREVER FOR THIS!
    Also, could you please do a video educating people on the social, political, and economic obstacles minorities (especially african americans) face today.
    I feel as though the reason why people of privilege make such dismissive comments is because they are literally uneducated on these issues. Thus, they do not see how ignorant they really are. (i,e chris tomphsons videos)
    Im graduating high school this year and watching your videos has had a very huge impact on how I can better myself and the people around me so thanks a lot!

  • @soulsmart18
    @soulsmart18 10 років тому +7

    Love it!!! "Even in black in white, I'm still black" hilarious 😂😂

    • @drrd4127
      @drrd4127 5 років тому

      You look brown.

  • @reading1713
    @reading1713 9 років тому +4

    Oh Chesca, did you really just say "Please, have all of the seats". I love you. This is awesome. I may just start linking this video whenever people say that kind of stuff to me.

  • @JordanWyn
    @JordanWyn 10 років тому +2

    When someone came to my grad school Halloween party in blackface and I made a "...wtf that's not cool" comment to a white man (not the one in the costume), he launched into a monologue about how if people would just stop being offended at "every little thing" and making him "walk on eggshells" then racism wouldn't even be a problem anymore. Thanks white boy, I see your brilliance now! It wasn't the grown ass man with the grass skirt and spear with grease paint from head to toe that's the problem, it's expressing even the most mild level of give-a-damn for the humanity of other people!

  • @BayAreaStyleFile
    @BayAreaStyleFile 10 років тому +5

    Lolllllll "please have all the seats"

  • @kanadajin3
    @kanadajin3 10 років тому +14

    good video and I agree with everything you said. But you know, I don't see race, because we are all human. Race is a social construct. It doenst mean I am blinde and cant see the colour of your skin, it also means I can see colour of hair and eyes and shape of face, and what I see is what you are. But ar you a different kind of human than me? no. Are you less =? no. If we had babies are the some kind of biracial? no. Will I ever look like you? no, but I also wont ever look like britney spears or celin dion ^^

  • @kaleidojess
    @kaleidojess 8 років тому +52

    Not talking about race constantly doesn't mean that we ignore it.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  8 років тому +26

      +KALEIDO jess (Jesselapotter) did you...bother watching the video? this is specifically in response to people who say "stop talking about race and racism will go away"

    • @kaleidojess
      @kaleidojess 8 років тому +3

      That's why I commented.

    • @gigabites809
      @gigabites809 8 років тому

      +KALEIDO jess (Jesselapotter) shut up

    • @kaleidojess
      @kaleidojess 8 років тому +5

      annita bel How about nay? People will talk as they wish, you can't control that. Nice try though.

    • @gigabites809
      @gigabites809 8 років тому

      KALEIDO jess with a nonsense comment? Heck no

  • @theyovilleshows
    @theyovilleshows 10 років тому +2

    Chescaleigh, Thank you so much. I was a huge fan of SupDaily06's (Chris) videos for a while, but when he put those two videos out I just lost all interest in him and had to unsubscribe. What made it all worse was how he put such a big emphasis on "Having a conversation" with his viewers, but every interaction I saw him take part in involved making those who opposed him look stupid, and making him seem superior to the "dumb people racist against whites."
    Sorry, that turned into a rant, but seriously, I absolutely love the way you execute making your points. I appreciate you for doing so as well, and I know that I have learned new things from your videos. You make us laugh, educate the public, and provide a generally all around good time on your channel and that's really appreciated. Thank you, and continue to slay, Chescaleigh.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +2

      yeah, i'm not familiar with him at all, but that didn't give me a good impression of him. when i mentioned that i'd be making a video response he accused me of spreading hate, which was really annoying and unfair, considering i hadn't made a video yet. anyway, he didn't apologize to me directly, but he did tweet that he was sorry if his video made it seem like ignoring racism was the solution or that he was dismissing what happened. it wasn't the best apology but i give him credit for trying. i'm sorry to hear he reacted so poorly to people who disagreed with him, but based on how he responded to me, i'm not that surprised. it's unfortunate. anyway, thanks for watching and for the support! i try to be as concise as possible without being too judgmental or preachy, so i'm glad to hear that you've learned something from my videos and have appreciated the effort i put into making them. i'm very fortunate to have such a great audience ;)

  • @AverieMc
    @AverieMc 10 років тому +1

    Completely on point with this one. The divide between races is absolutely real and it is our job to close it. The only way to achieve that goal is by talking about it and educating people on the importance of equality for everyone!

  • @Nellie1924
    @Nellie1924 10 років тому +7

    I swear....this happens to me all the time. I have gotten in many debates about what white privellage is and it turned into I'm racist. *Blinks rapidly* I'm just happy I'm not the only one speaking up. As a black woman it seems like my voice is always trying to be silenced and it hurts at times. I just don't understand how I feel and how my experience seems to always mean nothing if it doesn't fit into a near little box.

    • @Nellie1924
      @Nellie1924 10 років тому +1

      Neat box not near...proofreading is in my future lol

  • @ThePaperTiger
    @ThePaperTiger 9 років тому +4

    "i'm comfortable here in reality fighting for equality for myself and the people I love." #micdrop

  • @blitzedblueberry
    @blitzedblueberry 10 років тому +2

    Thank you so much for this video! I came across a highly inappropriate and racist video on vine a few days ago, and most of the comments were saying," gosh it was just a joke, stop complaining" or "it's your complaining that makes racism an issue"....really? Really,now? I was appalled when I noticed these comments and I had to say something. Anyway, thanks for speaking up on a topic that needs to be discussed.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому

      yeah, vine is ripe with those types of "jokes" it's gross

  • @zucchinigreen
    @zucchinigreen 10 років тому +1

    I didn't realize how much I missed your videos so much until I saw this one and it was everything I didn't even know I needed. Amazing.
    I was thinking of examples about "stop talking about race" and immediately thought of the time I had two white roommates, but I actually want to share a more recent example w/ people of my own color who I thought I respected. Sigh.
    An old colleague of mine, who left to live in London recently came back to the Caribbean where I now reside after a 5 year absence and we decided to reconnect w/ each other, his wife and a few friends. All his friends are upwardly mobile black Caribbean people and my friend is a teacher. He's talking about his opinion on why black students don't do as well as white students is because "they don't believe in themselves enough and they don't try hard." I was this close to saying negro, are you serious? Not that the British system is one that stems from colonization that heavily privileges a certain kind of intelligence that is tied to wealth and access just "they don't try enough" really?
    I tried to mention this and of course the "it's not about race" thing came up and I got shut down b/c "we did so well and we're all black, so why can't they?" So I just decided that it was not my night to fight the cause about how their upbringing allowed them certain advantages that a lot of other people do not have. So the "don't talk about race" convo isn't just from non minorities, it's from minorities as well!
    Continue preaching Chelsea, they need to hear it.

  • @kevyo
    @kevyo 10 років тому +12

    I always didn't know what to say back when I get dismissed about talking about race. I felt like I was going crazy because all my friends would make me feel racist because I wanted to discuss about racism and how its still going strong but they think that i'm backwards. Thank you for making this genuine video and please keep on being vocal about these subjects that most people are just frankly too lazy to talk about. It takes a lot of work to stand up for people and its just soooooo soooo easy to dismiss everything and live in la la land.

  • @beautifulnature5724
    @beautifulnature5724 9 років тому +15

    I kind of disagree. Humans invented race, just like they invented government. It isn't real, but racism is very real. Of course I notice if someone is a darker hue or a lighter hue or has different facial features, but that is only because I notice people's appearance and that is natural. My judgement of a person doesn't come from their appearance, it's just something we all notice at first glance. For me at least, it doesn't go beyond that. I can't possibly know their personality, culture, etc. by what they look like. You say it's a big part of who you are, but not everyone feels that way or puts themselves into a box based on race. I don't consider my race to define me as a person. I base my value on the way I treat others and my overall personality and accomplishments. I don't lump myself into a group that really doesn't even exist. But, I don't think we shouldn't talk about it, which is what I agree with you on, because there is still racism in this world. It's designed to separate people as a whole and keep us down. The powerful use it as a tool to take advantage of others. And don't think just because I'm "white" I don't notice. I do notice and it's sickening.

  • @HuntHerKillHer
    @HuntHerKillHer 10 років тому +1

    You make a good point about being "colour blind". I myself have used that phrase in order to conceptualize the way that I see other people as a complete identity not being fixated on what group or colour they are. But that doesn't mean I don't also speak up about racism as its something that disturbs me enough to get vocal about it. To me colour can be part of someones identity as much as their hair colour, but I also understand that there are historical and social components to a persons identity that comes with colour. E.g. (as an Australian) Ive known people born in Australia that have largely an Australian identity despite appearing asian. Then there are indigenous Australians that have a much deeper historical and social connection to their ethnic identity that goes beyond just their outward appearance. I think the important thing to do is to listen and learn from others experiences with racism but also learn more about others ethnic history. Which is why I think that black history month and NAIDOC Week etc are fantastic. Great video!

  • @JapanBlue54
    @JapanBlue54 10 років тому +2

    Everything in this video is on point. Like my friends in college don't really feel comfortable speaking about race and anti-blackness that I face, and they're all poc. They think racism is just being mean to other people, and despite me telling them otherwise they don't listen, so I've stopped talking about it. So this vid hits close to home, awesome dialogue to get started for both white people, and poc who have certain privileges afforded to them.

  • @chieftv3416
    @chieftv3416 8 років тому +13

    Race is man made.

    • @Ulrna
      @Ulrna 6 років тому +4

      Everything is man-made, altruism is man-made, sympathy is man-made, culture is man-made. Houses are man-made. That doesn't really mean anything.

  • @Rodier1128
    @Rodier1128 10 років тому +7

    People brush off LGBT equality issues as if they don't matter or at lesser than any other civil rights movement. It's one.of the things in life that angers me beyond comprehension

    • @glooom6355
      @glooom6355 10 років тому +19

      Please do some research on what intersectionality is and you'll realize why some LGBT issues are "brushed off" to deal with race issues. The gay struggle is NOT equal to the race struggle, seeing as black gay people are not treated as equally as white gay people.

    • @frostpan3086
      @frostpan3086 10 років тому +1

      Vanille Oerba I think that Racial equality and LGBT issues are equal. LGBT is not just about being allowed to get married. People have been been treated very badly, as if they were not human beings, for both issues. But it is sad and stupid that LGBT black people (and black people in general) are not treated equally. My best friend is bisexual and black, I've seen people be very rude and cruel to her.

    • @JayAntoinette
      @JayAntoinette 10 років тому +17

      I think if you truly gave it some thought and think about in terms of visibility you would understand why Race Equality is prioritized over LGBT-related issues. When I say "visibility", I'm referring to people make initial assumptions about a person. Most of these assumptions are based off of what is tangible; things we can see. The things that are most visible are our appearances. Our clothes, hair, eye and skin color are what's used to judge people. Now of all these things I've mentioned, sexual orientation is not one of them. That's because people cannot "see" your sexual orientation, but they can most certainly see your race. Increased visibility = Increased Discrimination.
      I could hide my sexual orientation but it's nearly impossible to hide my race.

    • @athenalong
      @athenalong 10 років тому +7

      Joshua Groll "You have to find a way to externalize and express the goals of your movement without appropriating someone else's history."

    • @megidolaon384
      @megidolaon384 10 років тому +1

      Antoine David No. It's about expression. Oui-Je-Suis was comparing race issues with gay issues, which is completely preposterous since they're not and are prioritized differently.

  • @honeybeelzebub
    @honeybeelzebub 10 років тому

    Thank you so much for saying everything. I am sick of people saying "colour blind." Shut up. Don't be "colour blind" be accepting of who someone is. I'm sick of getting into a discussion with people and them throwing out "that's not me, I'm not racist" and they look to everyone else like a puppy wanting a treat for peeing outside. No stop. We were having a real discussion about trying to solve the inequality problems that are embedded in society. Maybe talking won't solve problems directly, but I hope it has more of an impact than ignoring the problem. Thank you for speaking up and giving youtube and me more perspective.

  • @HippieGoddess142
    @HippieGoddess142 10 років тому +1

    It's ridiculous. I talk about race and colorism as a past-time activity on my Twitter and blog because I got tired of seeing racism, colorism, and misogyny online towards black women like myself. When I try to talk about it in real life to friends and family, I get the same thing you talked about in the video. It's not just when I talk about white people being racist either. When I talk about colorism and light-skinned privilege, some black person who is usually light-skinned and/or mixed race will say, "But we're all black!" It's no different than the "We're all human" claim I get from white people denying racism. College is the worst when you meet all types of people from different backgrounds. Yes, we're all in the same category, but I'm not going to deny how we're treated differently based on skin color and looks. And what about being called "racist" or getting accused of hating white people when you're merely discussing white privilege and even mocking those who refuse to listen? I want people to notice my skin color and race so they can help me fight injustice towards people like me. If you don't notice my race or skin color, you don't care about me or my plights and you're not a good friend/ally/partner. Sorry this is a little long.

  • @shepherd_of_art
    @shepherd_of_art 10 років тому +11

    Racism isn't only about the color ... kids and adults get bullied all the time because they are "ugly" or "fat" or they have big ears or something. In general, the problem isn't that people don't like the "somehow different" from what they are but the fact that every family and the society always teaches us that things are always one way. Educational system is one way, relationships is one way, we need to fake out politeness every time we see other people because we have been taught to do so, most of us don't want to do it. So it is reasonable to see people defuse their anger for that staged life we are living to other people they see and they hove a different lifestyle or appearance that they consider as beautiful and normal, they overcome that staged politeness they've learned because it is learned and not found. We need to teach our children to explore themselves instead of teaching them to be who we want them to be. And I don't have children, no I'm too young. But I do have the luck to grow up this way so I can understand this. Please people. Just be substantive.

    • @AlxMar5
      @AlxMar5 9 років тому +1

      I can't see the comments to your post, so I'll chime in blindly. I agree that there are many factors involved in discrimination, and body image shaming is one of the many terrible kinds. However, that would not be classified as racism, at least not for the most part. There's definitely stuff like fatphobia, ableism, and other such concepts which are of extreme importance to combat, but racism in itself is more about treating people as inferiors due to their race, which is to say mainly their skin color.

  • @Antreus
    @Antreus 8 років тому +3

    So that whole thing about MLK saying he looked forward to the day when people would not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character. Screw that, because reasons. Black as an identity is not the same as having a darker skin color, because reasons. People who don't have prejudice against people with different skin colors are NOT perpetuating racism, and your assertion that they are, based on an assumption that they have lack of basis for saying and holding a view that they see people as apart of the human race (which has scientific basis) are just stupefying and narrow.
    Being unfair doesn't necessarily make you right, and it swings both ways. But please, continue perpetuating racism by insisting that people don't consider how much racism has affected your cultural inheritance, identity, or narrative. Do we need to go around wearing shirts or name tags? Going a step further, how are they supposed to know your background just by looking at the color of your skin? The best policy is to just not talk about it for a lot of folk, because anytime they do open their mouths they are shamed. We have so many people of different backgrounds in this country, and coming from a large city this view is just narrow, especially in a multiethnic environment. It's like saying all folk of Asian descent are from China and on it goes.
    You don't have a monopoly on how race can be discussed, sorry about that.
    Why not assume that they do consider this and aren't the ignorant folks you're making them out to be? I'm sorry but not all people that the label White is projected upon bear any guilt what so ever, nor can they be shamed. Similarly, not all people that the label Black is projected upon have any loyalty what so ever to it, nor can they be made to feel less than because of it, because it isn't apart of their identity.

  • @HistoryactionOrg
    @HistoryactionOrg 10 років тому +1

    Yup, we're dealing with multicultural issues in Thailand and there are a few people that dislike this (thankfully they are in the minority.) Some foreigners here complain that we are bringing 'political correctness' to Thailand, which is usually code for wanting to use bigotry without consequence. The conversation is important and while it can be difficult at times, it's good to try and deal with the issues with an attitude of mutual respect.

  • @sklerskler6468
    @sklerskler6468 10 років тому

    100% spot on! I just recently subscribed because a friend showed me this video and I could not possibly agree more with the points you brought up!
    Similar to the other microaggressions you mentioned, the microaggression I encounter the most happens to be victim blaming where white people posit themselves as the oppressed and label me as the perpetrator by speaking on the taboo subject manner of race. As a person who isn't afraid to call others out on their bigotry, I am often accused of being "irrational", "angry", or "uncivil." It often starts with the accusers enforcing their politics of respectability on me as if I have to earn recognition from them in order to have my opinions accredited. Most of the time it just ends in big flame wars with the accusers labeling me as an "asshole" or "prick."
    I'm grateful for the fact that there are people like you in the world who use their activist platform to educate others so that their actions are not rendered as problematic in the future. You inspire me to do more in my own life to educate others! Thanks for being such a great role model!
    PS: Good luck at upworty! I'm excited to see what you'll have for us on that platform as well!

  • @narotic613
    @narotic613 10 років тому +3

    People try to downplay racism because people are generally more subtle about displaying it, but for example dating an African woman I have heard the craziest examples of ignorant things people have said while being oblivious to insulting it is.My point being people can pick up bad habits from society that won't be corrected without honest conversation

  • @ignoblemonkey
    @ignoblemonkey 9 років тому +3

    I went and actually spent some time reading about racism and I now understand what the differences are. However, I still have a question that I want to ask a question and I feel a bit hesitant to do so but am going to ask anyway. In the comments below I had mentioned that I have had encounters of what I would call racist comments. What I mentioned below was walking down the street and a group of blacks called out things such as "kill whitey". If I did that to a person of color then, to me, it would mean I am being racist. The use of racism here is talking about how whites can't feel the oppression of racism because systematically the statistics are outrageously different in numbers when the two races are compared on MULTIPLE levels in our society. So, basically my question is this: Is the example of what I went through above, and if it the situation above were also reversed, is that just prejudice or racism? I read the differences, but what I stated above hardly sounds like prejudice is the right term with the definitions that I had read in one of the articles. I am genuinely confused on this and just want a better understanding because I would rather understand this than to not. I hope this makes sense and hope someone can answer this for me.

  • @florcita72
    @florcita72 10 років тому +2

    Have you read the novel Americanah? Adichie deals with this topic over several chapters with such sarcasm that reading about race can become pure pleasure.

  • @WKDowden
    @WKDowden 10 років тому +1

    100% agree with you! Yes people who say you shouldn't make a big deal of it are not only wishing to silence views that are not the 'majority view' but also totally disrespecting all the amazing work by those who have fought tooth and nail for the level of equality that has been gained already.

  • @UdoADHD
    @UdoADHD 10 років тому +8

    Tutorial on your scarf wrap, hunty PLEASE!

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +7

      ha! it's a wire scarf, so it has a piece of wire in it that let's you shape it however you want. it's literally just twisted into a knot. nothing special!

  • @AlaaNouasri1994
    @AlaaNouasri1994 10 років тому +4

    Oh my god THANK YOU for talking about this! I agree with everything you said. On a side note, you look GORGEOUS.

  • @GraveyardMoth
    @GraveyardMoth 10 років тому +1

    I wish I could "like" this video twice, because it's so important. Also, I am SO glad someone already made a gif of your "please, have ALL the seats" moment because I think it could come in handy in future discussions.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +1

      aw thanks! i'd say sharing it counts as 2 likes ;)

  • @EliseLogan
    @EliseLogan 9 років тому +2

    Heh. We hit just this point last semester in a class I was teaching. In a class discussion about race (and racism), one of my students said he didn't see color. My response was that I'm not blind and I see color just fine. I made the point you make in the video - that discounting race denies the experiences of that person related to race in the same way that discounting ANY formative experience would discount that experience. If we want our society to function with equality, we have to recognize the inequalities, acknowledge them and face them in order to find ways to reduce those inequalities. Thank you for being vocal and using your platform to make your voice heard. Let's see if we can't amplify the signal.

  • @blackbirdtype
    @blackbirdtype 10 років тому +3

    I went on a rant about this the other day, but this was better put :p It baffles me why in some environments, mentioning one's race (and often gender) almost seems taboo. When we don't talk about race/gender, we can't acknowledge prejudice and privilege, and we remain ignorant.

  • @debmart59
    @debmart59 10 років тому +18

    Just Stop Talking About Race

  • @jeanabell100
    @jeanabell100 10 років тому +2

    "The internet streets are ruled by me" lmao

  • @desireefrommyspace
    @desireefrommyspace 10 років тому

    Yesssss! I used to be "colorblind" and didn't "care" about race or ethnicity myself either -- I realize now that I kept so many things bottled up. I'm brown and proud, I love People of Color and identifying as one and doing what I can to achieve equality and justice for us folks of color... When someone doesn't "see" or "care" about our race it undermines and dismisses our struggle, the inequalities in society, AND our IDENTITIES! Thank you for doing what you do, Franchesca!

  • @KaygeeAllah
    @KaygeeAllah 8 років тому +3

    I, for one (amongst many) enjoy these discussions. It needs to be talked about. It's been ignored for far too long. People want to create an uncomfortable silence for those who suffer, just to appease those who still benefit from it. No... You have to deal with it. Ignoring it and/or saying stupid *ish like "post-racial" "if you don't talk about it, it'll stop" & "I don't see color" is just dumb. And trying to belittle those who do talk about it makes one part of the growing problem.

    • @nate654
      @nate654 8 років тому

      Yeah she looks very oppressed.

    • @KaygeeAllah
      @KaygeeAllah 8 років тому

      +Nathan Rawlins: Describe what oppression "looks" like? How does one actually look when oppressed? Because I thought oppression was existing under the condition of mistreatment, or in a state of distress. I didn't realize there was an actual look to it. This is news that one has to actually "look" oppressed. How exactly is that supposed to look? Please enlighten me. Thanks in advance.

    • @quqbalam5089
      @quqbalam5089 8 років тому

      Kaygee Allah Please don't play dumb. You can tell what a poor person looks like, what a starving, malnourished or sickly person looks like. Of course not every Black person is poor, like this woman, but a disproportionate amount are.

    • @KaygeeAllah
      @KaygeeAllah 8 років тому

      +Quq Balam: So, is that what you call playing it smart? Hmmmm... Well, I just so happen to be intelligent enough to know when someone is trying to goad me into a nonsensical debate by spewing ignorant bigoted rhetoric. And I may even be just intelligent enough to know when not to engage in such. So how about you take it easy, huh?

    • @quqbalam5089
      @quqbalam5089 8 років тому

      Kaygee Allah So it is nonsensical to debate such important issues like poverty and inequality in general?

  • @Dglenn11
    @Dglenn11 10 років тому +7

    Talking about white privilege is a Herculean labor somedays. PS, I need a GIF of your "Please, have all of the seats." lol :)

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +2

      ha! i'm gonna see if someone will make one

    • @JustCallMeWah
      @JustCallMeWah 10 років тому +3

      It IS! I talk about White Privilege all the time. Because it is real. I people need to know. I'm in total support of the GIF idea.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +2

      here's the gif ;) 24.media.tumblr.com/70ade3fe31aba8aa315d4158e512c0ca/tumblr_n5c5lr2Cap1s7v12uo1_500.gif

    • @JustCallMeWah
      @JustCallMeWah 10 років тому +1

      This is amazing.

    • @Dglenn11
      @Dglenn11 10 років тому +1

      chescaleigh This GIF actually brightened my whole week LOL Thank you for this. You have no idea how useful this will be. :)

  • @cakanbi
    @cakanbi 10 років тому +1

    One comment I had to shut my mouth for was when someone suggested that it would be better when we've all mixed into one race. I got a flash of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and envisioned rich, significant cultures and languages just disappearing in puffs of smoke. SCARY.

  • @dpreeper
    @dpreeper 7 років тому +1

    I understand what you're saying about the colour-blind comments, but I think sometimes people just mean that race doesn't effect how you treat people. I used to say it, and that is what I meant. If you mean it literally, it's like saying you can't tell if someone is blond or brunette, tall or short, thick or thin. That's just completely nonsensical...unless you are actually blind. Also, another bit of anecdote, when I was a little girl, my two best friends were native-americans. I didn't realize it anymore than I realized we were brunettes. I could see their darker-than-me skin tone, but didn't know that that meant anything because it was a non-issue where I lived. It wasn't until I moved away from there that I realized that there was anybody that thought race was a bigger issue than heritage, history and ancestry. So, I think some people can be colour-blind in that way, as well, thinking that there is no issue because they haven't been exposed to it.

  • @Milshton
    @Milshton 10 років тому +11

    I'm so glad I subbed

  • @lar2211
    @lar2211 10 років тому +3

    This is amazing and you were so eloquent in your delivery. Thank you, I could not have said it better :-)

  • @aleciaquaria
    @aleciaquaria 10 років тому

    I am a teenager who's half black and half white. Being lighter skinned, I don't feel like I've been exposed to as much discrimination as others might come across. Or maybe I just haven't been exposed to the world as much. I agree with what you're saying, not just in this video, but in a lot of your other videos. They're very insightful and help me to become more educated about the issue of race.
    Maybe... I haven't grown up enough - you said you thought the same at one point - but until this video got me thinking, I didn't see the world in black and white. I see race, and I'm proud of who I am, both black and white. But to elaborate, when I went to see STOMP, my stepsister (who's all white) said, "They always have to have a black person," when the performers were first coming on stage. I feel she said this because she meant something along the lines of: every performance of any type needs a black person so not to be seen as discriminatory. My internal response to this was, "Why do you have to see them as black and white? Why can't they just be good performers who were chosen because of their ability and not the color of their skin?" I'm not sure if you would consider this something different, but this is what I was meaning when I said I don't see black and white.

  • @rebakkaaaaaaa
    @rebakkaaaaaaa 10 років тому +2

    One of the situations that frustrates me is when I try to have a discussion with friends about issues of racism, sexism, queerphobia, etc in media. I'm currently in a media studies program, so I really try to be objective of what I'm critiquing. However, my friends have started getting into saying "if you don't like it, don't watch it" and sometimes adding "because they (the comedian/writers/etc) don't give two fucks about your feelings" and I find that incredibly rude.
    I can still enjoy a piece of media and still be critical and ask for better esp. when oppression is involved. I never say anything like "this needs to get cancelled" but I say "Hey, I think they should be more mindful of [____]". But my friends don't allow it, they just shut me down. And what they're saying when they tell me that is "I don't care about your opinion. Shut up." And that fucking hurts.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому +4

      YIKES. that classroom sounds like my nightmare. I'm sorry you have to deal with those types of comments. I know how frustrating that can be. Honestly, it sounds like those are people you don't need to be friends with. They should be more respectful of your opinion, even if they don't agree with you. Telling someone to shut up when they're expressing real concerns isn't ok. I hope you're able to find some other people to hang out with that give you the respect you deserve.

  • @JayAntoinette
    @JayAntoinette 10 років тому +3

    I'm so happy to see you making videos! Oh and I saw your piece on UpWorthy. I was like, "Oh It's Chesca!" Congrats on the job!

  • @matthewmiller4954
    @matthewmiller4954 7 років тому +3

    What challenges do you face? I'm honestly curious. Cause I'm a Pacific Islander and have faced all kinds of racism where I've been called every racist name and have seen others of every race face some too. Whether it's blacks being racist to whites, Mexicans to Asians, whites towards blacks or Mexicans. I've seen it almost every type of way but I understand that there is always going to be those types of people and it's mostly a minority group doing it. It's not holding me back from accomplishing the things I want in life so I don't complain about it even though it's there. So I'd like to just know what have you faced that I haven't? Please I'd like to understand

    • @Tash_-en6uo
      @Tash_-en6uo 7 років тому

      Matthew Miller are u saying black women don't have it bad too? That's messed up , do u know that black women are tho most disrespected in the u.s you may be a minority too but black women have it worst scroll through these comments and see how people are talking about black women in a bad way just because of one black women ill wait

    • @matthewmiller4954
      @matthewmiller4954 7 років тому +1

      Natasha Bartley Um when did I say that? I just honestly would honestly like to know what the challenges are that you face? Cause obviously there is racism and stuff like that out there but I've seen it from and to all races, men and women. But of course there's always going to be a bad apple for every 10 good ones and I just don't see it as a huge issue. Ive faced certain challenges too but I don't need to complain about it to everyone so they can see me and understand my challenges. I just need to be able to look in the mirror and feel ok about myself and hope the people I love feel the same. Everyone's got problems. I don't need a pity party to get to where I want in life

  • @angeladalton9308
    @angeladalton9308 10 років тому +1

    Race/ethnicity and culture should be things that we can openly talk about. They are a part of a person's identity and while we're all human, the intricacies of how we express being human through cultural difference is so beautiful. The wide spectrum of human appearance is similarly beautiful and the fact that whether you are one background or another you have biological similarities is such a cool concept - everyone babbles before they talk before they read. We are all alike at our core but our individual differences - whatever they may be - give us such a rich uniqueness. Why not celebrate the beauty of diverse human culture and biology?
    Now not everyone wants to celebrate differences, but just closing your eyes to problems doesn't make them go away. It keeps you ignorant and it prevents healing, progression and understanding. When people don't want you to talk about racism or prejudice, it's because it either a) makes them feel guilty b) they truly don't think it exists or c) they agree with the prejudice but know they can't say that.

  • @Mcgturtle3
    @Mcgturtle3 10 років тому +2

    The color blind thing makes sense in your mind because you're thinking that you'll just treat each other fairly regardless of race but in reality it doesnt work.

  • @Zepikness
    @Zepikness 10 років тому +4

    I'm sorry for being off topic, but you have fabulous collarbones.

  • @byoung4eva1
    @byoung4eva1 10 років тому +8

    I'm glad race is being talked about. Especially when younger white ppl (even the older ones) say things like "Well u weren't the ones in the field, so get over it" and "It's not effecting u today" when they don't realize that it still does. Even down to how black ppl view each other, from our natural hair texture, that we've recently start to embrace thanks to UA-cam natural hair vloggers, to our skin tones. Those who aren't affected by racism or don't see it are the first to want to change the subject. Everyone keeps saying black ppl are "too sensitive" when really everyone else is just insensitive. It's like they scarred us (for generations) and now tell us to get over it.

    • @byoung4eva1
      @byoung4eva1 10 років тому

      I like to have discussions on race, so we can see each other's point of view and why we say the things we say. To educate ppl

    • @justmyopinion4409
      @justmyopinion4409 5 років тому

      I know this is 4 years ago. But since I'm half white and have light skin. It's a problem when at school whenever I try to say my opinion about white people and privilege I get shunned because I'm a "privileged white girl". I don't think that racism doesn't exist, it does. But it comes from all places not just one. If we really want to talk about it. Talk about it for all sides Mexicans, Indians, Asians, African Americans, and yes even white people because this is all an equal street. The only way to get rid of it is if we show the full truth and not cherry pick the parts that we want to believe or not believe in

  • @tecwzrd
    @tecwzrd 10 років тому

    White 45 year old male, married, with a 10 year old daughter here :) Really liked the video and you hit on some solid points. I was raised to respect and acknowledge all races myself and it is how I raise my daughter. IMHO racism is a "learned" trait either from friends or family as you rarely ever see kids (toddler to around 10) ever practicing it "naturally". Talking about it and understanding is the only way to educate :) Looking forward to more!
    P.S. You have an amazing smile and radiant personality. Also congrats on your job at www.upworthy.com, seems like a very good fit!

  • @lesmcdonald8383
    @lesmcdonald8383 9 років тому

    I'm over 71yrs. old living in the USA since I was 16 yrs. old from NY to CA. To GA. with a master's degree from very reputable institutions and in my view the problem of racism is more "refined" but still definitely a major problem in this country. Needs to be addressed and fixed but who in power wants to when it's profitable for WASP'S and others who are not of the persuasion being sure she'd on a daily basis. I totally agree with your voicing your sentiments my young sister, as we used to say "right on" and keep it going.

  • @brixtongun
    @brixtongun 9 років тому +3

    Ignoring problems fixes them every time, whether it's race issues, debt issues or herpes outbreak. Just ignore them and they'll go away...to bother you another day. P.S. What's with the subtitles? Your perfectly articulate

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  9 років тому +3

      ha! good analogy ;) i'm working on captioning all of my videos so they're more accessible to my deaf and hard of hearing audience. UA-cam is also rolling out a feature that will let you translate captions into other languages which will give more people access to my content! You can always turn off the captions by clicking the "CC" button in the lower righthand corner

    • @AlxMar5
      @AlxMar5 9 років тому +1

      chescaleigh I think it's wonderful to have your videos be as accessible as possible! Though I am not hard of hearing or deaf, I am sometimes in situations where I can't use audio, so this has proven to be very useful.
      I sometimes wish I could just ignore my challenges at work and they'd go away (while actually keeping my job!) ;)

  • @TymetheInfamous
    @TymetheInfamous 10 років тому +24

    RACISM IS VERY REAL. Thanks for this video doll Xo

    • @jackjohnson-wv5fh
      @jackjohnson-wv5fh 6 років тому +3

      TymetheInfamous ur right. The hirl in this video is absolutely racist

    • @Injudiciously
      @Injudiciously 3 роки тому +2

      Only in your head it is.

  • @NumberThirteenRoxas
    @NumberThirteenRoxas 10 років тому +2

    Oh my god, this happened to me literally today, someone told me/another person talking about the prison system in the US "stop pulling the race card". It's so infuriating, doubly so when people agree and pat them on the butt. "Yes they're pulling the race card they shouldn't be doing that." Excuse you?!

  • @4ridaque
    @4ridaque 10 років тому +2

    I appreciate that even if you are talking about a topic that i have no real passion about, that it is always clearly stated and logical.... the visuals always make me laugh... love your realness and how you speak on things near and dear to your head and heart.

    • @chescaleigh
      @chescaleigh  10 років тому

      thanks love! that means a lot ;)