DP. I agree with what you've said here, but OP's description of the event doesn't match that. OP said herself that this one teacher's presentation stood out from the rest. The other parent felt the same way and complimented her on that - not for her presentation being "professional for a black woman" but for standing out with a very professional presentation. I suppose it's possible that she said it in a bizarrely condescending way, but as described it was just a compliment, not a backhanded racist compliment. |
| Why is this post from 7 years ago being resurrected? |
| The OP's example did not have any "for a _____" qualifier to the compliment at all! That is why she's completely reaching, IMO. This level of defensiveness will cause well-meaning people who would have otherwise bothered to try, to just avoid an interaction. Then they'll be castigated by the other person for being indifferent or some such. SMH.... |
+1 |
This is why I just like animals and children better. This is my life. |
Because you don’t have to actually use those literal words to get the message across. To think otherwise is a 3rd grader’s understanding of racism. |
OP, you are the problem. You automatically see the teacher as a Black” person first, then a teacher. Welcome her to your White community? Do you view every person who is not White is NOT part of YOUR WHITE community? |
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Holy crap.
I've seen many teacher presentations which were poorly done. Mostly white teachers. So I would also be inclined to compliment a teacher for a particularly clear helpful and well-done presentation to let them know I appreciate their hard work. Guess I am a racist. I hate you people. |
The question is can you do with without a condescending tone. |
To be honest, I'd have the same response if an athlete of any color was well-spoken. Just listen to Aaron Rodgers explaining his "inoculation status." He sounds like a moron. |
Thank you. |
| Most black folks don’t care anymore because caring has never worked. |