Stop Pretending to Be Shocked at Homophobia in the Black Community

Do you remember how shocked white people acted a couple of years ago when a video surfaced of a group of Sigma Alpha Epsilon members at the University of Oklahoma chanting about how theyโ€™d never let a โ€œniggerโ€ into their fraternity? Suggested Reading How Diddy Could Still End Up With a Long Sentence, Despite The…

Do you remember how shocked white people acted a couple of years ago when a video surfaced of a group of Sigma Alpha Epsilon members at the University of Oklahoma chanting about how theyโ€™d never let a โ€œniggerโ€ into their fraternity?

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDSffcVIVFg

Can you recollect how Caucasians publicly caught the vapors when they heard the audio of Donald Sterling telling his girlfriend he didnโ€™t want her hanging around black men?

Does anyone remember how the whole of unmelanated America stopped frying chicken and eating butter when they learned that Paula Deen said she wanted sharply dressed niggers tap-dancing at her brotherโ€™s wedding?

Do you recall how ludicrous their pretend outrage looked? Did you see how ridiculously transparent their โ€œWell, I never heard such thingsโ€ charade seemed? How silly they appeared, acting flabbergasted whenever a white person slipped up and let a little bit of racism slip out? Do you remember? Iโ€™m sure you do.

Well, thatโ€™s how black people look when we act like weโ€™re surprised to hear homophobic statements.

A couple of days ago in a Rolling Stone article, the hip-hop group Migos (in case youโ€™re wondering, yes, I did cringe a little bit when I typed the words โ€œhip-hopโ€ next to the creators of the hit โ€œBad and Boujeeโ€) let a little of their homophobia slip out when the writer asked them about fellow Atlanta rapper iLoveMakonnenโ€™s (no, that is not a genre of Japanese porn) decision to come out of the closet. The interviewer writes:

Iโ€™m surprised by Migosโ€™ reaction when I mention iLoveMakonnen, the local MC who just came out as gay on Twitter. โ€œDamn, Makonnen!โ€ Quavo bellows after an awkward interlude. I mention support I saw online for Makonnenโ€™s decision. โ€œThey supported him?โ€ Quavo asks, raising an eyebrow. โ€œThatโ€™s because the world is fucked up,โ€ says Offset. โ€œThis world is not right,โ€ Takeoff says. โ€œWe ainโ€™t saying itโ€™s nothing wrong with the gays,โ€ says Quavo. But he suggests that Makonnenโ€™s sexuality undermines his credibility, given the fact that โ€œhe first came out talking about trapping and selling Molly, doing all that.โ€

He frowns. โ€œThatโ€™s wack, bro.โ€๏ปฟ

By the time they realized their faux pas, it was too late. They quickly issued a publicist-written, Donald Sterling/Paula Deen-like statement, asserting that they โ€œhave no problem with anyoneโ€™s sexual preference. We love all people, gay or straight and we apologize if we offended anyone.โ€

To be fair, I donโ€™t have any confirmation that a publicist wrote the statement, other than the lack of grammatical mistakes from a group who canโ€™t even spell โ€œbougieโ€ correctly. (No! I reject your spelling, Migos! I guess Iโ€™m bougie about how I spell โ€œbougie.โ€) Plus, the biggest indication that their mea culpa was crafted by public relations personnel was the telltale ending of โ€œwe apologize if we offended anyone ... โ€

But before they could issue the apology, people had already thrown their arms up in exasperation at Migosโ€™ homophobic remarks. Iโ€™m not just talking about the white progressive allies who peer down their noses at everything, or the social justice warriors who scour the internet looking for a microscopic molehill outrage to make into a mountain. Iโ€™m talking about black people.

Cut it out.

Although hip-hopโ€”and black culture in generalโ€”have made strides in the acceptance and understanding of sexuality and gender norms, both still have a long way to go, and we all know it. For the purposes of public perception, we will embrace inclusiveness and shun homophobia, but behind closed doors, we are cool with the Deens and the Sterlings.

We will issue love offerings and ignore pariahs like Kim Burrell and Eddie Long who have ranted about the โ€œperversionsโ€ of same-sex love. We give up passes to the vampirish, snake oil salesmen like Umar โ€œLet Me Fleece My People Out of Hundreds of Thousands to Build a Hogwarts for Black Boysโ€ Johnson who suck money and the lifeblood out of communities while blaming the ills of blackness on homosexuality. We excuse the Hoteps, the backward thinkers, the preachers, the narrow-minded, the low IQsโ€”and especially the hypermasculinity of hip-hop.

Migos live in Atlanta, for chrissake. Hailing from the ATL and being homophobic is like living with a million white people but hating mayonnaise. If they can get away with saying something like that in the black gay mecca, then it is apparent that we are willing to turn a blind eye to it anywhere.

Every black person reading this has a family member or someone they love who lives outside our traditional ideas of gender norms. Every one of us has someone we would start whooping ass to defend if we heard anyone threatening to hurt them. But weโ€™re cool with staying silent in the cocoon of blackness when we hear someone say something in the pulpit, on the street corner or in a rap song.

We are quick to call out the wypipo who voted for Donald Trump and didnโ€™t call him out on his racism. In our heads, if you are willing to support a racist or even sit quietly and not say anything, then you must be a racist, too. Silence toward racism is racism.

So what does that make those of us who stay silent and pretend to be shocked at homophobia?

It makes us look like the phonies professing to be shocked to learn that a 70-year-old white woman from Georgia is a little racist. We appear as dumb as the fakes who acted astonished that an 80-year-old white man didnโ€™t want his young girlfriend hanging around the chiseled bodies of elite, black, millionaire athletes. We look as stupid as the people who pretended to be appalled that a busload of white frat boys from Oklahoma used the n-word (although I must admit I was astounded that they clapped on the beat).

Black America turns its head away from homophobia every day, and in doing so, we tacitly allow it to fester. When it explodes into subliminal hate like Migosโ€™ remarks, we can be disheartened, dismayed and even upset about it, but:

Rain dropDrop topStop acting like youโ€™re shocked.

Straight From The Root

Sign up for our free daily newsletter.