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Recently, the New York Times ran a story suggesting that Cain's use of humor and choice of words might not be so funny.
At issue was Cain's announcement that his Secret Service codename should be "Cornbread" and his use, often before white audiences, of phrases like "shucky-ducky."
He also claims that he likes to wear gold because it looks good against his "beautiful dark skin," and he likens himself to Haagen-Dazs black walnut ice cream because he is, he claims, not just a flavor of the month.
For some people, these are nothing more than charming phrases; but for others, they raise the specter of race in ways that are unsettling.
For example, "shucky-ducky" is a nonsensical phrase often associated with uneducated Southern blacks.
Cain's wish to be called "cornbread" is also troubling, since it can be viewed, like watermelon and fried chicken, as a stereotype applied to blacks.
Yes, Cain is himself a Southern-born black man who grew up in a lower-income family, so it would be unfair to insist he's being inauthentic.
But what is at issue here is how Cain uses these verbal tactics in front of white audiences…
http://www.nydailynews.com/opinions...cial_language_is_rhetoric_we_must_refuse.html
At issue was Cain's announcement that his Secret Service codename should be "Cornbread" and his use, often before white audiences, of phrases like "shucky-ducky."
He also claims that he likes to wear gold because it looks good against his "beautiful dark skin," and he likens himself to Haagen-Dazs black walnut ice cream because he is, he claims, not just a flavor of the month.
For some people, these are nothing more than charming phrases; but for others, they raise the specter of race in ways that are unsettling.
For example, "shucky-ducky" is a nonsensical phrase often associated with uneducated Southern blacks.
Cain's wish to be called "cornbread" is also troubling, since it can be viewed, like watermelon and fried chicken, as a stereotype applied to blacks.
Yes, Cain is himself a Southern-born black man who grew up in a lower-income family, so it would be unfair to insist he's being inauthentic.
But what is at issue here is how Cain uses these verbal tactics in front of white audiences…
http://www.nydailynews.com/opinions...cial_language_is_rhetoric_we_must_refuse.html