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My Brother David Dennis succinctly breaks shit down in the video above about that anti-Black BAFTA incident that was televised the other night, where, as my Sister Brooke Obie made plain, BAFTA and the BBC managed to censor a young Black man saying “Free Palestine,” but saw fit to allow Mr. Davidson’s slur to air in its entirety.

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3 days ago · 556 likes · Brooke Obie

And while there’s all of this extremely performative hand-wringing and the dying on of hills about protecting Mr. Davidson from the apparently too-degrading act of apology, according to his own film, apologizing for a tic deemed offensive isn’t outside the realm of possibility. In the critically acclaimed I Swear, the character representing Mr. Davidson says “Fuck the queen!” to Queen Charlotte’s great-great-great-great-granddaughter Queen Elizabeth II, and immediately apologizes to the queen and everyone else within earshot.

Therefore, the question remains: What’s so different about Mr. Jordan and Elder Lindo that suddenly makes an apology burdensome, outrageous, unnecessary, and ableist?

I don’t have to tell you because you already know.

To my Brother David’s and my Sister Brooke’s testimonies, I would like to add this:

Going forward, no Black person—especially if you are a self-respecting Black person—should ever attend any BAFTA event or accept any BAFTA award again; no matter the pressure, the potential “exposure,” or the alleged prestige associated with doing so.

Pointing out the unfairness or the hypocrisy of white supremacy isn’t, and has never been, enough. We already know that if it was a Black man with Tourette’s syndrome in that audience and he shouted a slur at non-Black presenters onstage, he would have been immediately sanctioned and forced to apologize. It’s safe to say that the response wouldn’t have been him being defended, empathized with, sympathized with, coddled, or treated as though he were the victim. No. What would have happened is that we would be told how his disability was no justification for his behavior and that very aspect of his identity would have been weaponized against him. We’ve seen that happen countless times before.

White supremacists don’t mind being hypocrites at all. In fact, they get a kick out of the anger and frustration we exhibit when they create rules, break them, and then turn around demand that we abide by the very rules they broke. That paradigm (them breaking the rules and us following them) assures them of their power. They know that all we’re going to do is be angry and frustrated and then, next year, show right up at the scene of the crime again to prove that our anger and frustration are both meaningless and toothless, and that they were right in believing that there’s no level of disrespect they could display that would get us to finally respect ourselves.

We have to do it differently, Fam.

They have to be made to feel what it means to be denied our presence and our artistic genius. And they must be made to know what price is to be paid when they dare to treat us with hostility. It’s way past time that we stopped giving credence to the idea that we need their co-sign to be considered legitimate at our crafts anyway.

I advocate removing ourselves from all of their shit. Let’s take our fucking ball and go the fuck home. Do not watch or patronize their self-congratulatory events. Period. The end. Let’s start weening ourselves off of our whiteness-validation addictions.

Unless it’s a strategy about divestment, I really don’t want to hear shit else about BAFTA or any other white supremacist organization.

It’s time to leave them behind.

Let’s build our own shit, make it meaningful, and celebrate ourselves. ✊🏾

Feb 23
at
9:59 PM
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