Posted on 12/28/2018 1:55:05 PM PST by Impala64ssa
Has Chilling Echoes to the Nuremberg Laws of Nazi Germany
Dwayne The Rock Johnson will play folk hero John Henry in an upcoming Netflix movie. Until the recent backlash, I was unaware that Johnson is only half black; his mother is Samoan.
Some think Johnson, who is among the highest-paid actors in the world, is not black enough to play a black man in the movies. One wrote, John Henry was a very dark skin man & yes that matters. Yet, John Henry is mythological. The skin shade of the real John Henry is uncertain; and like all folk tales, many aspects of the story are subject to debate.
Other critics say Dwayne Johnson hasnt proclaimed his blackness enough to qualify as black. One tweet read, The Rock is black when it's profitable and racially ambiguous when it isn't. We need a proud, strong, all-day black man to play John Henry.
For Johnson, the project held a special place in his heart because Henry was one of his childhood heroes. Folk heroes have universal appeal; something in their character inspires us. Character, not a shade of skin, touches hearts and stirs us to action.
Ben Kingsley isnt even part Jewish, and yet he masterfully played the part of the Jewish accountant, Itzhak Stern, in Schindlers List. Kingsleys role as an actor was to convey fear, adversity, decency, and hope. Universal emotions are not tied to ethnicity.
In the original Star Trek series, the episode Let That Be Your Last Battlefield is a story of ethnic strife. The Enterprise was transporting back to the planet Cheron two warring alien humanoids, skin colored black on half their bodies and white on the other half.
One alien is Bele, a Cheron police commissioner, who has captured the political refugee, Lokai. Bele considers himself superior to Lokai. Why? Bele is white on the left side of his body, while Lokai is white on the right side.
Mutual hatred over this superficial difference had been going on for 50,000 years. In the final scene, Captain Kirk leaves them to return to their now-destroyed home planet, still going at it with each other.
Initially broadcast in 1969, the episode was a not too subtle allegory about race relations in the United States.
Race relations in America have improved since 1969, but those marching to the beat of identity politics threaten to take us back to terrible times.
In 1935, Nazi Germany passed the infamous Nuremberg Laws making legal the destruction of German Jewry. The preamble to the notorious 1935 Nuremberg Laws states:
Moved by the understanding that purity of German blood is the essential condition for the continued existence of the German people, and inspired by the inflexible determination to ensure the existence of the German nation for all time, the Reichstag has unanimously adopted the following law.
Jews were stripped of their German citizenship, making them aliens in their own land. They were forbidden to marry or have intercourse with other Germans.
Immediately the Nazis faced a problem: who was and who was not a Jew? Professor Thomas Childers in his book The Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany, explains,
Was it anyone with one Jewish grandparent, as the Civil Service law of 1933 had dictated? Two Jewish grandparents? Three? State officials, especially Economics Minister Schacht and Foreign Minister Constantin von Neurath, insisted on three grandparents; party radicals, led by Rudolf Hess, on only one. The army, concerned about manpower needs, also hoped for a more restrictive definition.
Childers adds, The status of racially mixed individualshalf Jews (two Jewish grandparents) or quarter Jews (one Jewish grandparent)remained a source of conflict and confusion within the regime for years.
Would those criticizing the selection of Dwayne Johnson to play John Henry be outraged by the idea that their mindset is the same as those who sought to determine who was Jewish in Nazi Germany? These critics would tell us they are motivated by good intentions: They want social justice for dark-skinned blacks. They might defend their racial evaluations claiming that, unlike the Nazis, it serves good purposes. Yet, underlying their criticisms of Johnson, it sounds like they believe there is an ideal black man that needs safeguarding from those of mixed blood.
Decades ago when my children were little, our family watched the delightful Disney movie, Tall Tale. In the film a young boy meets Pecos Bill, Paul Bunyan, John Henry, and Calamity Jane. Roger Aaron Brown played John Henry. I am now informed by critics of Johnson that Browns darker skin made him pure enough to play the part of John Henry.
I am certain that as we watched Tall Tale, no one in my family had even a passing thought of how dark John Henrys skin was.
Thats the America I want to live in, not an America where identity politics reminds me of the Nuremberg Laws of Nazi Germany.
He is a very down to earth guy, by the way. A family man, and very intelligent. Also, he does not act like a “star.” He talks and behaves just like any normal guy down at the hardware store. I do not know a single person in our small community who doesn’t think he’s the cat’s pajamas.
Im trying to remember who his Samoan mother was related to in the restling world....Peter Mavia? Also, he can have black makeup on to satisfy all the racist negros.
“This mental disorder” - and about 200 to 300 more, are way out of hand. Gives me headaches to even read about it.
And, yet, (to these same people) Obama is black.
I wonder what the people criticizing Dwayne Johnson think about Elizabeth Warren.
One of my favorite clips of him on YouTube is a Saturday morning in the kitchen at the stove making bacon and pancakes for his kids. Just a dad bantering back and forth being silly with the kids, telling bad dad jokes. You could tell he loves being a dad and those little girls have him wrapped around their finger.
Yes Peter Mavia, and his maternal grandmother was involved in promoting pro wrestling in Polynesia.
The same people who undoubtedly have no problem with the Hamilton cast not being white enough to play their roles.
His grandfather was "High Chief" Peter Mavia, and his father is Rocky Johnson, former WWF Tag Team Champion (along with Tony Atlas)
There was an episode of "That 70's Show" where the gang went to the wrestling matches. Dwayne Johnson played his father Rocky Johnson in the episode. After the match, Red Forman and the kids were talking with "Rocky", who had his small son with him. The kid playing the son said: "Someday I'm going to be the biggest star in sports entertainment!" Red Forman replied: "Yeah, sure you will, kid."
That was indeed the case through much of his past. But, I think he was somewhat led astray by the Half-rican president who told him he had to get down with the struggle and drop his republican party affiliations to atone for speaking at the RNC Convention in 2000.
I remember years ago seeing an advertisement for the wiz and I thought it was a joke about taking a wiz.
Say Buh-Bye Cracker!
Right, but Alexander Hamilton, who was Caucasian, gets a Negro to play him in that stupid play, which I consider to be a direct damning insult to his legacy.
But Rock Johnson isn’t BLACK enough? Filthy bastards just don’t know when to stop.
Those pushing the identity politics must be apoplectic about the stage play “Hamilton”. Oops, forgot they are hypocrites.
if my memory serves me correct I thought Johnson is an anti trumper. If so then let dog eat dog.
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