Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
Apologies if you don't have all the info but it seems fairly clear.
A - Buffy Ste-Marie was an advocate for Indigenous rights and culture for 60 years, bringing the "cause" to millions of people who otherwise would have remained ignorant of all that.
B - Buffy Ste-Marie, it appears, also lied about her Indigenous origins and weaved a complex web of deceit with more and more contradictions that eventually caught up with her. She also intimidated (often viciously) people who threated to expose her.
Her supporters are quite adamant that B should be overlooked and not even discussed, because of A.
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I think you're right in most cases where people say something is good if one person does it and bad when another person does it. Especially if they only think something is good or bad based on whether or not they like a person. I was referring to cases like the JT blackface where everyone agreed it was bad but opinions differed on how bad it was with people like me not being as worried since they didn't believe it indicated that he was racist while others pretending to be outraged out of political expediency. A case like that is context sensitive since it isn't as much about the actual act as it is what it says about the person committing it. There is a long history of racist people conducting minstrel shows by donning costumes w/ blackface to mock and denigrate black people. It unfortunately still occasionally happens and is still a sore point. So when someone does it nowadays, it can mean one of four things (from least worst to worst).
1) They were unaware of that history and just wanted to make a convincing costume that looked like a POC character (ignorance)
2) They were aware of the history but didn't care about it or how their actions would be perceived (racial insensitivity)
3) They were aware of that history and intentionally wanted to do it to be provocative and edgy (more severe racial insensitivity)
4) They were racist and wanted to continue the tradition of mocking Black people. (Racism).
The context is necessary to inform which interpretation is most suitable with people's reactions being increasingly worse the further down the list one goes.
Based on your description of the Buffy stuff, there could also be room for interpretation. Behaviour B could be be due to,
1) A greedy, selfish person who doesn't care about indigenous people but who wanted to promote or indulge themselves by fabricating a connection to the indigenous community
2) A person who genuinely cared about indigenous people and perhaps once believed she was one. Then reacted poorly to the discovery she wasn't, going too far to avoid embarrassment.
The two interpretations would warrant different reactions, and context A would help to inform which interpretation is best. But neither would be good or acceptable. The general public is certainly capable of such things, but fortunately I don't think there's a problem with the CBC in that regard.