There have been and will continue to be calls for Valerie Scogin â the Louisiana school teacher who essentially called black people lazy animals who should go back to Africaâto be suspended and/or fired. These demands have merit, because not only is Scogin racist, she got her âfactsâ from a MAGA fortune cookie. And since racist idiots are already in the White House, we donât need them in our classrooms too. Iâm all for equal representation, but Trump done filled that quota.
But as we wait to see how the St. Tammany Parish Public School District responds to Scoginâs behavior … letâs just say that while this story had my curiosity, the pictures of Valerie Scogin that have been circulating grabbed my attention. And now Iâm less concerned with Scoginâs employment status and more interested in who her real momma and daddy is. And also both grandaddies and both grandmommas. Maybe some uncs and aunties and cousins and siblings, too.
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Why? Well, remember how the kid from The Sixth Sense could see dead people? Even the ones who donât know yet that theyâre dead? Well, I can see black people. Evenâespeciallyâthe ones who donât know (or donât want other people to know) that theyâre negroes. And while I am not certain that Valerie Scogin has some black-ass branches on her family tree, if this were a spades game, Iâd call her a queen of hearts. Not a strong possible, but definitely a possible. You could count her as a book, and no one would be mad at you if you did or surprised if she walked.
When looking at and thinking about Valerie Scogin, Iâm reminded of how whiteness, in America, is mostly defined by a lack of. Specifically, a lack of blackness. Exactly who and what is considered white has, since Americaâs inception and whitenessâs invention, shifted and will continue to shift. But what has remained and will likely remain static is that whiteness is negated by the presence of blackness. And because so many of the people who believe themselves to be white need also to be pure for this whiteness to be authentic, any hint of potential blackness in them is contained and suppressed like a contagion.
Earlier this year, the Washington Post ran a feature on white people who took DNA tests and discovered they had black blood in them. Some expressed surprise and intrigue. Others were pressed to retain their whiteness, even if that meant rejecting science.
But for some, white identity trumps DNA. If the test result is too disruptive to their sense of self, they may rationalize it away. One white supremacist who discovered he had African DNA claimed on the white nationalist website Stormfront.com that the testing company was part of a Jewish conspiracy to âdefame, confuse and deracinate young whites on a mass level.â Members of white nationalist groups have advised those who discover non-Aryan heritage to rely more on genealogy or the âmirror test,â as quoted in a sociological study of Stormfront members discussing ancestry-test results. (âWhen you look in the mirror, do you see a jew? If not, youâre good,â one commenter wrote.)
âFor me, the number one takeaway is how easily people reject science,â said Anita Foeman, a professor of communication studies who co-directs the DNA Discussion Project, whose respondents are mostly in and around Philadelphia. (In a sample of 217 self-identified European Americans from the project, 22 percent learned that they had African DNA.)
âMany whites would get a new story and say, âIâm still going to call myself âwhite,â or âIâm still going to call myself âItalian,âââ Foeman said. âThey started to less see race as genetic and more a question of culture and [physical appearance].â
Considering where sheâs from (Louisiana), itâs very possible that Scogin perhaps has some indigenous blood in her. Maybe Asian. Who knows? All I know is that sometimes the snow ainât as white as it thinks it is. And by âthe snowâ I mean âValerie Scoginâ and âAmericaâ and âmost Americans.â
Anyway, perhaps a better use of Valerie Scoginâs time would be to take her Queen of Hearts-ass to Ancestry.com instead of Facebook. If she did that, Iâd even want her to keep her job, just to see what her lesson plans would be like then.
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