I wrote a whole draft yesterday, then realized I'd opened up another can of worms. I guess that one will go up next week.
I was making the point that in general people were being very understanding of Davidson. One notable exception was Jamie Foxx.
https://parade.com/news/jamie-foxx-questions-john-davidsons-tourettes-defense-bafta-awards
In a series of three brief Instagram posts, Foxx indicated his belief that Davidson meant the slur and that it was intentional.
There were replies that argued and tried to correct Foxx, but also some that agreed.
I thought I would make a brief point about how coprolalia can't be controlled so you can't say it was intentional, but there was this nagging inability to dismiss that it was meant.
Getting back to that SNL sketch, celebrities only saying terrible things on record when they are drunk does not mean that they don't really mean it or think it; they simply know that there is a penalty for saying it that allows their sober versions to keep it in check.
One of the interesting things that came up in the initial discussion is that the UK has a much smaller Black population than the US, meaning they are not used to getting so much flack on the racism. The rollout of improved (but still lacking) apologies may have been due to push back that they were not prepared for.
Black people make up about 15% of the population in the United States versus less than 4% in the UK. The caveat I have to put with that is that I have also seen -- but do not really know -- that mixed race is generally counted as a separate category there, whereas the US had our one drop rule. It's not that we don't have issues with colorism, but there may be greater solidarity in the United States, beyond just bigger numbers.
(Though the reaction of many English people to Megan Markle could make you question whether mixed race really gets any preference.)
Something else I have seen people say is that other countries are more racist than the US but they don't talk about it so it works differently. As we are already way too racist here, that is not an encouraging thought.
Remember, with structural racism is that there is so much supporting the racism that it can act on an unconscious level. That's why you have to actively talk and think about and pay attention to it to actually overcome racism.
A lot of people fail to even try.
When some people are forced to think about it by circumstances there is angry reaction instead of introspection.
This results in things like mentioning racism being called the real racism, or people saying how Obama divided us because once he was elected they were making monkey and watermelon jokes before he was even in office, and then were criticized for that.
That is my very roundabout way of saying that while I truly believe that Davidson's outbursts were not intentional -- which matters -- that does not guarantee that he did not mean those outbursts, even if not consciously.
That's not about blaming him either, but there is a context to everything.
If we really want to care about each other and make things better, we need to pay attention to those contexts.