Showing posts with label race. Show all posts
Showing posts with label race. Show all posts

Friday, December 2, 2011

Makes Me Sick.

It just makes me sick that we still live in a world where this discrimination and hatred exists. 

"In a move to "promote greater unity" among its body and the Pike County community it serves, a small Kentucky church voted to ban interracial couples from membership and from participating in certain worship activities, Kentucky.com reports.

Though reminiscent of some Jim Crow-era mandate, the Gulnare Freewill Baptist Church actually made the decision earlier this month, following a visit from 24-year-old Stella Harville, daughter of the church's secretary and clerk, and her 29-year-old fiance, Ticha Chikuni, a native of Zimbabwe.
According to Harville's father, Dean Harville, Stella brought Chikuni to the church in June where they performed a song for the congregation. 

Following the visit, former pastor Melvin Thompson told Harville that his daughter and her fiance could not sing at the church again. Thompson later proposed that the church go on record saying that while all people were welcome to attend public worship services there, the church did not condone interracial marriage.

His proposal, which was accepted by a 9-6 vote last week, also suggested that married interracial couples be prohibited from becoming members and used in worship activities, except for funerals.
"It's not the spirit of the community in any way, shape or form," said Randy Johnson, president of the Pike County Ministerial Association, according to Kentucky.com.

While Pike County and the surrounding community come to grips with the church's decision, researchers at Ohio State University and Cornell University say black-white marriages in the United States are soaring, increasing threefold, from 3 percent in 1980 to 10.7 percent in 2008."

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Red Flag

**WARNING!! This blog contains
some language
(quotes from others) that may offend.
Proceed with caution**


Okay. So if you haven't been following (or you are a new reader) the saga of my life life you may want to read this blog, and this one...and then finally this one. (Oh and if you want a quick, humorous wrap up of my dating experiences check this entry out)

Now somehow, and perhaps its because I've felt like my head has been in a whirlwind the past month or so, I have failed to mention that a week after Mr. HK (who is now back in the USA and I supposed should now be called either Mr. SF....or as one of my bff's calls him "The Creature") contacted me guess who should reappear on my computer screen? 

Mr. CT of course.

Sent me an email saying his computer crashed, lost all his emails, and that's why he hasn't emailed/IMd me lately. Now, I'll give him that, I'll trust that this is why the emails stopped. However, I am keeping in the back of my mind the fact that a broken computer does not also mean a broken phone (when questioned about not calling there has yet to be an answer). Also, when I mentioned to Mr. CT that I felt like "runner up" - because I saw he had restarted up his online dating profile - his response was "well it DIDN'T work out with anyone else."

.... he just didn't get it. 

At this point, I'd been honest with "The Ex" about the fact I had been 'seeing' others while we were broken up and equally I wanted to be honest with Mr. CT. about the fact that "The Ex" and I were talking and exploring the possibility of mending fences. 

His response: "The China Guy!?"

Now, from there I explained that he was no longer living in Hong Kong and that "The Ex" was only 1/2 Chinese (when I first started talking with Mr. CT he was perplexed on me having been in a LDR with someone in China). Something about "the China guy" just didn't sit well with me. My bff in Seattle tried to convince me I was just over reacting. That because "The Ex" was now back I was trying to convince myself that there was something racist wrong with Mr. CT. 

So we (Mr. CT and I) continued to talk and be friends. Then earlier last week Mr CT and I were chatting. He asked "So how is the China Guy"....hm? So as a response I told him I didn't think he really wanted to know how he was doing and if he had another question he just needed to ask. (My thoughts were that he was hoping "The Ex" and I weren't doing well and the gates had reopened for him). After a few moments of silence Mr. CT has a moment of verbal diarrhea asking if I've ever met "the China man" face to face and how do I know he's not a "Negro"
 
Um? WHAT THE FUCK!!??

RED FLAG!!

RED FLAG!!

Overwhelmed and shocked I ended our conversation (thankfully it was 5 o'clock and ending the conversation was fairly easy enough). I quickly sent my Seattle BFF a text message telling her what just happened and asking if I could start jumping to conclusions and see this as a "red flag"!! (of course she said 'yes')

Later on Mr. CT found me again online and apologized saying he didn't mean to offend me, he was just curious if I knew "The Ex" wasn't "white, black or whatever".....I replied that I wasn't offended by the intent of the question just his use of the term "Negro"... no response.Since then I have received a few (offline) messages telling me 'good morning' and 'evening'. 

At this point I don't see him talking his way out of this one. 
I don't see me believing anything he might say trying to. 

At this point I'm not sure if I need to tell him to just piss off point blank or to simply let this whole thing fade away into the cyber-sunset. Either way, Mr. CT's time is quickly running out. 

Monday, April 18, 2011

Questioning Interracial Relationships

I came across this "article" [blog] last night and it really sat uneasy with me....Here's the blog first and then I'll rant afterwards.

*     *      *

"Have you noticed a recent surge in Asian men and white women being together lately? Bruce Lee and Linda Lee Caldwell were one of Hollywood’s first Asian man/Caucasian women celebrity couples … and that was in the 60s! So what’s changed?

The question is, why is this interracial combo not as widespread as other interracial combos?

There is definitely a higher percentage of Asian women with white men than ever before. Why?

The above video [I took it out - visit the website to view video] was taken by video crew who asked random and predominantly Asian guys and girls “Why Asian girls are attracted to white guys”. Stereotype… stereotype and more stereotype!

According to this video, most respondents described Asian men as being too shy or unassertive. The woman also stated Asian men were too effeminate and even too short! Apparently this is turning Asian women away and they are beginning to look elsewhere.

Asian stereotypes have been created by society in general. Enough articles have been written about what I would like to call stereotypical racism in the Asian community – for instance, how Caucasian men actively seek an Asian woman because of their exotic looks and supposed submissivenes?. How many have this so called Asian fetish or yellow fever?

Asian females, on the other hand, have constantly been disgraced and labeled “white-washed” women busy trying to climb the social ladder by their own communities and are finding more acceptance with races other than their own.

So what about the rise of interracial relationships between the Asian man and Caucasian woman? Is it that Asian men are fed up with their female counterparts and that they take revenge by dating Caucasian women? (just a thought) Or just that there are fewer Asian females in their dating pool so they are expanding their own horizons?

My conclusion is that maybe it’s not that at all. I think people should be intelligent enough not to allow trivial stereotypes to conform to their preferences on who to date. Why do you think there is a rise in the Asian man-Caucasian woman interracial combo?"


*     *      *

First, I think I need to remind the author that the title of this article and the first sentence point that he is going to discuss Asian men-Caucasian women relationships....but instead talks about Asian women and Caucasian men....not the same....yes, same cultural/ethnic combination but he didn't go into the article saying we're going to discuss the rise of Asian-Caucasian relationships. 

Mildred & Richard Loving
Next, why does there have to be a reason other than people are finally becoming more accepting to the concept behind interracial relationship? That we're in a place today where people fall in love with a person and not a race? Why does it always come down to a fetish or rebellion? 

People forget that it hasn't been that long (historically speaking) that interracial marriages have been allowed in the United States....only 44 years. Think about it. How many of us have parents older than 44?

Or maybe it's because I'm dating a man who identifies as Asian-American (a child of an interracial marriage) but it angers me to think that people want to discover a sociological reason behind our relationship.  Does there have to be some underlining psychologically repressed reason for us being attracted to the other? Can't it just be because we love each other?




Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Soy Sauce on Tamales or Interracial Online Dating

A friend posted the link to this article on facebook - being a student of Diversity Studies, in an interracial relationship, with a biracial man, whom I met online....of course this was something I'd read! 

I would like to know what dating service they surveyed (although really, I'd put my money down on eHarmony being their unfortunate source). And I was slightly disappointed about the focus of black-white relationships in the article (until you reach the last few short paragraphs when they focus on a Jewish white man and a Chinese-Mexican woman). Dating a man who identifies as Asian-American; there aren't many articles/books/etc focusing on our "type" of interracial relationship....White man and women of Asian decent sure, but not the other way around. 

Sadly, there wasn't anything I'd consider "new" information but it is interesting to see the "Race is a state of mind" via the lens of cyberdating.
*     *     *

Study shows that for many cyberdaters, race is a state of mind
By Jessica Yadegaran
Contra Costa Times

With a plethora of interracial dating sites on the Web and a black president in office, one would think that we're living in America's post-racial era. But, apparently, that's not the case.

According to a new UC Berkeley study of 1 million online daters, cyberspace is just as segregated as the real world. When it comes to dating online, whites prefer whites, research reveals. More than 80 percent of whites -- even the 48 percent of males and 28 percent of females who said they were indifferent to race -- sent messages to whites and just 3 percent contacted blacks.

Researchers won't disclose which major dating site they used to compare the racial preferences and online activity of more than 1 million singles. But, we do know that they found significant differences between blacks and whites. Young black men are the most likely to cross the race barrier when looking for love online, and blacks, including women, were 10 times as likely to contact a white person than whites were to contact blacks.

Some people don't date outside of their race simply because they don't come into contact with people of other races in their communities.

"There's no segregation online, which makes this data so interesting," says Gerald Mendelsohn, a UCBerkeley psychologist and lead author of the study,which analyzed online subscribers between 2009 and 2010. "Online dating is about courtship and attraction. Segregation is a physicalmatter but it's also a state of mind."

Mendelsohn says there are three possible reasons for the discrepancy between attitudes about interracial coupling and the actual behaviors of online daters when it comes to race.

"It might be appearance management," he says. "They think it makes them look better to say that they're open to another race. Also, saying you're open to another race is only stage one of the dating process. Stage two is actually taking the step. Another possibility that can't be discounted is that people are just hypocritical."

Certainly, it's a touchy subject. Even talking about race can make people uncomfortable.

"I don't think I've ever dated someone outside of my race," says Stephanie of Fremont, who is white and works in retail. She asked to omit her last name. "I think I'm just attracted to white guys. It's what I know."

That's not the case for Lynne Herendeen, an operations manager living in Pleasanton. She has a thing for black guys. "I love the darker skin tone,"says Herendeen, 31. "I feel like it makes their features pop, their eyes sparkle and their smiles more beautiful."

When searching for matches on OKCupid.com,Herendeen specified tall, nonsmoking, African- American men. That's how she met her boyfriend, Rick Kamfolt, a Santa Clara lab analyst who is black. The two have been dating for four months.

Kamfolt, 29, has dated women of all races, including his own, and says that intelligence and communication are more important to him than race. That said, there is an added layer of intrigue when he dates outside of his race.

"It adds a certain spice to the relationship," Kamfolt says. "It's something different, so you're always learning and growing."

Rob Thompson hears those stories every day as the co-founder of two Nevada-based interracial dating websites, Afroromance.com and Interracialdatingcentral.com. Thompson, who is white and Australian, met his wife, who is black and Kenyan, online in 2006.

"I think people are becoming aware of more dating opportunities outside of their race," says Thompson, whose sites have 1.1 million users combined. "The president has certainly done a lot to raise awareness that it doesn't matter what your race is. What does matter is your substance. And it's probably influenced people when they go online looking for love."

But Thompson's websites cater to a niche audience. In Mendelsohn's study, which was based on data from one of the major dating websites, the young, black men who searched outside of their race were most likely to contact white women.

"The theorizing is that it's upward mobility," Mendelsohn says. "Like any other minority, they want to move into the dominant power structure, which is white." Also, Mendelsohn adds that white women are the idealized image of beauty in the United States, and that all men receive that message from a young age.

A major objective of the study was to gauge how changing attitudes about interracial marriage and an increase in dating opportunities have played out in relationships between blacks and whites. In the past 40 years, the approval rating of black-white intermarriage has gone from three to one opposed to three to one in favor, Mendelsohn says. But the study found that our attitudes do not match our behaviors.

"One hypothesis is that while people might feel like it's acceptable for themselves to date outside of their race, they might feel that it's not as accepted by their families, friends, and society at large," says Lindsay Shaw Taylor, a research associate in UC Berkeley's psychology department and co-author of the study.

Herendeen's family has never had a problem with her preference for black men. Still, she says she gave them a heads up before introducing Rick. "Not like I had to warn them, but I was like, by the way "...," she says. "It's not like I care at all what they think."

Rita Kwan and Todd Feinberg of San Francisco understand. Kwan is half-Chinese and half-Mexican, and Feinberg is white and Jewish. They met on Eharmony in 2008 and will be married this May.

Planning the wedding has brought an awareness of their cultural differences to the surface, but both families are embracing those differences, the couple says. Still, there are minor generational snags to work out, says Feinberg, who is 37 and works as a criminal prosecutor.

"It's hard for the parents. It's not that they're not open to other races, but they have a lot of pride and tradition in their own cultures," says Kwan, 32 and a surgeon at Oakland's Highland Hospital.

On their Eharmony.com profiles, Kwan and Feinberg said that they were open to dating all races. Neither is attracted to a particular race, they say.

"I didn't fall in love with Rita because she is half-Chinese and half-Mexican," Feinberg says. "I fell in love with her because she was smart, beautiful and we were just able to talk for long periods of time."

That said, he says he believes that dating outside of one's race adds to who you are as a person. "I love the thought of our future kids being so well-rounded culturally," Feinberg says.

There are other perks, too. Feinberg spent last Christmas with Kwan's family in Albuquerque, N.M. When it was time for dinner, they served piping hot, pork tamales covered in red sauce. To his surprise, some of her family members spooned soy sauce onto the tamales.

"That's just one of the things you can learn from dating someone of a different race," Feinberg says. "That soy sauce goes really good on tamales."