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I hadn't heard anything about that, how are they reacting?
From r/Theatre a month ago:
Basically a bunch of very serious “we used to laugh because we didn’t know how racist it was to seek a colorblind society, what privileged fools we were” with some hemming and hawing about Trump and DeSantis.
Here’s one I’ll respond to specifically:
This person is literally upset that there might be racists in the same audience as them, actively being racist by laughing at the Asian immigrant and getting away with it without anyone to
lecturecorrect them about how wrong it is. This is a level of paranoia the CIA would have been giddy to inspire during their MK-ULTRA experiments, a level of internal division the Soviets would have loved to sow during the Cold War.It reminds me of one of the most insightful moments in Cerebus The Aardvark. Bear, Cerebus’ drinking buddy, is discussing a pop culture fiction with Cerebus at the bar. Cerebus gets more and more upset, and finally Bear figures out why. “You’re not upset because I don’t like the thing you enjoy,” says Bear (I’m paraphrasing). “You’re upset that I do like it, but not in the same way as you.”
I am really confused by this. Is the poster arguing that racism might not actually be bad? It reads so easily into "progressives are just as racist as everyone else" rhetoric.
My interpretation of the post was that that the poster believed that, 20 years ago, there was a naive belief that we could take for granted that everyone agreed that racism was a bad thing that we were making progress at defeating, which Avenue Q seems to be invoking by saying that Everyone is a little bit racist. That is, Avenue Q is saying that we're all on the same page - helplessly forced to be (at least a little bit) racist, but presuming that the audience sees that as a shameful thing to try to fix. And the comedy in the song comes from everyone agreeing that being racist is bad, but also everyone having to come to terms with they themselves being racist, even if a little bit.
The poster seems to want to contrast this to the true and correct view of now rather than 20 years ago, where we recognize that there really are significant amounts of powerful racist racists out there who really do think in stereotypically racist ways like "black people don't deserve human rights," not in the "little bit racist" way of, say, cracking a joke about Pollacks. There's a bit of leap here, but the poster seems to think it's "gross" that the musical is poking fun at "racism" by calling out these little bits of racism for humor, which sweeps under the rug the obviously much more significant factor of racism from truly racist racists (that the enlightened people of 2023 recognize which the ignoramuses of 2003 couldn't).
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He's arguing the musical is taking it for granted that everyone believes racism is bad, but since we live in a cis-heteronormative white supremacist capitalist patriarchy, that view is mistaken.
That would explain it. It's just worded so weirdly, imo.
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