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MrScorpio

(73,630 posts)
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 10:22 AM Jun 2018

Why black women's experiences of #MeToo are different

THE CONVERSATION
14 JUN 2018 AT 08:52 ET


Actress Nicolle Rochelle, who appeared on several episodes of ‘The Cosby Show.’ AP Photo/Corey Perrine, File

In April, a 25-year-old black woman named Chikesia Clemons was violently arrested by police at a Waffle House restaurant in Alabama.

A video of the arrest that went viral shows police pulling Clemons from her chair and throwing her to the floor. In the process, her breasts are exposed and her dress rides up in the back. When she attempts to cover her breasts, the two officers on top of her threaten to break her arm for “resisting.”

Clemons’ experience is not unique. In the U.S., black women are not afforded the same regard for bodily privacy as white women.

Another example: In an investigation of the Baltimore City Police Department, the Department of Justice found that the Baltimore Police Department frequently engaged in unjustified strip searches of African-Americans. In one instance, Baltimore police conducted a strip search of a black woman, including an anal cavity search, on a sidewalk in broad daylight and in full public view. The woman’s pleas to not be forced to disrobe in public were ignored. Her offense? A broken headlight.

While the #MeToo movement has been successful in bringing down several high-profile assailants, critics continue to argue that it has been monopolized by middle- and upper-class white women, particularly white Hollywood actresses. This, despite the fact that a black woman, Tarana Burke, created the Me Too campaign more than a decade ago. These criticisms reflect the fact that black women have experienced sexual violence differently than white women.

As a philosopher of race and gender who has written about sexual harassment, I offer historical context on the ways that black women experience sexual abuse, often by the authority of the state, as a way to think about black women’s contemporary experiences as the kinds of experiences that #MeToo should address.

https://www.rawstory.com/2018/06/black-womens-experiences-metoo-different/
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marble falls

(57,010 posts)
1. Back in the sixties and seventies we dressed for the possibility of being arrested: jeans and long..
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 11:14 AM
Jun 2018

sleeve shirts for being dragged across the macadam. and to make groping a bit harder.

If you're going to protest and one should always protest as needed, please dress appropriately. It'll save you some skin. And a photo thousands of Incels are are desperately googling for even as we type here.

lunasun

(21,646 posts)
2. She was at a restaurant . She was not expecting to get arrested . She was not intending to agitate
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 11:30 AM
Jun 2018

Clues 1,2&3

marble falls

(57,010 posts)
3. Then who wrote the Femen mottoes on her arms? She was there for a protest....
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 11:35 AM
Jun 2018

And I applaud and support her 100%. If we don't start getting back in the streets things will continue to get worse.

lunasun

(21,646 posts)
4. She was ordering food
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 11:40 AM
Jun 2018
https://blavity.com/6-things-everyone-should-know-about-chikesia-clemons-arrest-at-a-waffle-house-in-alabama


At a Saraland, Alabama Waffle House on April 22 at 2:45 a.m., 25-year-old Mobile resident Chikesia Clemons was wrestled to the ground and threatened by police during an arrest over 50 cent-cutlery. Blavity reported the victim told an employee that she did not previously have to pay the extra 50 cents for the four utensils. But the employee insisted that she had to pay. Then, the Waffle House employee reportedly canceled Clemons' order and police were called out after Clemons asked for the Waffle House district manager's contact information.

That photo is not Ms Clemons but media would rather show you that than this

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DbqDiaVX4AEAACx?format=jpg
Don't get played

JustAnotherGen

(31,780 posts)
5. That image doesn't match the story
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 01:08 PM
Jun 2018

A black woman had her body exposed by a couple of thugs for doing something simple - like going to a restaurant.

Waffle House - Cancelled. They shouldn't even exist anymore. I don't care how many people lose their jobs in the process.

marble falls

(57,010 posts)
7. I certainly agree with corporate responsibility - they built and tolerated the atmosphere ...
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 02:43 PM
Jun 2018

that got us where we are now. I agree the cops by every detail in the story restrained her from pulling her clothes back on, Femen is a truly activist feminist movement internationally where members use partial nudity to make their points. When I saw the writing on her body, which Femen do also, I thought naturally she was at a political action. Thats all. I saw the picture.

I believe she was unnecessarily roughed up in a time more and more PoC are being unnecessarily roughed up and much, much worse.

I wasn't being critical, but being practical - if I am going to an action I am going to dress accordingly. I'm staying away from Waffle House.

 

heaven05

(18,124 posts)
6. AA women
Thu Jun 14, 2018, 01:21 PM
Jun 2018

and their experiences in the #MeToo campaign in an eye opener on the continuing way the importance of AA women and abuse is reacted to by media, white women and white society in general. The 'Wafflehouse Incident' in Alabama clearly shows the racist abuse of Ms. Clemons, but the lies were spun early by Wafflehouse and authorities to divert and distract attention from the cruelty of this society AGAINST AA women. Sandra Bland always comes to mind when a subject such as this arises. Black women as are black men abused and murdered are never long in the media's eye. At least not as long as the high profile white women get on claims of sexual abuse, I feel.

This society is irredeemably and irrevocably racist and the fight goes on

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