Jess George

  • Jess George

Charlotte, like many other cities that have not historically dealt so much with large mixes of racial, ethnic and cultural differences (other than black and white), is riddled with bigotry these days. It plays out in the comments section of Creative Loafing, and it plays out in the comments section of The Charlotte Observer.

This morning, on the Charlotte Latin American Coalition’s Facebook page, administrators posted this note that the Coalition’s executive director, Jess George, wrote to city’s daily newspaper

The Observer published an article celebrating the first Charlottean born in 2012, a boy of Latino heritage named Tommy. What followed was a litany of hateful and racist comments posted on the Observer website, so profane that site administrators disabled all comments.

On the paper’s website, Ms. George goes on to say:

While I commend the Observer for removing hate speech, we can do more to curb anti-immigrant and anti-Latino sentiments. For example, we, including the Observer, need to stop using the word “illegal” when describing undocumented immigrants. It’s offensive, dehumanizing and perpetuates stereotypes and comments like those removed from the website. By using accurate and respectful language the Observer can help reframe this issue. Then maybe we can get back to cooing over babies instead of sending them hate mail. Jess George Charlotte

Depressingly, as the Coalition also writes in its Facebook post, the comments in response to Ms. George’s letter prove her point. (To see them, scroll down at this link.)

Do we really want to live in a city like this? Or would we rather change it? As editor of Creative Loafing, I would like to make a public appeal to change it.

It is the bigots, not Latino infants, who should be made to feel unwelcome in Charlotte.

Mark Kemp is Creative Loafing's former editor-in-chief, and the author of Dixie Lullaby: A Story of Music, Race and New Beginnings in a New South. He is currently the senior editor of Our State magazine....

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6 Comments

  1. It is actually the parents who should feel unwelcome in Charlotte and in the USA for that matter. It is a slap in the face and a kick in the nuts to the people who have LEGALLY obtained their citizenship. Why do we call them illegal? BECAUSE THEY ARE! Its not bigotry its patriotism!!!

  2. Over and over we prove that we are tribal in nature.

    Draw a line anywhere, over any thing, and watch people line up on either side of it and begin denigrating and attacking those on the other side.

    Black vs white
    Management vs labor
    North vs south
    Rich vs poor
    Conservatives vs Liberals
    Christians vs … well just about everyone else

  3. I don’t allow my own brothers by birth to just waltz into my home and help themselves to the things I’ve worked and paid for. I don’t expect them to help pay for the things my children need either. Is that bigoted or tribal? I must be confused I guess.

  4. Did I miss something? Was the girl in the Observer article undocumented (illegal if you insist on being provocative)? If not, then the outrage really IS nothing but racism, blindly assuming that all latinos are undocumented.

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