Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Time For Americans To Be A Family :: essays research papers
 Time for Americans To Be A Family    By D.C. Burch    It seems to be a time for Americans to try and be a family again. Maybe a  quarrelsome and restless family not entirely happy with each member all of the  time, but a family nonetheless.    OK, I admit it. I am confused and perplexed by the storm of political  correctness sweeping throughout the nation, raising dust-devils and tempests;  leaving destruction and chaos in its wake.    The English language is being transmogrified to quell and satisfy members of the  American society who feel they should somehow, be special; apart from our  citizenry. Thus my confusion.    I've been called a privileged white-boy by some, honky by others, and cracker by  others still. All this because I grew up in a middle class family in Toledo,  Ohio? I've never considered myself to be anything special, certainly never  superior to anyone or anything by virtue of my ancestry, just your basic, run-  of-the-mill guy who wants to do the right thing.    From the time I was little boy, I have seen one particular group called colored,  Negro, black, and now, African-American. I can't seem to find a consensus out  there in any media, one moment the reference is to blacks, and the next to  African-Americans, when they are referring to the same group of people.    I'm not knocking what people want to call themselves, it's the mixed messages  I'm getting and the inaccuracy of the terminology that frustrates me.    Look around and you will see there is the National Association for the  Advancement of Colored People, the Black Muslims, and African-Americans.    All of these terms are used to refer to members of one group of people. Is it  any wonder I'm confused?    I have particular problems with the term African-American, a misnomer which  would lead me to believe these people somehow hold dual citizenship with another  country, or even worse, lead everyone to believe all those who use that term to  describe themselves are of African origin and are exclusively black in color.    As we all know, there are white Africans, too. Should they choose to come to the  U.S., they too, would be eligible for the label African-American, which would  further confuse the issue.    Enter the U.S. Census Bureau.    Rather than help clear up the mess, they perpetuate it by requesting racial  information and make-up of families that does nothing more than perpetuate the  lies we tell one another. At least with the Census Bureau, their are Asians,  Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans, Other, and Whites. I don't know about you  folks but, I was born here in the U.  					    
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