A lengthy thread🧵 of #ADOS speakers calling into the OMB Townhall on Race and Ethnicity Statistical Standards
President and Co-Founder of ADOSAF Yvette Carnell
ADOS Co-Founder Antonio Moore:
“There has been an erasure of an entire population by the fact that we have not created the category American Descendants of Slavery” #ADOS#OMB
ADOSAF Compliance Director Simeon Harris:
“Our lineage has been the basis of our exclusion; an exclusion that continues today” #ADOS#OMB
Elizabeth:
“Disaggregating our data is important because we need to know where we stand. We need to know what our financials look like. We need to know what our lives look like as those descendants, as the people who built the country” #ADOS#OMB
Dr. Speller
“There is much data that would suggest substantive statistical differences that are otherwise shrouded by the persistent use of racial category” #ADOS#OMB
Allen:
“Liberian Americans, Haitian Americans, they all have different wealth outcomes, income levels, homeownership rates...In Boston we have $8 dollars, Caribbean immigrants have $18,000” #ADOS#OMB
Georgette:
“We can't fix what we can't measure” #ADOS#OMB
Brandon:
“I claim the name American Descendants of Slavery because the government has communicated to my group this way through benign negligence and this designation gives us the opportunity to communicate back through a demand for policy prescription” #ADOS#OMB
Dr. Gibson:
“The government must disaggregate to discern the effects of past targeted and exclusionary policy directed towards those who descended from the institution of slavery” #ADOS#OMB
Bernard:
“I hope the OMB uses this opportunity to assist the least of us in getting what we deserve and need from enhanced public policy derived from more accurate and precise data that is better able to capture our condition” #ADOS#OMB
Israel:
“The effects of these distinctive events can only be rectified when those who endured the suffering can be accurately identified” #ADOS#OMB
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When you separate various Black groups, you see that Ascendant Blacks, or those with two US born Black American parents, are the most underrepresented Black group in law schools 🧵
There is also a gendered aspect with Black men from every group being underrepresented, especially for Ascendant Black men
Also Black women from every other group besides Ascendants achieved representation in excess of their proportion of the population and even above white men
For those wondering how they define terms like “Ascendants” and “Black Immigrants” here is how the paper breaks it down
“Thirty-some years ago, there were no “Asian Americans.” Not a single one. There were Japanese Americans, Chinese Americans, Filipino Americans, and so on...Though known to their countrymen, collectively, as “Orientals”...they didn’t think of themselves at all as a collective” 🧵
“Stirred by the precedent of Black Power, a cadre of Asian student activists, mostly in California, performed an act of conceptual jujitsu: they would create a positive identity out of the unhappy fact that whites tend to lump all Asians together”
“Looking to make affirmative action programs easier to document, the Office of Management and Budget in 1973 christened the term Asian and Pacific Islander for use in government forms. In the eyes of the feds, all Asians now looked alike. But this was a good thing.”
🧵 Nailed It (2019) | How did Vietnamese come to dominate this multi-billion industry
“The nail industry is a 7.5 billion dollar industry that focuses just on nails. And more than half of these salons are Vietnamese.” 1/4
“[Tippi] Hedren brought in her personal manicurist to teach them the skills of the trade. An idea was hatched. Hedren convinced a beauty school to train them for free” 2/4
“They grew the first nail salon chain in the hood, South L.A. to be exact...Within two years the duo opened nine salons...All Vietnamese manicurist except for Kim. And like the original, in Black communities.” 3/4
Bisa Butler is a biethnic fiber artist whose art reflects her heritage mixing traditional Black American quilting techniques with African fabrics often recreating iconic photos in Black American History
A #BlackArt 🧵🪡
I Am Not Your Negro
The Photo The Quilt
Bisa Butler | #BlackArt
The Tea
The Photo The Quilt
Bisa Butler | #BlackArt
Southside Sunday Morning
The Photo The Quilt
“In the diamond industry, a handshake accompanied by the words mazel u'broche creates a binding agreement”
“Arbitrators explain that they decide complex cases on the basis of trade custom and usage, a little common sense, some Jewish law, and, last, common-law legal principles”
“The Diamond Dealers Club still functions like an old-fashioned mutual-aid society. It provides kosher restaurants for its members...There is a synagogue on
the premises, and contributions to a benevolent fund are required”
“The parallels between Jewish law and the modern organization of the diamond industry are striking. For example, under Jewish law, a Jew is forbidden to voluntarily go into the courts of non-Jews to resolve commercial disputes with another Jew”
The idea that there is a commonality among different racial/ethnic groups based on "shared" oppression is specious
Some Japanese Americans participated in blackface minstrel shows during internment and Native American tribes still owned Black slaves on the Trail of Tears twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Contrary to the popular belief of finding solidarity with Black Americans because of oppression, many groups instead reaffirmed the idea that they were superior to Black Americans
Many Native American tribes still discriminate against Black tribal members
The paradigm of group consciousness and solidarity is based on the history and struggles of Black Americans and there is a ton of research showing that other groups classified as "minorities" do not automatically share any commonality with Black Americans