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Dipped in Platinum
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: KLANCINNATI
Posts: 1,212
Credits: 4,600
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Black Girls Get Pregnant and Get Scorned...
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Black Girls Get Pregnant and Get Scorned; Why Do the Gloucester Girls Get Tea and Sympathy?
Date: Tuesday, June 24, 2008
By: Tonyaa Weathersbee, BlackAmericaWeb.com
By now, another racial stereotype ought to be biting some big-time dust.
It seems that in Gloucester, Massachusetts, a fishing town described as white, Catholic and blue collar, students who walk the halls of the local high school this fall may find themselves bumping into classmates who will be returning with their own bump. Seventeen girls at Gloucester High School are pregnant -- more than four times the number of pregnancies that the school of 1,200 has had in a year.
Time magazine recently reported that the pregnancies may have been part of a pact that the girls entered into to give birth to and raise their children together. But the principal of the school, Joseph Sullivan, has been silent since making that assertion -- possibly to quench the media firestorm ignited by that sordid tale. The mayor of the town, Carolyn Kirk, is vigorously denying that there was any pregnancy pact -- saying that Sullivan now claims his memory of the details is foggy.
Me, I believe Sullivan's memory is just fine. It's his courage that has lapsed.
But Kirk and others needn't worry too much about the town's reputation because ultimately, the Gloucester girls will receive more of society's sympathy than its scorn. The fact that the media is focusing on whether there was a pact and whether the girls are victims of a celebrity culture that spawns movies like "Juno" and "Knocked Up," says that when white kids do something that smacks of antisocial behavior, people are quick to dig for explanations.
When black kids do antisocial things, people think that all they need are sermons.
By now, everyone should know that becoming pregnant isn't a wise career move for any teenager. Despite anecdotes of how some teenage mothers, like the singer Fantasia and others, grow up to become successful, studies too numerous to name here show that children who are born to teenage mothers are several times likely to grow up in poverty -- and to suffer all the problems that come with that package.
Yet it seems that over the years, as black teenage births continued to grow, many people seemed content to treat it as some kind of inner moral deficit; as part of blacks' inability to control their sexual urges. As a columnist at a daily newspaper, I can't begin to tell you about the numerous calls I get from whites -- racists who have found a new best friend in Bill Cosby -- who are convinced that black immorality is the sole reason for our teenage pregnancy epidemic.
One caller, who claimed to be a middle school teacher, once left a rambling message on my voice mail about how disgusted she gets with all the little black girls in her class who gleefully share pictures of their sonograms with each other.
I wonder if she's as disgusted by what the Gloucester girls did.
Chances are she isn't. Because chances are sociologists, psychologists and all other manner of experts will be trying to explain why those girls happened to get pregnant at the same time. They'll talk about the influence of popular culture, which brought us Jamie Lynn Spears, and phrases like "baby bump." It's a culture which treats the public and vulnerable girls to aisles full of magazine racks with covers of the latest, unwed celebrity mom-to-be.
They'll probably even coin this debacle as "The Gloucester Syndrome," when it's imitated at other, mostly-white high schools. It'll be treated as a trend, not as a depravity.
Teen Pregnancy & the Gloucester Pact
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It's disingenuous to pretend there is some philosophical coherence between the GOP of the 19th century and that of the 21st that should command black loyalty. - Leonard Pitts, Jr.
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