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Victims versus Victims
Townhall.com ^ | January 16, 2016 | Steve Deace

Posted on 01/16/2016 9:14:14 AM PST by Kaslin

Once again the Bizzaro world, perpetual grievance rantings of the Left's collective inner child doesn't disappoint.

Breaking news: The Oscars are racist.

Riiiiiiiiight, said the prophet Nipsy Russell. Because if the Oscars are racist, then I'm starring in the sequel to Brokeback Mountain.

Yet there it is, and for the second year of race-based fist-shaking in a row. USA Today catalogued the most recent cinematic holocaust thusly: "Once again, the Oscar nominations are marked by a glaring lack of diversity. All 20 slots in the four major acting categories went to white actors when the nominations were announced in Hollywood on Thursday. Last year, for the first time since 1998, the same thing happened. The exclusion sparked outrage online and inspired the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite on Twitter, which was revived Thursday when this year's crop of nominees was announced."

One of my favorite things about Leftist lunacy is how often it is so obviously self-refuting. For example, since racism is the systematic and ideological diminishment of a select class of people, it is simply impossible to claim such a crime against humanity exists while in the very same paragraph pointing out that we have nearly two decades of direct experience to the contrary.

Although 'Selma' was nominated for best picture last year and the phenomenal '12 Years A Slave' won best picture two years ago - with two of its actors also earning nominations and one of them, Lupita Nyong'o, winning best supporting actress - somehow the narrative still cries out that we have returned to the Dark Ages.

A more accurate hashtag would be #GoodLuckFindingAJobInTheObamaEconomy, but since this is the era of #BlackLivesMatter, as well as Melissa Harris-Perry actually having her own television show, I guess reality, common sense and rudimentary statistical analysis was voted down.

Not coincidentally, Planned Parenthood claimed the most preposterous moral high ground in the history of faux grievances this week when it sued the group that dared to videotape its death-and-dismemberment-for-profit cult. By the way, somebody thank those baby killers for chasing this ambulance, since it's going to bring a whole new level exposure to its own butchery. But I digress.

This cognitive dissonance of ours obviously goes deeper than the Oscars or racial affairs. We are dealing with a madness that an entirely non-pasty white nomination slate at the Oscars wouldn't come close to fixing.

For example, the gangster biopic "Straight Outta Compton" has often been highlighted as one of the films guilty of being snubbed by the Oscars. A movie that plays up (or plays down) to profiting off the worst stereotypes out there. Nowhere to be found, though, in that concern is "War Room," a powerful movie about a black woman's redemptive faith in God.

That about sums it up, doesn't it? Only when gang hagiography is preferred to God's grace can you come to believe that Leftist Hollywood has suddenly blacklisted you. Because a house divided against itself cannot truly stand to be judged according to the metric of equality - artistic or otherwise -- it claims to have fought for all along.

Once the playing field is actually leveled, then it becomes time to start seeking windmills to fight.

But in an ever increasing competition for status on the grievance call sheet, what are black actors and filmmakers to do? Perhaps those who are angry should take up their angst with the likes of Cate Blanchett, who was nominated for an Oscar this year for playing a lesbian in the film "Carol." Or how about Eddie Redmayne, whose Oscar nomination celebrates his character's removal of his genitals in the movie "The Danish Girl."

Maybe those are your white devils. Instead of black actors like Idris Elba (for "Beasts of No Nation") or Michael B Jordan (for "Creed") getting a legitimate Oscar nod, we are having sexual confusion lifted up to the status of sacrament.

"Carol" is set in the 1950s. "The Danish Girls" is set in the 1920s. Those historical motifs are no coincidence. We are being asked to hop on board the "we've always been born this way" train and pretend that these movies are in some way the equivalent of "Roots."

That concept, I wish it would go without saying, is as insulting as a perpetually warm place where souls go for eternal damnation. Perhaps Spike Lee should make a movie about that?

These days the Left seems more inspired by Bruce Jenner than Martin Luther King.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: africanamerican; blacklivesmatter; films; hollywood; movies; oscars

1 posted on 01/16/2016 9:14:14 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Zombie movies never win, either.

Microaggression against the evil, disenfranchised departed must end.

#DeadLivesMatter


2 posted on 01/16/2016 9:19:47 AM PST by Salamander (I made friends with a lot of people in the danger zone...)
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To: Salamander

Works for me. lol

3 posted on 01/16/2016 9:25:57 AM PST by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! I reallyRead it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Fiddlstix

;D


4 posted on 01/16/2016 9:32:55 AM PST by Salamander (I made friends with a lot of people in the danger zone...)
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To: Kaslin

“For example, the gangster biopic “Straight Outta Compton” has often been highlighted as one of the films guilty of being snubbed by the Oscars. A movie that plays up (or plays down) to profiting off the worst stereotypes out there.”

I don’t follow that music, and it sure isn’t my thing, but by odd circumstance, I wound up seeing that last summer and walked out thinking it would be a big winner. They are right to be offended that this didn’t get a nomination.
Saw “beasts of no nation” and that was just unbelievable. But as a Netflix original, I think it wont get the recognition of a studio film.
Haven’t seen war room, but that wasn’t snubbed for being black, it was for being Christian.


5 posted on 01/16/2016 10:29:22 AM PST by DesertRhino ("I want those feeble minded asses overthrown,,,")
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To: Kaslin
H'wood alienated me eons ago, so I don't bother to keep up.

Blacks are complaining about the GLBT types getting more of the preference benefits than they are, group-wise?

Too bad.

Lots of great films, not to mention profitable ones, come out of indie productions. Perhaps any "group" that feels disenfranchised could go that route, and hopefully laugh, if they really have the right talent at the right time, all the way to the bank.

Oscars aren't everything. Didn't Woody Allen eschew attending the year he won, to play with his regular weekly jazz ensemble?

6 posted on 01/16/2016 10:49:53 AM PST by Calvin Locke
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