SeriouslySearching
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2007
- Messages
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I have lived in OK my entire life and have never seen a sign like the one you said existed only 2 decades ago. Where?! I have a really difficult time believing people let that stand without raising hell over it. I would have heard of such a sign existing in the area.The chant should not have had to be "retired" -- the meaning was always derogatory, and was always clear, especially with its direct reference to lynching. It has nothing to do with "all colors." It is a slur against black people. Nothing mitigates that fact.
I lived in Oklahoma for 15 years, and am not surprised at all by the usage there -- the racism was alarming; and the apparent "shock" of some authorities has as much or more to do with the effect it might have on recruiting athletes for OU football as it does on matters of actual substance. The mask slipped a little; the chickens came home to roost.
Two decades ago the place where I lived had a "don't let the sun set on you here" billboard -- also featuring the 'n'-word -- on the outskirts of town. So the only shock I can register has to do with the fact that people seem so surprised at the existence of that chant at the most significant university in the state, the one held to be the more progressive of the two major state institutions.
OU and OSU are absolutely not rampant with bigots/racists and neither is our state! The people putting a stop to it and raising awareness are from Oklahoma. The two ring leaders of the incident are not.