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We'd all share Cottom's outrage if she provided any evidence that this tiny number of teenagers are a lynchpin of white southern power in a way that isn't available to black teenagers. But Cottom doesn't even try to provide evidence of discrimination in the rush process. She also doesn't try to link these few hundred wannabe housewives (or are they part of the power machine, she can't seem to decide) to a controlling interest in southern society. Cottom only alludes darkly to white power structures and hopes we'll all agree.
Instead, Cottom focusses her anger on the fact that many of these few hundred teenagers are thin, white bottle blonds. Look, it's way past time to broaden our standards of beauty to include more colors and shapes. The bottle blond look isn't available to black women, but black sororities have their own beauty and behavior standards, make no mistake. Cottom mocking and excoriating white women for, basically, being white is another kettle of fish, and it's not camouflaged by the thin veneer of her unproven claim that these few hundred teenagers will allegedly go on to control southern white society. |
She's a sigma gamma rho. You don't expect her to exercise introspection, do you? |
Until white supremacy has been completely dismantled, there will always been a need for affinity groups and safe spaces for marginalized people. I know this bothers white people so much, in the same way you are not allowed to use the N word, while Black people do because a primary tenet of white culture is that no one can tell you what you can't do ever (see 2nd Amendment). White folks built an entire society and systems of exclusion and discrimination that has only been successfully challenged in the past 70 years (for kicks, picking 1954 the year of Brown v Board, though the decision did not lead truly integrated schools...) and now, the organizations that Blacks built to uplift themselves are somehow problematic? This is akin to the big bully wanting the little kid he beat up to be forced to apologize to him too. |
yep. also ironic to criticize women who chose to perform their gender in a certain way, when progressives are supposed to be all about supporting gender expression. if this was a sorority of trans women glamming it up, there would be fawning NPR segments about it … |
Because somehow sororities at the 137th ranked college in America are bastions of power. Does anyone really think KAT is incubating the next generation of corporate leaders? |
Congratulations, you passed virtue signaling vocab 101. |
I just posted a snarky response agreeing with you before I actually read the article. Cottom is a cultural critic - so as much as David Brooks can write about a sandwich as representing something (a sandwich that I actually just ate btw) Cottom can write about Bama Rush (and she does in a better and more informed way). She’s also commenting on Bama Rush as a new pop culture phenomenon via Tik Toks. As far as race goes she observes the lack of diversity but has very interesting things to say about how to interpret that. Anyways Cottom does in other of her pieces/interviews indulge in dime-store reliance on the reified concept of “whiteness” which I really dislike but she doesn’t do it here. She has a much broader range examining economics, gender, class, & pop culture. I’m glad to see her on the pages of the NYT. |
DP. I agree that affinity groups are helpful. But it's still self-segregation, and that actually undermines Cottom's argument that the White sororities are excluding Blacks. So you need to decide: which is it, are Blacks self-segregating in their own sororities, or are White sororities excluding them as Cottom is claiming? If the latter, you need to prove with data (not just assert) that Black people who actually want to get into these White sororities are being discriminated against. You don't even try to prove this, and Cotton doesn't try to prove this either. Also, grow the eff up. Accusing posters who disagree with you of wanting to use the N word and carry guns is really childish. |
the more important point is that there is no black sorority Tik Tok trend. anyway, I don’t think any white DCUM person who knows any black people in DC fails to understand the role of Jack & Jill, HBCUs, black sororities/frats, or vacations to Oak Bluffs. I’m sure Cottom would have equally interesting things to say about them as elite institutions. |
You can think that both Brooks and Cottom are idiots, and I do. I'm no fan of the greeks, but if Cottom were really making a point about the greek system in general, I'd have more respect for her if she took down black frats too. She asserts various things about diversity and discrimination in the sororities, but she doesn't provide any evidence (at least Brooks occasionally serves up a fact, but he's still an idiot). Cottom's piece basically slams a pretty much irrelevant group of white women for doing white things. This doesn't advance racial awareness, instead it just drives more readers into the arms of Trump and his ilk. |
I think you need to reread the article if you think Cottom is calling for integration of white sororities …. also come on, the history of all-white sororities in *Alabama* is obviously different from black sororities. To claim that they are just neutral products of people wanting to affiliate by race is just stupidity. |
Do you think all the TikTok viewers are watching because they admire these sisters? Seriously? Probably most viewers are hate-watching and laughing. Also, you dodged the question about self-segregation contradicting Cottom's thesis about discrimination. |
NP. I'm not worked up about Alabama sororities, but this is ironically myopic vision of what power is and where it comes from. If you're outside certain parts of the big cities/corporate or academic America, a USNWR ranking is pretty meaningless. I don't know Alabama, but I know where I'm from, and I know that the mover and shakers in my hometown where mostly Greek affiliated graduates of a school that would have to jump 100 spots to be competitive with Alabama in USNWR. You might not care about that power, if you live where I'm from, people do. |
black sororities are an entirely different cultural and historical phenomenon than white sororoties! for one, there is no Tik Tok trend of black sorority rushing. To demand that Cottom treat them equally out of some kind of belief that they are symmetric phenomena is to ENTIRELY miss the point. As for Brooks v Cottom, if there is any justice, she’ll get his spot in the NYTimes when he retires. I’ve been following her for over 10 yrs and she has a lot of interesting things to say. |
Think you missed the point of the post, which was about race gatekeeping. |