...my problem with the entire question of tone and courtesy is that it's typically only applied one way: people of color/non-white people who are angry about racism are told to watch their tone and be more polite.

It reminds me of how women angry about sexism are told that they're being shrill and strident, and men would listen to them if they were more polite and phrased it better. I say that not to compare oppressions, but to say that the mechanisms of socialization work in some eerily similar ways to maintain oppressive power structures: Speaking up for your rights is rude. Telling people who are being kicked from corner to post that it's their own fault nobody's listening, because they're not saying it right, is normal and polite.

The question of "personal attacks" is also applied and seen in a similarly skewed manner. When a person of color says, "Hey, so-and-so said a racist thing," they're seen as making a personal attack. When a white person says, "You're not smart enough for your opinion to count," they're seen as arguing the issues.

The burden of being polite and impersonal - in a matter that affects people's everyday lives on a profoundly personal level - is placed on the backs of the people who have to cope with the oppression in real life. And the people who are at the top of the power structure are the ones who get to be perceived as being polite and nice, when the substance of what they're actually saying - your opinions don't count, you're not educated enough to have a valid opinion, you're too educated to have a valid opinion, we don't want you - is neither nice nor polite.

These are not my original ideas, just my phrasing. I have seen this argument made many, many times by people of color. And also by white women. And also by GLBT people. A much more detailed explanation here, including the point that no tone is ever good enough.
rydra_wong: Chiana from Farscape in a silly hat, captioned "really white girls against racism" (Chi - *really* white girls)

From: [personal profile] rydra_wong


*snerks* I was quite entertained by that, as it's actually the first time I've been on the receiving end of the "tone" argument.

Usually, once people have realized I'm white, I can be as snarky as I want and I'll still get patted on the head and told how polite and rational I am and how they can have a reasonable conversation with me, unlike Those Scary Angry Hostile People over there.

(This has even happened when I've simply re-iterated or expressed my agreement with something that a POC just said.)

So it was a new and exciting experience!

From: [identity profile] daedala.livejournal.com


Haha. I almost posted that I was pretty sure he didn't realize you were white. But I decided maybe I shouldn't try to make that call.
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