James Kirkpatrick VDARE
September 3, 2015 It’s like the Middle Passage all over again
Poor Tay-Tay. She just can’t win.
Taylor Swift has been trying her best to appeal to more “vibrant” consumers as of late, but it never seems to do her any good. She’s learning the hard way that any kind of engagement with black culture or Africa is automatically racist.
After a blowup a few months ago with
escaped laboratory experiment Nicki Minaj, Swift went on to win “Best
Video of the Year” at the 2015 Video Music Awards last weekend. Alas,
even in triumph, she made a fatal misstep when she premiered her new
video, Wildest Love.
This was a crucial mistake because cisgendered White people need to
understand that they can’t talk about Africa without being racist. If
you portray Africa as a Third World hellhole, you are a racist. But if
you portray it in a positive way, as Swift does here, you are also being
racist.
The racial rent seekers were quick to pounce.
NPR’s Viviane Rutabingwa, who has an African heritage [editor’s note – and is evidently basing a career on it] said:
‘We are shocked to think that in 2015, Taylor Swift, her record label
and her video production group would think it was OK to film a video
that presents a glamorous version of the white colonial fantasy of
Africa.’
She added: ‘Swift’s music is entertaining
for many. She should absolutely be able to use any location as a
backdrop. But she packages our continent as the backdrop for her
romantic songs devoid of any African person or storyline, and she sets
the video in a time when the people depicted by Swift and her co-stars
killed, dehumanized and traumatized millions of Africans.
‘That is beyond problematic.’
The Daily Dot’s Nico Lang
wrote: ‘An homage to a love triangle about white colonialists is going
to present some, uh, challenges to an artist who just wants to make a
three-minute music video to put on her VEVO page – and Taylor Swift
found that out the hard way.
‘Even the most casual observer would have
noticed that – for a clip that’s set in Africa – it’s about as white as a
Sunday morning farmer’s market.
‘The video wants to have its old-school Hollywood romance but ends up eating some old-school Hollywood racism, too.’
Isn’t that comment about “white as a Sunday morning farmer’s market” kind of racist? Sort of like saying “black as a Section 8 housing lottery.” That’s a terrible generalization to make.
Notice also how simply stating the current year (“we are shocked to think that in 2015…) is used as an argument in itself.
But Swift is in trouble for channeling a
“romantic” image of European colonialism. It is indeed startling to
remember that there was a time when vast swathes of African territory
were well governed, orderly, and prosperous. The dystopian hellhole now
known as Zimbabwe was once Rhodesia, the breadbasket of Africa, before
being handed over to Communist thugs at the West’s insistence. It’s not
surprising that the best thing to do is just not bring up these kinds of
“problematic” comparisons between past and present.
The fact is, you can’t use Africa as any
kind of a backdrop without getting in trouble. During the World Cup in
South Africa, Shakira made a video entitled “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)”
which was so sentimental and syrupy sweet, I thought it was a parody.
(One was reminded of the character of Patrick Bateman in American Psycho trying to make up a plausible Broadway musical,
and coming up with “Oh Africa, Brave Africa,” which he describes as a
“laugh riot.”) And yet Shakira was also accused of various forms of
cultural exploitation and appropriation. [Undermining African Intellectual and Aristic Rights: Shakira, Zangalewa & the World Cup Anthem, by Dibussi Tande, Scribbles from the Den, May 23, 2010].
So why bother thinking about Africa at all? If you start thinking about it, you might start noticing things, and if you start noticing things, your career is likely to come to an abrupt halt.
But if you really want to watch a video on Youtube about Africa and colonialism, I’ve got a suggestion. It’s called Africa Addio, and you can watch it on Youtube.
Lost in all the controversy is the fact that Swift’s video was
supposed to help animals in Africa, which was something we were all
supposed to care about (remember Cecil the Lion?)
But as you’ll see above, that kind of care for the environment is
another one of those things that you only get under Western rule.
As for Taylor, she’s got enough money and fans that she’ll be okay.
But go the full Trump, Taylor! Have your next video be a love story
set at the Voortrekker Monument. Now that would be a Twitter blowup on social media worth seeing.
Constititution
of the United States: 1stAmendment, Bill of Rights
: "Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of
grievances."