Lol no. “The social media pile-on means that they must be right!” Cause we all know that Tiktok is the truth. |
Boy, I can see the arguments that the students didn't know what they were doing. And, we should lean towards giving children the benefit if the doubt. But, it's something to see such a denial of the complicated history of the song. Words such as "He was de nig dat sarved me so" are right there to see and it was a popular song in minstrels where blackface was central. Other and more modern variations don't change this history. We should not try to destroy these young men. But, we also should not dismiss the reaction as political correctness gone wrong. |
The Rednex version does not have those lyrics. Personally I’ve never heard the other lyrics and did not know they existed. Many people in this thread have said the same. |
Those lyrics are not in the 90s version of the song. When it is played today the true stereotype being perpetuated is of ignorant white “hicks” or “rednecks.” But of course we can evolve in our understanding and preferences. |
Teenagers do unkind things to each other, do dumb things and can be generally unempathetic. If they do these things around members of their own race, its generally no biggie and life goes on. If it crosses racial lines, it potentially becomes life ruining. Stand around any DCPS HS at dismissal, and watch how the students treat each other. The name calling, the language, the horse-play, the yelling; none of that ever causes a walk-out. Why is that? |
I, 45 yo f, right here from the DC area, didn’t know cotton eye Joe was a racist song, and frankly hadn’t ever read all of the lyrics. It’s played everywhere especially in the summertime. I hope those kids were ignorant to it like I was. |
Nobody's this dumb. If kids can horseplay at dismissal, they should be able to be racist? What is the connection in your mind, exactly? Is a little racism between friends how you let off steam? But if you're raising your kids to think that racism is just being generally unempathetic, and believe that being racist is "life ruining" for the racist but somehow also a false accusation on the part of the recipient of your child's unkind dumbness, then good riddance to you and your white family. The way you people are telling on yourself is bizarre. Like an Onion writer is floating trial balloons in this thread, finetuning a piece about horrible white parents. |
I hate this song with a fiery passion, and have since it was the 90s, when it a favorite at dance clubs, weddings, sporting events, etc. It was inescapable, and I'd love for the song to die. But unfortunately it lives on on Tik Tok. There are THOUSANDS of videos there of people showing off line-dancing skills, doing some silly challenge where they smash cans with their feet, etc. And on Tik Tok, it is just the same 15 seconds of a song played over and over. I wish teens spent more time with history books than on TikTok, but I'm sad to say most kids know this song from TikTok as a goofy hybrid country-techno song, like Old Town Road. I'm not defending these kids. I don't know the details of the incident, so I'm not going to pass judgement. Just wanted to counter, that teenagers DO listen to that song for fun these days. Glad it was handled and hope everyone is okay. |
DP. I am raising my kid to respect and listen when someone tells him that his words/actions are hurtful (even if he did not intend them that way). But I will also defend him to the last if someone tries to ruin his life over an innocent mistake or “unnkind dumbness.” PP’s point is that kids engage in “unkind dumbness” all the time (including on social media) but there’s only one scenario where this can result in life-changing consequences. |
I've heard the song hundreds of times and never knew it was racist. But I don't to make excuses for these kids -- it's possible they didn't know the song's racist background but STILL had intended to do something that was racially discriminatory. At the very least it should be investigated.
But it's very sad that any interaction between Black and non-Black people, that would be nothing if between people of the same race, is almost by default considered racist against Black people until proven otherwise. |
And I hope that any parents of the accused who decide to lawyer up over this incident are bankrupted in the process. Raise your children better and stop trying to defend their poor behavior! |
Very telling that the majority here don't have a kid at SWW but think they know the environment. Well you really don't have a clue! The incident was the tipping point related to other issues. The meaning of the song today can be something quite different to teens than 25 years ago or in your bubble. People will give you the benefit of the doubt. Just say "I'm sorry ,I didn't know" and remove the post. This doesn't appear to be the case. I glad my DD and classmates took a stand. It's a learning experience for all. |
right - like you wouldn’t defend your child from expulsion based on a false accusation? |
Your DD joined a witch hunt mob for her own self aggrandizement - thereby making it much harder to actually handle these incidents in an age-appropriate and productive way. Also there’s no evidence that the kids refused to delete the Tiktok. |
That's DCUM's answer to everything BUT never pursues anything. No reason to involve a lawyer. No identities have been released and no privacy laws broken. The punishment is what it is and if you wanna fight, go for it. I doubt that a family wants to go thru the "discovery" process? That alone could be devastating-all media posts are fair game! Just apologize, learn, and listen to others. |