07/01/2020
Earlier: The New Childishness: āWhy we capitalize āBlackā (and not āwhiteā)ā and Childishness with a Capital "B"
A New York Times announcement:
The Times will start using uppercase āBlackā to describe people and cultures of African origin, both in the U.S. and elsewhere. Read more in this note from Dean Baquet and Phil Corbett.
Dear Colleagues,
At The Times and elsewhere, the nationwide protests over racism and police violence have prompted discussions about many aspects of our coverage. One element has been a renewed focus on a longstanding debate: whether to capitalize the term āBlack.ā
We have talked to more than 100 staff members to get their views ā¦
Based on those discussions, weāve decided to adopt the change and start using uppercase āBlackā to describe people and cultures of African origin, both in the United States and elsewhere. We believe this style best conveys elements of shared history and identity, and reflects our goal to be respectful of all the people and communities we cover.
⦠We recently decided to capitalize āNativeā and āIndigenous,ā while other ethnic terms like āAsian-Americanā and āLatinoā have always been capitalized.
We will retain lowercase treatment for āwhite.ā While there is an obvious question of parallelism, there has been no comparable movement toward widespread adoption of a new style for āwhite,ā and there is less of a sense that āwhiteā describes a shared culture and history.
After all, what kind of shared culture and history can white people take pride in? None. They have nothing in common and, especially, nothing to be proud of. Nothing.
Moreover, hate groups and white supremacists have long favored the uppercase style, which in itself is reason to avoid it.
You can tell that they are white supremacist hate groups because they want to treat blacks and whites equally: either capitalize both or capitalize neither. Advocating racial equality is a dead giveaway of the white supremacist hater.
But, cāmon, letās be frank, The New York Times is uppercasing āBlackā and lowercasing āwhiteā for the same reason that Christian journals usually uppercase pronouns referring to Jesus but not to the devil.