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Mulatto.org > Forums > Important Issues to Mulattos > A Brazilian Senator Wants to Reclassify Mulattos As Black.
 
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Hanzou
Moderator
Registered: Sept 21, 2005
Posts: 645

    July 22, 2006 at 10:59 AMReply with quote#1

http://www.brazzil.com/content/view/9656/78/

 

Written by Janer Cristaldo   

Friday, 21 July 2006

Brazilian mulataA stupidity cloud seems to hover over the Brazilian national Congress these days. Not that it would be easy to find any intelligent cloud over the Congress. But now there's a high concentration of stupidity and the whole country is threatened with a stupidity rain. Two projects, that intend to send Brazil two centuries back are being discussed in Brasília.

One of them, by senator Paulo Paim, already approved in the Senate, wants to send Brazil back to the racist America of the America when Jim Crow laws were in force or perhaps to the Hitlerist Germany or even to the South Africa of apartheid.

To be honest, I have nothing new to say about the matter. Since talks about quotas started I have been denouncing  this tactic adopted by the black movements as something that will only serve to stimulate racism. The stupidity keeps moving on with ever increasing audacity.

While before all we talked about were quotas, senator Paim's project now intends to identify Brazilians by race, as it was done to Jews in Nazi Germany. Is the stupidity being repeated? This chronicler feels compelled to repeat himself.

I have already commented on the Statute of Racial Equality, when I denounced recently the extinction of the mulatto. With a stroke of a pen, the senator intends to extirpate from the country's history the most evident proof of the good racial conviviality. The expedient is elementary.

As blacks comprise a mere 5,4 % of the national population, the senator decides to call black the whole mulatto contingent, which represents 39.9% of the population. Give a little time and Brazil will be defined as being for the most part black. By the way, this is how the country is already seen by many Americans and Europeans.

The intention is to adopt the American model, which does not admit miscegenation. It's either black or white. Some intellectuals, able to escape the herd spirit that characterizes the species, presented to the Congress a document with 114 signatures, with arguments opposing the Statute and the reserves required by racial quotas.

Right away the document was satanized as the "White Elite's Manifesto," as if the mean white men were interested in maintaining the black population far away from their territory. 

The government, which since then had been insisting on maintaining the academic quotas, felt  compelled to back out. Now they are talking about social quotas. If on one hand it disengages the reserve of vacancies from the racial element, on the other  it maintains the absurd purpose of sending to the university people who do not fill the basic requisites to enter college, ruining once an for all the academic teaching, which is already extremely deficient.

Paulo Paim put a goat in the room. The government removes the goat but leaves the rest of the animals in the room. That goes without saying that such a project is flagrantly unconstitutional. "All are equal under the law, without distinction of any nature," says article 5th of our Magna Carta. If the new proposal is approved, some will be more equal than others.

Good part of the black population liked the idea of winning with bent rules and they can't even see the trap they are falling into: having entered university through the back door they will be naturally rejected in the labor market.

Anticipating that, the senator has already added to his project a guarantee that the law will assure at least 20% of the positions in show or advertising on TV to Afro-Brazilian actors. The logic next step will be to impose these same quotas to the private sector, ending once and for all any merit criterion left.

The project also includes a mandatory course in high school, General History of Africa and of the Black in Brazil, as if Africa's history and that of blacks were more important for Brazil than Greece's History and of the Greeks, or Portugal and the history of the Portuguese, or Italy and the Italians,  America and the Americans.

It would be interesting to imagine the way the new course will deal with the sale of slaves to the European whites by the black tribal chiefs of Africa. Or will it be a forbidden chapter of history, like the slaughter of Polish officers in Katyn forest by Stalin's troops, like the slaughter of 7,000 Spanish members of the clergy by the communist in Spain?

The senator's project still anticipates the creation of a special ID that will identify blacks racially. According to the statute, blacks will be required to carry their black ID card. It's funny to observe that in past decades the black movements had arrived at the conclusion that race doesn't exist.

Now it does exist and must appear in a document. Since whitening is quite generalized in Brazil, perhaps a better solution would be to create a tattoo or another very visible accessory, like Hitler created in Germany for Jews and homosexuals.

If such monstrosity is approved this country where miscegenation has always been the rule will start to officially discriminate by race. We are walking with large steps towards a black Nazism.

If such foolishness weren't enough, another project, this one from House Representative Pastor Amarildo intends to take the country even farther back in time, to Middle Age days, when the guilds controlled with an iron fist the exercise of professions.

Basically, the intention is to smother freedom of expression, regulating journalism, a profession that cannot be regulated.

If thanks to a decree-law passed by a military junta in 1969 only those with a journalism course can be journalists in Brazil, the new project, approved by the Congress in the quiet of the World Cup, intends to regulate even columnists and commentators.

Now, this dictatorial rule does not find a parallel in any democratic regime in the world. Journalist is he who gets his income from the exercise of the journalism profession and that's it.

The pastor's project is in reaction to the  rejection of a proposal by Fenaj (National Federation of Journalists) to create a Federal Board of Journalism. That proposal was sent in 2004 to Congress by the Federal Government. Due to the pressure by the journalists and the media owners, however,  the attempt to curtail even more freedom of expression in Brazil was withdrawn on that same year.

Again, the quotas. The white guild wants to protect the corporation. While the country was getting thrilled and distracted by the World Cup, the project was approved almost clandestinely in Congress. It now depends only on a veto or an approval by the Supreme Ignoramus, the president. It's amazing that such a rule would appear now in these Internet days, a time in which any citizen can start his blog and do journalism the way he pleases.

The Supreme Ignoramus, as it is known,  has no love lost for the press. He might very well adopt such juridical excrescence. Right now when the Web has liberated journalists from the costs of paper, printing and distribution. Blogs represent today high level journalism and they are nimbler than the journalism on paper. The Chinese communists have already realized this and are censoring the Internet.

If he adopts this scourge, the Supreme Ignoramus will be fighting in vain against tomorrow's dawn.

 

http://www.brazzil.com/content/view/9656/78/

 

Thoughts?

Dave
Registered: Sept 19, 2005
Posts: 4,372

    July 22, 2006 at 11:17 AMReply with quote#2

Well, of course I am against eliminating multiracial self-identification options in Brazil or other places. That would seem to me to be a reduction of individual liberty and freedom of self-expression.

 

The best thing we can do about this is support Brazilians who want to retain the right to identify multiracially.

 

Other ideas mentioned in the article, such as minimum representation quotas for "afrobrazilians" in national media may be a good idea for Brazil, but I think it would be a great idea for mulattobrazilians too. It might not be a bad idea for America, either.


Registered: Member deleted
Posts: N/A

    July 22, 2006 at 12:30 PMReply with quote#3

A face to the senator

 

Paulo Paim

 

Contact

Dave
Registered: Sept 19, 2005
Posts: 4,372

    July 22, 2006 at 12:51 PMReply with quote#4

He's a good-looking guy. I think it may be worth it to email him to encourage him to accomplish all of his other objectives while preserving multiracial identities as options in Brazil.

 

EDIT: Here's an email I just sent him (I edited out information which identifies me personally)

 

Please preserve multiracial identities options in Brazil

Dear Senador Paulo Paim,

I am a 3rd year law student at *** in New York City, USA. I am also a member of the *** Multiracial Law Students Association.

I read that you were advocating to reclassify all mulattos as "black" in Brazil. I would like to encourage you to preserve the freedom of Brazilians to choose multiracial identities. Here in the United States, us multiracials are working for the right to self-identify as multiracial, such as mulatto or eurasian, and fighting the old American "one drop rule" that forces all multiracials with some african/black heritage to be classified as solely black.

I hope you preserve government recognized multiracial identity choices in Brazil, even as you pursue your other goals such as increasing affirmitive action and representation for multiracials, blacks, and other people of color in Brazil.

Thank you for hearing my point of view,

Best,

***

*** Law JD Candidate 2007


Registered: Member deleted
Posts: N/A

    July 22, 2006 at 01:15 PMReply with quote#5

Two places where we can see this trend:

http://www.mundonegro.com.br/

http://www.etnica.com.br/

Look at the poll:

Qual o look de celebridade negra que mais te agrada?
O loiro liso da Taís Araújo
Os cachos longos da Isabel Fillardis
O longo avermelhado da Camila Pitanga
O crespo assumido da Sheron Menezes
O channel desestruturado da Glória Maria

 

Translation:

Which black celebrity look pleases you more ?
Blond smooth of the Taís Araújo
the long clusters of the Isabel Fillardis
the long colored one of the Camila Pitanga
tight curls of the Sheron Menezes
unstructured of the Glory Maria

 

The big question is what do they refer to as Black and is this ODR or just refering to an ethnicity concept.

And why is there no celebrity that looks like your dark skinned brazilian beauties who would be seen as Black in any context

TheMulattoKid
Registered: June 20, 2006
Posts: 323

    July 22, 2006 at 01:18 PMReply with quote#6

OHHHHHH CHHHRRIIIISTTT!!

 

4$#($(%(#)(@)@))@)))$$$

 

 

dAMMIT!

 

WHen will thse *** give up!??? Its not gonna work. Brazilians are never going to let this *** fly, ever. That rotten *** son of a *** traitor. Arerrggghj! Its about time we struck back. Get brazilian activists over here and ours down there. ***.

 

 

Zack


Registered: Member deleted
Posts: N/A

    July 22, 2006 at 01:22 PMReply with quote#7

Here you see more comments on the article:

http://www.afrolatino.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2792


Registered: Member deleted
Posts: N/A

    July 22, 2006 at 01:23 PMReply with quote#8

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheMulattoKid

OHHHHHH CHHHRRIIIISTTT!!

 

4$#($(%(#)(@)@))@)))$$$

 

 

dAMMIT!

 

WHen will thse *** give up!??? Its not gonna work. Brazilians are never going to let this *** fly, ever.

Zach, those sites are bothe Brazilian that I posted.

Dave
Registered: Sept 19, 2005
Posts: 4,372

    July 22, 2006 at 02:01 PMReply with quote#9

Quote:
Originally Posted by Otorongo

 

The big question is what do they refer to as Black and is this ODR or just refering to an ethnicity concept.

 

Well, we have brazilian members of mulatto.org who have an ethnic identification as mulatto. So, I'm sure there is a diversity of approaches in Brazil. Which is a good thing, in my opinion.

Dave
Registered: Sept 19, 2005
Posts: 4,372

    July 22, 2006 at 02:19 PMReply with quote#10

Brazilian mulata

 

 

 

 

 

One thing I think we can all do is support the author of this article, Janer Cristaldo. I assume she is a Brazilian mulatto journalist, and she clearly supports maintaining multiracial identity options such as mulatto in Brazil.

 

Also, rather than "wage jihad" against the Senator, I think we can try contacting him and trying to persuade him first in a friendly way. After all, he is very likely mulatto himself, and I think he may relate to the freedom of having multiracial identity options.   

 

Finally, if you go to the "comments" section of the article, you can leave comments that the author and many people who read the article will probably read too. It's a good way to let folks (including the author) know that many of us support positive mulatto identity as an option for Brazilians and globally:

http://www.brazzil.com/content/view/9656/78/

dayday
Registered: Feb 17, 2006
Posts: 629

    July 22, 2006 at 03:38 PMReply with quote#11

That would be like eliminating the history of an entire people. This guy has some serious mental problems...why would he do something like that is what I want to ask him. I'm curious of his own racial background. This just further ticks me off because it seems like Mulattos everywhere are being forced to be black. I'm starting to like this guy as much as I do Sadam.

Hanzou
Moderator
Registered: Sept 21, 2005
Posts: 645

    July 22, 2006 at 03:57 PMReply with quote#12

Quote:
Originally Posted by Otorongo

Here you see more comments on the article:

http://www.afrolatino.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2792

Are those posters really "Afrolatinos", or African Americans trying to spread the black nationalist paradigm into Latin American countries?

Hanzou
Moderator
Registered: Sept 21, 2005
Posts: 645

    July 22, 2006 at 04:00 PMReply with quote#13

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave

Brazilian mulata

 

 

 

 

 

One thing I think we can all do is support the author of this article, Janer Cristaldo. I assume she is a Brazilian mulatto journalist, and she clearly supports maintaining multiracial identity options such as mulatto in Brazil.

 

Also, rather than "wage jihad" against the Senator, I think we can try contacting him and trying to persuade him first in a friendly way. After all, he is very likely mulatto himself, and I think he may relate to the freedom of having multiracial identity options.   

 

Finally, if you go to the "comments" section of the article, you can leave comments that the author and many people who read the article will probably read too. It's a good way to let folks (including the author) know that many of us support positive mulatto identity as an option for Brazilians and globally:

http://www.brazzil.com/content/view/9656/78/

Good comments there Dave. Let them know that the plight of mulattos in Brazil is also the plight of mulattos around the world.


Registered: Member deleted
Posts: N/A

    July 22, 2006 at 06:20 PMReply with quote#14

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave

Brazilian mulata

 

 

 

 

 

One thing I think we can all do is support the author of this article, Janer Cristaldo. I assume she is a Brazilian mulatto journalist, and she clearly supports maintaining multiracial identity options such as mulatto in Brazil.

Its a he.

Janer Cristaldo

janer.jpg
Janer Cristaldo
Gaúcho de Santana do Livramento, Cristaldo formou-se em Direito e Filosofia e doutorou-se em Letras Francesas e Comparadas pela Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle (Paris III). Morou ainda na Suécia e Madri, onde estudou Literatura e a língua de ambos os países. No Brasil, lecionou Literatura Comparada e Brasileira na Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina e trabalhou como redator da editoria Internacional na Folha e no Estado de São Paulo.


Registered: Member deleted
Posts: N/A

    July 22, 2006 at 06:20 PMReply with quote#15

Quote:
Originally Posted by Hanzou
Quote:
Originally Posted by Otorongo

Here you see more comments on the article:

http://www.afrolatino.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2792

Are those posters really "Afrolatinos", or African Americans trying to spread the black nationalist paradigm into Latin American countries?

AfroAmericans and AfroLatinos that have embraced Afrocentric mentalities.

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