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[Pgabs] Why don't black protesters dress nice anymore?

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by KingCheetah, Apr 5, 2018.

  1. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Atomic Playboy

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    How Clothes Helped Female Leaders Convey the Struggle for Civil Rights

    During the civil rights era, the “Sunday Best” look was de rigueur at nonviolent protests. Appearing polished and put-together brought a serious undertone to the proceedings and demanded that the activists be taken seriously as citizens. Donning Castleberry tweed suits and delicate strands of pearls as she marched alongside her husband, Coretta Scott King was the personification of grace under fire. The de facto first lady of the movement, there was not a curl in her marcel wave out of place as the mother of four stood up at rallies. Women’s and civil rights activist Dorothy Height couldn’t be ignored in her signature church hats—a vibrant and ladylike way to accessorize the professional business suits she wore when taking on lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

    Diane Nash, the gutsy organizer with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), looked like a prim and proper model—making the image of her being arrested countless times at demonstrations all the more jarring. Fannie Lou Hamer, the Mississippi-born firebrand and daughter of sharecroppers whose forceful vocals disrupted the Democratic Convention of 1964, attended voting rights protests in spirited frocks and a prim pocketbook by her side.


    Effective and vigilant, these smartly attired leaders helped usher in major legislative victories—from the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to the Civil Rights Act of 1968—that largely struck down the Jim Crow laws. But in the late ’60s, a major shift in politics—and style—occurred, during which a much more militant group responded to a younger generation’s call for swifter action and feistier leadership. Enter the Black Panther Party.

    Donning their signature black turtlenecks, leather trenchcoats, and berets over the tufts of their Afros, the party spoke of black self-determination in the face of massive urban blight and heavy police surveillance. And alongside the BPP’s domineering cadre of black male leadership stood women like Kathleen Cleaver, Elaine Brown, and Angela Davis, who espoused the party’s beliefs from head to toe. Sporting Afros and embracing what Cleaver once described as a “new awareness . . . that their own natural, physical appearance is beautiful,” these leaders and their crowns of natural curls came to reflect a new pride in one’s appearance—a striking visual marker of black identity.

    https://www.vogue.com/article/rosa-...avis-coretta-scott-king-civil-rights-movement


     
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  2. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Member

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    Is this yet another, albeit cleverly disguised, Black Panther thread in the D&D?
     
    KingCheetah likes this.
  3. iconoclastic

    iconoclastic Member

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    Have you seen what white protesters are wearing these days?
     
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  4. conquistador#11

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    bring back the bow ties!
     
  5. mdrowe00

    mdrowe00 Member

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    ...you know how hard it is to get blood out of those suits?

    ...and suits offer almost NO protection against dog bites...

    ...and don't get me started on what happens when you get them wet...
     
  6. edwardc

    edwardc Member

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    God no to the bow ties i have never liked those things.
     
  7. edwardc

    edwardc Member

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    [​IMG]
    Maybe they all should dress like this.
     
  8. dc rock

    dc rock Member

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    Most people dress poorly these days. I've seen dudes wearing golf polos, starched, wranglers, and brown boots to business formal events. What a disgrace.
     
    iconoclastic and justtxyank like this.
  9. Rashmon

    Rashmon Member

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  10. justtxyank

    justtxyank Member

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    Bernie: "Make sure I'm in the picture!"

    [​IMG]
     
  11. edwardc

    edwardc Member

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    With a big ole koolaid smile
    [​IMG]
     
  12. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    I enjoyed the video, Rashmon, but I thought that Mr. Duke (who sounded like he hasn't lost a thing) was overly effusive in complimenting Dweezil's guitar playing skills (I think he was being polite, which is cool). George is right about Dweezil improving a great deal, though. He has. Duke then made a ridiculous comment about this group playing better than Frank, George and the Mothers played back in the day. I disagree with that, a lot. A very appropriate music selection, otherwise. :cool: (this is intended to be the "cool!" version of the emoticon, not what I think it really looks like, which is, "...eh?")
     
  13. pgabriel

    pgabriel Educated Negro

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    B-Bob is the fashion expert


    Follow me @realpgabriel
     
  14. pgabriel

    pgabriel Educated Negro

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    Why are international spies no longer suave like Roger Moore and are instead fat and crude like reality show billionaires?


    @realpgabriel
     
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