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Dear Campus and Community Family,
There is a deep-rooted cancer in this country called white supremacy, which thrives on black/brown inferiority so it targets black/brown people. As a result of centuries of race-based slavery in the U.S., which depended on the lie of African inferiority, the cancer of white supremacy affects African Americans in a different way. A post-Civil War narrative was created of Black people (but not Black culture) as inferior, lazy, dangerous, subhuman animals, and Black men in particular as 'black beasts.' This narrative of Black inferiority encourages a post-slavery criminalization of Black people that allows police brutality and killings of Black people to go unpunished.
We’re talking board games and card games and games where people have to sit and games where people have to stand. That means it’s a perfect time to RANK the best black family (or friend) games! Go Fish (Classic) One of the few games (along with Uno) that literally the entire family can play at the same time with double and multiple decks. There's supposed to be 2 of every card from the 4 color suits besides 0 (so two 1-9s, 2 reverse, 2 skips, and 2 +2s), and 4 wild color changes, and 4 +4s. So even if it wasn't a scam, you're still paying like $20 (when you can get a licensed Uno deck for even $5 I believe) for like half the deck of normal Uno deck. Birthday Suit Uno. Orionca@earthlink.net wrote: After my gaming group had played UNO for a couple of years straight, we invented this version of UNO out of boredom and found that it actually works after a fashion: Standard UNO rules, only the cards are dealt face up and kept visible.
Black people are brutalized and killed by police for the crime of 'being Black' during a routine traffic stop and reaching for a wallet too quickly; or for sleeping in one's own bed while Black, and the police break into the house in the middle of the night and shoots to kill because of, well...mistaken identity. A narrative of Black bodies as subhuman and inferior also encourages ordinary white citizens to 'police' Black people for 'crimes' such as walking or jogging while Black, BBQ-ing or bird-watching in the park while Black, or protesting police brutality while Black.
Historically, ordinary whites have been given a pass to 'police' African American bodies. Like those who participated in 'spectacle lynchings,' the gruesome, torturous, public killings of Black people during the late 1800s and most of the 1900s, white citizens who 'police' Black citizens understand the relationship between white supremacy and criminal justice. Lynching Black people was law enforcement. Police killing unarmed Black people is law enforcement.
This narrative of white supremacy and Black inferiority needs to change. The narrative of Black inferiority is why there is a discipline called Black Studies. The cancer of white supremacy and the structures which hold together racism exists in academia as strongly as they do in law enforcement. Yes, this cancer is on UNO's campus.
As a breast cancer survivor myself, I was blessed to have a TEAM of doctors who were committed to helping me fight breast cancer, a disease which left unchecked, is fatal. The Department of Black Studies is like ONE of those doctors committed to fighting the cancer that is racism in academia. We welcome all who want to be on this TEAM.
Black Uno December 20, 2020 at 8:25 PM We thank the people at USPS for their service during this crazy season. Our gaming company, and other small businesses rely on them for most of our orders. Black Uno is a Trademark by Another Frequency Productions, the address on file for this trademark is 4523 S Drexel Blvd., Chicago, IL 60653.
I am encouraged today by the local, national, and global support which is acknowledging the cancer of white supremacy and its impact on, not only Black people, but the soul of the country, and all who care about it.
Be well,
Dr. Cynthia L. Robinson
Chair, Department of Black Studies
University of Nebraska at Omaha
Black Studies is the interdisciplinary study of the history, culture, and politics of Black Americans.
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Our department consists of scholars and intellectuals who focus their teaching, research, and service on the analysis, critique, and discussion of African continental and diasporic experiences and the systems of oppression and resistance that characterize those experiences, commonly referred to under the rubric of “blackness.” As Africa is the home of humanity and of civilization and society, we believe the knowledge of these is central to the understanding of the whole of human experience. Moreover, the resonant theme of resistance to oppression, spiritual optimism, and social movement organization characteristic throughout the African experience is instructive to all who are interested in social change and cross-cultural communication and tolerance.
We stand at the epoch of a new resurgent African continent with some of the world’s fastest growing economies and most revolutionary political growth, and a diaspora confronted all of the complexities of cultural identity and hybridity in the modern, interdependent world. We stand also at the precipice of a newly revitalized discipline of Black Studies ready to engage multidisciplinary and cross disciplinary perspectives. Here at UNO, our faculty bring expertise across a wide variety of subject areas including:
• Anthropology | • Literature |
• Art and Art History | • Music |
• Communication | • Psychology |
• Demography | • Religion |
• Education | • Sociology |
• History (African and Diasporic) | • Theology |
• Law | • Women's and Gender Studies |
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We invite you to join us and become part of this great adventure. The Department of Black Studies., UNO. The only thing missing is …YOU!