Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need a sign on your front lawn to support a cause? More effective would be to volunteer or DO something rather than a shallow sign of status.
I agree that only having a yard sign is not enough. But I don't think that OP is suggesting that having a yard sign is her only form of activism.
Having a yard sign or bumper sticker or button or whatever is a very easy, very cheap, very small thing. But, I don't think it's harmful.
Actually, OP said exactly that. She admitted that her only form of activism is her "social worker" job and she can't do much more than that. So, yeah, basically OP just wants to put a sign on her lawn (and still send her kid to LAMB). Just another hypocrite.
OP again - not a social worker, but close enough. Assuming LAMB is the go-to charter for gentrifiers, then no I wouldn't want a LAMB due to demographics if there was a better or equal but more convenient charter, even if it was overwhelmingly black/not "like us".
Absolutely admit that I'm not getting a babysitter for an event that happens after bedtime or taking a wild toddler to a serious daytime event. I did a lot more activist work before kids and plan/hope/intend to get my kid(s) involved when they are old enough to actually participate and not be distractions. My mom drug me to a million rallies, letter writing events, and volunteer opportunities as a kid, and I fully intend to do the same. That said, does that mean I should wait to put up a sign until I can actually get involved again? Also welcome any suggestions for how to be involved with small kids!
Anonymous wrote:
This whole thing just sounds so strange. I don't recall ever seeing a sign in someones yard besides a "For Sale" sign.
And loving a neigborhood because you live near black people or poor people is just weird. If you want to really embrace these things, move to Detroit.
Black/Hispanic/Asian people are not aliens, they are people just like you and me.
Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand about these signs is when do you remove them? They are not like an election or referendum sign.
Many of my neighbors have them, I live in an upper middle class area with top schools and few minorities. I like where I live, it's clean, it's safe, it feels comfortable to me.
My neighbors who have these signs clearly like where they live and like the people who they live amongst too. They have the means to move to a more diverse area and yet here they are with their yard signs. The whole thing seems disingenuous to me.
Anonymous wrote:Hey white people- we don't really want you living in our midst and "improving" things for us.
Signed,
Black People
Anonymous wrote:I am Asian-American and I have a ton of white friends who are super into being "allies" but from what I can see, they all live in white neighborhoods and are trying to get their kids into a charter Montessori school because the "method" is so much better than regular public schools. It seems from my perspective that these people are more into their identity of being an ally and not part of what they consider the norm. But in my experience, being part of the norm is where you get diversity in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:
This whole thing just sounds so strange. I don't recall ever seeing a sign in someones yard besides a "For Sale" sign.
Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand about these signs is when do you remove them? They are not like an election or referendum sign.
Many of my neighbors have them, I live in an upper middle class area with top schools and few minorities. I like where I live, it's clean, it's safe, it feels comfortable to me.
My neighbors who have these signs clearly like where they live and like the people who they live amongst too. They have the means to move to a more diverse area and yet here they are with their yard signs. The whole thing seems disingenuous to me.
Anonymous wrote:I am Asian-American and I have a ton of white friends who are super into being "allies" but from what I can see, they all live in white neighborhoods and are trying to get their kids into a charter Montessori school because the "method" is so much better than regular public schools. It seems from my perspective that these people are more into their identity of being an ally and not part of what they consider the norm. But in my experience, being part of the norm is where you get diversity in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Why is nobody questioning BLM affiliation of OP?
Anonymous wrote:I think a yard sign means nothing and scream white liberal who wants to prove who great I am.
Live your life and make your actions speak.
Recognize white privilege, speak up for those who are marginalized. Your neighbors don't need to know how great you are because that should not be th end goal - having neighbors who pat you on the back for being so liberal.
Anonymous wrote:Hey white people- we don't really want you living in our midst and "improving" things for us.
Signed,
Black People