October 1, 2021
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
New Study Finds White Rice to be Racist
Friends,
The latest major study issued by a blue-ribbon commission on
racism infecting American culture comes on the heels of other startling examples
which “woke” academia, government and the media have pinpointed during this
past year. Indeed, in recent months we have witnessed the Oregon
Department of Education explain how traditional mathematics—you know
the 2 + 2 = 4 version—is racist and unfairly
penalizes BIPOC [Black, Indigenous,
People Of Color] students, and that students should be able to decide for
themselves what 2 + 2 actually is, with no correction or interference from a
white teacher. A BIPOC child may think the equation equals 5 or maybe 6. For a
teacher or professor to admonish the student is blatantly wrong and an
indication of toxic white supremacy.
And then there was the credentialed academic and author who claimed
that a majority of white people with dogs who let their canine pets stay
indoors was a clear indication of “white
canine racism” [since BIPOC people tend to be poorer than whites without
the wherewithal to offer good indoor housing to their pets].
I have written about these and other cases in MY CORNER back on February 17 of
this year.
The number of such reports emitted recently from academia boggles
the mind. Almost every day we can read of another instance, another example.
And academia embraces such findings with zealous alacrity.
So, when I ran across the following news article, I decided to relay it to readers exactly as it ran:
HISTORIC WHITE RICE
RACISM IS ENDEMIC TO WHITE EUROPEAN CULTURE, RESEARCHERS SAY (UPI –
Wednesday September 29, 2021)
(Boston – September 29, 2021) A report issued Tuesday, Sept.
28, labels white rice as an historic and continuing example of “white European
colonialism and toxic food racism.” The
report, issued by the Blue-Ribbon Task
Force on Food Racism and Inequity, in 108 pages reveals in detail both the
history and the effects of white rice in Anglo-European culture, how its
consumption became a status symbol utilized by white plantation owners and
wealthy classes to emphasize their supremacy and control of society, and the resulting
submission of BIPOC peoples. The report
also includes a long chapter on rice-cultivation and the historical use of
slave labor and oppressed people in the process.
Dr. Stanwyck Vile, who heads of the International Institute
for Food Diversity, Equity, and Inclusiveness [IIFDEI], chaired the commission,
composed of world-renowned experts in the fields of African-American studies,
feminism, transgenderism and transphobic deterrence, ableism, and anti-fat
theory. Dr. Gladys Hookah-Schmuck, tenured chair of the Black Liberation and
Feminist Lesbian and Polyamory Studies program at Baxter University, served as
vice-chair.
Interviewed about the findings of the year-long, multi-million
dollar study, supported by a grant from the Ford Foundation, Dr. Vile
highlighted several of the major points in the report.
“White rice is, you see, white,”
he offered. “That was our first very substantial clue that white rice is, well,
racist. We spent six months researching that point. You see, there is no equity
here. Yes, there is brown rice, but
as we all know, it is consigned largely to Chinese restaurants. And that fact
is, as they say, a double-whammy: it’s largely limited to Asian establishments
and normally not consumed by most people. Brown rice is, then, obviously oppressed
and restricted, which is a most definite indication of the white supremacy of
white rice.”
At that point Dr. Hookah-Schmuck interjected another important
finding and complaint made by the commission report. “We were shocked by the
fact that historically there is very little evidence of black rice…and we spent
hours and hours scouring manuscripts and recipe books going back to the 13th
century, reviewing television cooking programs—we even watched the complete
Julia Child series. But, then, we happened upon reruns of Justin Wilson, the
Louisiana chef.”
“And everything seemed to fall into place,” she continued.
“Wilson,” she revealed with an air of triumphant satisfaction, “was a white male
Southerner, from Louisiana, who talked with the kind of accent that you would
normally hear employed by Southern racists and Klan members. And he only used white rice. It was all right
there.”
It seemed to make sense to the commission members, the
connections, the relationships, according to Hookah-Schmuck.
At this point in the interview, Vile interjected: “One of our
major findings and recommendations had to do with ‘black rice’ equity. We
looked at the history, or I should say the lack of history, of black rice, and
we suggested some potential and much-needed remedies to this toxic state of
affairs.”
“The only substantial examples of black rice we can find
historically,” added Hookah-Schmuck, “are when white race is overcooked and
burned, but, you see, that is never intentional, so in no way is that process motivated
by social justice concerns and the desire for genuine equity and diversity.”
Dr. Hookah-Schmuck added that a significant section of the
commission’s report is dedicated to proposed methods and federal programs to
address this burning question.
“So what we are recommending is that the United States
Congress enact a Rice Equity and Diversity Act,” added Vile. “We have
communicated with Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and explained to her the extreme need
for legislation which would set up a national rice civil rights standards board
and which would require that in every household where rice is prepared that a
substantial portion be blackened by burning. Of course, this would also require
a large staff—a rice patrol, as it were—to enforce that regulation, to have the
authority to enter any household at dinner time and make certain ‘rice equity’
is carried out.”
Speaker Pelosi, according to Vile and Hookah-Schmuck, was very
receptive to the commission’s proposal, and promised to consult with other
prominent comgresspeople in the House Democratic Caucus about future
legislation. She also hinted that several Republicans, including Reps. Adam
Kinzinger and Liz Cheney, and perhaps a few others (who did not wish to be
labeled “racists”), would co-sponsor such legislation.
Asked about the bad reputation in which burned or black rice
is held, its claimed unsavory and non-appetizing flavor and smell,
Hookah-Schmuck suggested that such claims come mostly from far right wing
extremists. She added that among the commission’s recommendations is a demand
for a budgeted re-education of the American public about the delights and
tastiness of burned black rice, using the school system and the media.
Although the commission did not make explicit the dollar
amount envisaged by commission members to accomplish these ambitious goals, a
member did, off the record, volunteer a figure of five to eight trillion dollars,
over a ten year period, to be gathered via a value-added tax on all purchases
that certifiably white citizens make when they go to the grocery store.
*****
[Now, if you have read this far, you may suspect—rightly—that this
purported “news article” is not genuine, a fake. And, at least for the moment,
it is. But does anyone doubt after seeing and reading what has happened on
college campuses this past year and what is spewed forth daily by our media and
political class, that such a finding, such a report might well be in our
future? In other words, perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised if something like
this does happen? After all, this is
the giant lunatic asylum—the United States of America, circa 2021—in which we
live. BDC]
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