June 16, 2022

"I think on its face, the ice cream that Walmart attempted to sell at best feels performative and exploitative..."

"... in part because Juneteenth is a holiday that signals celebration of liberation, and this feels like an empty symbol rather than a meaningful gesture that companies the size of Walmart could have made to the Black community across the United States in celebration of Juneteenth.... I think that it’s really in the spirit of Juneteenth to ensure that they are doing things that are meaningful for the advancement of both their Black employees and their Black consumers and also where there are avenues for that—even investments in small Black-owned businesses. Juneteenth was once an obscure holiday... As it’s getting renewed attention and visibility, I hope that companies will find ways to mark the historic significance of the holiday and not larger performative gestures like what we are seeing here with Walmart and other companies."

Said Timothy Welbeck, an assistant professor of instruction in the Department of Africology and African American Studies and acting director of the Center for Anti-racism Research at Temple University, quoted in "Learning from Walmart’s Juneteenth marketing mistake/Timothy Welbeck, acting director of the Center for Anti-racism Research, believes companies must develop more meaningful ways to observe the occasion rather than capitalizing off the holiday commercially" (Temple Now).

Making Juneteenth a national holiday was itself a performative gesture, and now that it is a holiday, commercial entities will try to do things that mark the occasion, and holidays tend to be celebrated with foods and decorations and other superficial things. But it's a holiday related to slavery.

I don't know what flavor the "Juneteenth-themed" ice cream was, but you can see a photo of the packaging at this CNN article, which also quotes a professor who uses the vogue word "performative":

Stephanie Leonard, an assistant professor of management at Howard University who specializes in workplace diversity, equity and inclusion... called it “tokenism” when companies rely solely on one or two Black employees to decide how Juneteenth should be marked. 

“It’s tough for organizations to put forth an ice cream or watermelon salad without having done the prior work,” Leonard said. “Because it just comes off as performative, as a last-ditch effort. It does not come off as this organization values its Black employees or values its Black customers.”

ADDED: I see at MarketWatch — "‘Shameless performative act’: Walmart’s Juneteenth-themed ice cream leads to backlash online" — that the flavor is red velvet and cheesecake.  

AND: This makes me wonder why LGBTQ people are accepting rainbows.

ALSO: Buzzfeed has a "cheat sheet" on what white people should not to do for Juneteenth. Shorter Buzzfeed: Whatever you come up with is almost certainly a bad idea.

PLUS: It is a new holiday. Is it like Martin Luther King Day, a day to note but do nothing, or is it like Thanksgiving, where we look at the historical occasion and derive some things to turn into a tradition? Tell me 5 things that could be elements of a Juneteenth celebration — things that white people could do that would be respectful and appreciated. If it's too hard to do and fraught with faux pas, then it will not be celebrated.

AH: Here's a PBS article that has exactly my "5 things" approach: "5 Ways to Celebrate Juneteenth With Your Family." This author, who appears to be black, recommends "red food and drinks like red velvet cake or strawberry soda." Based on the Walmart experience, I don't believe that white people eating red velvet cake and drinking strawberry soda will be appreciated. 

HA HA: "Another issue with Walmart's Juneteenth ice cream was the fact that a trademark symbol appeared beside the holiday's name on the package" (Food & Wine). Celebrating ending the owning of slaves with an attempt to own the occasion of celebrating ending the owning of slaves.

96 comments:

rhhardin said...

I have no idea what Juneteenth celebrates. It doesn't look like high moral codes.

Wa St Blogger said...

Stephanie Leonard, an assistant professor of management at Howard University who specializes in workplace diversity, equity and inclusion... called it “tokenism” when companies rely solely on one or two Black employees to decide how Juneteenth should be marked.

Better option: Avoid the woke agenda items altogether. Sure, you'll get criticized, but it's a damned if you do or don't scenario. Put up a sign that says happy _________, and be done with it.

Mark said...

Juneteenth is a holiday that signals celebration of liberation, and this feels like an empty symbol rather than a meaningful gesture

Juneteenth is a holiday that [is] an empty symbol rather than a meaningful gesture.

Wa St Blogger said...

Favor/Flavor

Enigma said...

AFAIK, "performative" follows from Austin (1962) "performative utterances" in the philosophy of language. It likely became fashionable in the same way that "unconscious bias" became fashionable 20 years ago. People from other disciplines (read: cultural studies and politics/policy) grabbed on to a concept without understanding its mechanics or need, and then bastardized it horribly. In this case they likely merged with activism and performance art (e.g., dance).

https://www.encyclopedia.com/humanities/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/performative-utterances

In sum, performative has become a fancy $100 word for saying that "I did something" or "I have the authority to decide" or "I have the power."

wendybar said...

Ignore it. You are damned if you do, and you are damned if you don't. You will get accused of appropriating it, if you celebrate, and called a RACIST if you don't. Some choice.

Paddy O said...

The onslaught of ubiquitous Pride month performatives make Walmart look like a holiday piker. It's clear who the corporate priorities are.

Jimmy said...

"assistant professor of instruction in the Department of Africology and African American Studies and acting director of the Center for Anti-racism Research at Temple University"

another reason why the education 'system' needs to be burned to the ground.
State sponsored propaganda was wrong under Stalin. These fools decided it was an instruction manual.

Cheryl said...

Yes, how horrible it is that a company try to capitalize on a holiday in a commercial way. How awful.

Totally unlike Christmas, or Easter, or Valentine's Day, or Mothers' Day, or...

Michael E. Lopez said...

Oh just shut up and suck the commercialism.

All the Christians do.

Roger Sweeny said...

If you big company really want to recognize Juneteenth in a meaningful way, you will give my Center for Anti-Racism Research a big, continuing, grant.

Jamie said...

Are they really trying to make the case that Walmart - WALMART - hasn't been materially good for many black Americans? As well as many teenagers, many women, many people of other "colors" than black, many people with disabilities, many elders?

Come on, man.

Paddy O said...

I do think Juneteenth is worth honoring, as so many gave their lives to bring freedom to all Americans and this represents a momentous correction of the profound missteps of the Founders. Celebrate freedom don't be curmudgeonly about it. It's definty more substantive than a lot of holidays or the months.

Good day to watch my favorite movie Glory

who-knew said...

"Juneteenth is a holiday that signals celebration of liberation, and this feels like an empty symbol rather than a meaningful gesture" So is the Fourth of July. Will Prof. Welbeck be making the same complaint next month? What about Christmas? will the words 'I think that it’s really in the spirit of Christmas to ensure that they are doing things that are meaningful for the advancement of both their Christian employees and their Christian consumers and also where there are avenues for that—even investments in small Christin-owned businesses." be acceptable? Or are the 'black' holidays more sacred than all the others and so off-limits to commercialization?

RMc said...

Selling Juneteenth ice cream: RACISTS!
Not selling Juneteenth ice cream: RACISTS!

Gusty Winds said...

Looks like Walmart was offering Red Velvet Cheesecake as one of the Juneteenth flavors of celebration.

Twitter users whipping Walmart for it's insensitivity are encouraging everyone to head to Target which offers a black owned brand called "Cream-a-licious" . The also offer Red Velvet Cheesecake. Yummy!

If so inclined you can find all sorts of flavors and choices for a morally safe Juneteenth non-acholic celebration on twitter @socreamalicious. Available at your local Target. Enjoy!!

Freeman Hunt said...

Companies don't meaningfully celebrate anything, and it's better to keep it that way.

Narayanan said...

do the faculty in Department of Africology know who provided enslaved cargo for the ships in 1600?++++

Meade said...

How about a nice bowl of monkey pox flavored ice cream? Say YES!

mccullough said...

10% of blacks in the US are immigrants.

But the Woke keep looking for what was where it used to be.

Meade said...

A performative nice bowl.

Howard said...

Juneteenth is a good reminder that Texas was the last gasp of the confederacy.

The Cracker Emcee Refulgent said...


“Yes, how horrible it is that a company try to capitalize on a holiday in a commercial way. How awful.

Totally unlike Christmas, or Easter, or Valentine's Day, or Mothers' Day, or...”

Exactly. I agree that Juneteenth should be a holiday. And should have been since 1865. But if you insist on festooning it with your brittle Woke barbed wire, don’t expect others to sign on.

You may as well have called it Summer Kwanza.

Narayanan said...

Federal Juneteenth Holiday
On June 17, 2021, President Biden signed Senate Bill 475 declaring Juneteenth National Independence Day a federal holiday. For most federal employees and many federal contractors, this means each year they will receive an additional paid day off work or, for those who are required to work, may receive overtime or other premium wage benefits.
========
performative win for FJB.

another historic damaging disdainment of low hanging fruit by Party of Lincoln.
juneteenth could have been warm-up party for July 4 and Unity since so long ago.

rcocean said...

I think its racist that we only have two Federal holidays for 10 percent of the population. I Think we shouldn't be stick in the muds. I suggest one black holiday a month. Who's with me?

We could call the holiday in august: Pander to an African American day.

Meade said...

“Low-hanging Strange Fruit” ice cream.

Leland said...

Walmart, like Hallmark and many other businesses, created Juneteenth branded merchandise because the promotion of Juneteenth as a prominent holiday created a demand for products related to it. But our socialist progressive elite wanted to use Juneteenth to remember how horrible the United States is, rather than celebrating the US ending slavery and liberating oppressed blacks. One is simple marketing economics and another is performative theater.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

I get the feeling Walmart is not paying for protection.

Beasts of England said...

’Department of Africology’

I’m sure that sinecure creates a lot of wealth…

baghdadbob said...

He's suggesting that Walmart invests in Black-owned small businesses?!

Is he not aware that Walmart's business model is centered around destroying small businesses, regardless of their ownership?

Steven said...

Making Juneteenth a holiday is itself "performative" (particularly since it was done in order to placate the 2020 rioters).

Juneteenth is a holiday that will be celebrated the same way as MLK day, Labor day, Columbus day, and other civic holidays that don't have much deeper meaning to most people. A performative gesture in the form of a special ice cream flavor is about the best anyone can reasonably expect.

Paddy O said...

Juneteenth isn't just a holiday for Black people, it's honoring the sacrifices made by abolitionists and the MA y who died in the Civil War, including Lincoln and my 4x great grandfather and his oldest son. A lot of history and blood led to this admittedly symbolic day.

Lurker21 said...

Sprinkles - Performative or Exploitative?

Carol said...

Oh, I see, "performative" means "phony." I get it.

The whole Juneteenth thing is embarrassing because when I lived in Texas actual racists would snicker about how black people there hadn't known they'd been freed. I mean it was a joke, probably best kept as a local celebration, no?

MadisonMan said...

"Africology"

Hoo Boy. Well, at least I became familiar with a new word today.

Tank said...

Five things:

Deep discounts on:

1. Fried chicken.
2. Ribs.
3. Watermelon.
4. Colt 45.
5. Newports.

That's five things B(b?)lack people would like and appreciate.

Tank would like it too, so win win.

Aggie said...

..."I hope that companies will find ways to mark the historic significance of the holiday and not larger performative gestures like what we are seeing here..."

The 'historic significance' of the holiday is that it is unique to Texas, and Texas only - so why if we are now so pure in our expression, has it been extrapolated to apply nationwide, when the Emancipation had already taken place in all of the other states?

Performative Exploitation Much?

MadisonMan said...

I recall seeing ads from Kohls, I think, about what to buy during Black History Month, and I rolled my eyes at that. Similarly, I roll my eyes at all the rainbowness of just about every corporate entity during this month, Pride Month.
That was what I thought about the Juneteenth Ice Cream. My actual first thought, though, was "I wonder how creamy it is, or is it just mostly air like all cheap ice cream?"
Althouse: Have you tried Ice Cream Social yet? The ice cream flavors I've tried there are good, if a bit pricey. Some are a bit wacky, but that's easy to avoid.

Rollo said...

In fairness to Walmart, there hasn't been a Charlie Brown Special to explain the true meaning of Juneteenth yet.

TheOne Who Is Not Obeyed said...

"Juneteenth isn't just a holiday for Black people, it's honoring the sacrifices made by abolitionists and the MA y who died in the Civil War, including Lincoln and my 4x great grandfather and his oldest son."

I wish it were so, but alas, this is not how the new Federal holiday is viewed or treated. To try to extend it to honor the winners of the civil war would probably be denounced as "white supremacist cultural appropriation" or some such blather.

It's a holiday for black Americans and their Federal plantation overseers.

Lucien said...

Buried the lede by ignoring the idea that ice cream can have a face. I can see how it could be performative and exploitative “as applied” — depending on where one applies the ice cream— but “on its face”?
Doesn’t this kinda sorta misapply and bastardize a concept in American constitutional law?

mccullough said...

Juneteenth has overtaken Pride Month.

Paul Zrimsek said...

The distinction between symbols and gestures could do with a bit more fleshing out.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

Performative 👉🏽 https://youtu.be/mgODlObGjNs

Went looking for a pie in the face compilation, a la Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, found that performative ridiculous thing instead, with a few exceptions.

Temujin said...

My God. What did they think would happen when they made Juneteenth a holiday? Especially after the BLM Summer of Love in 2020 and we saw our congresscreatures kneeling down, wearing Kente cloth around their shoulders? Talk about performative.

Declaring these Movement Holidays in an era when no one can say or do anything that might be considered cultural appropriation, yet everyone wants to show they're all down with the movement, is like piling pints of gelato on a table in a small room and locking a diabetic in the room with it. It's just cruel.

I was thinking of putting a flag out for Juneteenth. An American flag. To me this is and should be an important holiday. We put an end to slavery. At least a beginning of an end. Hundreds of thousands gave their lives to do it. But if it's going to piss off people that I'm putting up an American flag up, and if they're going to use the occasion to call me by some racist name, then I don't think we're ready for Juneteenth. Or any teenth.

Beasts of England said...

I just saw a Juneteenth ad from NASA. No wonder SpaceX is kicking their woke asses. Sad.

dgstock said...

A peculiar inversion when the beneficiary is celebrated rather than the benefactor. Those two groups of white boys screaming “states’ rights!” and “preserve the union!” never realized they were really fighting over the rich man’s slaves.

Achilles said...

Meade said...

A performative nice bowl.

Did you mean to put an "n" in front of "ice" instead of an "r?"

Jupiter said...

"Department of Africology"?

I will say, having Monday off work is nice. Thanks, Negroes!

Michael K said...

Elon Musk said he would vote for DeSantis so DeSantis said he had the African American vote and the left went nuts. Hilarious.

tim maguire said...

Juneteenth is like Kwanzaa--basically a fake holiday that you are obligated to respect or you're a racist. Some people in TX heard about the end of slavery in the US long after slavery ended in the US. That's what Juneteenth celebrates.

Bilwick said...

I could get more on board with the Juneteenth celebration if it didn't seem like the beneficiaries of emancipation weren't marching lockstep into the service of statism and the State. I wonder if rational, pro-freedom African-Americans such as Thomas Sowell even observe the holiday.

BUMBLE BEE said...

Perhaps a holiday named for a most prominent African American - Elon Musk?

Jupiter said...

Uh-oh. Is it cultural appropriation if I get paid for not working on Juneteenth?

Narr said...

The Juneteenth Cone don't lick itself.

Dagwood said...

Of course if it had been Ben & Jerry's, they'd have praised it to high heaven.

Lurker21 said...

Hold your fire.

You'll need it when Carvel comes out with a slavery-themed ice cream cake.

MayBee said...

Althouse wrote:
PLUS: It is a new holiday. Is it like Martin Luther King Day, a day to note but do nothing, or is it like Thanksgiving, where we look at the historical occasion and derive some things to turn into a tradition? Tell me 5 things that could be elements of a Juneteenth celebration — things that white people could do that would be respectful and appreciated. If it's too hard to do and fraught with faux pas, then it will not be celebrated.

100%.
And making people feel uncomfortable will make Americans feel more separated than united. It could be such a glorious holiday! Don't make it hard!

Buckwheathikes said...

This article itself is "performative."

In that if you replace "Juneteenth" with "LGBT" the story would never be written.

Always In: Corporate Pride Month!

Always Out: Celebrating Black Liberation

Mark said...

I do think Juneteenth is worth honoring, as so many gave their lives to bring freedom to all Americans

As Aggie and TM have noted, Juneteenth is not about bringing "freedom to all Americans" or about national emancipation. It is about freedom for slaves in Texas.

It is at best a Texas state holiday. An important occasion for Texas to be sure, but it is entirely about Texas.

Mark said...

But, some insist, Juneteenth commemorates when, with emancipation in Texas, slavery was finally abolished throughout the nation.

No.

In fact, slavery continued to exist in the United States after Juneteenth. Slavery continued in law in Delaware and Kentucky afterward.

traditionalguy said...

What are the anti-white Americans gripping about now? Do they need a pure white-free safe space? Or to just loot more wealth?

PM said...

Since both Pride and Juneteenth occur in June, why doesn't the Juneteenth Committee reclaim the colorful Rainbow idea from the original Rainbow Coalition and, with the LGBTers make it one big JuneRainbowPrideteenth Month.

rcocean said...

I love how lots of white people, who didn't know what the fuck Juneteenth was until it got made a Holiday, are now all in favor of it and are bowing their heads in reverance over the sacred rememberance.

This constant, absurd, preening and virtue signaling over "racism" and "slavery" gets more and more insane. Black people are doing better than ever, and the affirmative action goals and various quotas that give them privilages are never going away.

We're going to have to wait for the boomers to die off, before any kind of sanity on the race issue can exist. BTW, if you really want to show your love for black folks, why don't you do something to stop the murder of 8,000 or so black men every year.

Deevs said...

I'm okay with Juenteenth being a national celebration of the end of slavery even if the date is specific to Texas. Ending slavery is well worth celebrating, and when else would we celebrate it? Besides, what other holidays are in June?

Still, I can't help but feel a little uneasy when I see all this hubbub about Walmart being insensitive for selling Juneteenth ice cream. Then Althouse provided a link to that Buzzfeed article that I knew existed without even having to see it.

I get the feeling Juneteenth is going to be the holiday version of that incident at Evergreen College a few years back. You know, the one where a voluntary day of absence for black people turned into white people being told to stay off campus. So, I imagine my Juneteenth celebration will consist of acting like it's any other day and just not having to go into work.

What's emanating from your penumbra said...

"this feels like an empty symbol"

ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v, ctrl-v ...

What's emanating from your penumbra said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Mark said...

Ending slavery is well worth celebrating, and when else would we celebrate it?

When the Thirteenth Amendment was ratified on December 6 (1865), thereby abolishing slavery throughout the United States?

Mark said...

What's with the disappearing comments?

Tina Trent said...

In the 90s, Juneteenth was for blockading streets, abusing whites caught in the melee, twerking, and assaulting girls on the hoods of the cars blocking Peachtree and Five Points. Quite unfortunately, our black, female Chief of Police dismissively compared the attacked girls to a cow who had escaped on the freeway that night and proved hard to catch. No, you won't find this story on the internet. It has been completely scrubbed.

In contrast, some corporate ice cream sounds nice.

OTOH there are some amazing historical photos of early celebrations under: images, history of Juneteeth.

Quaestor said...

Performative. Anyone using that word is obliged to prove he's not a lunatic.

Jim at said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Left Bank of the Charles said...

“Is it like Martin Luther King Day, a day to note but do nothing?”

Hey, better than nothing is a high standard. And MLK Day coming after the Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years run is the perfect holiday from holidays. Don’t spoil it.

As to how to celebrate a summer holiday, it’s pretty simple:

1. pancake breakfast
2. parade
3. baseball game
4. barbecue
5. fireworks

David Duffy said...

The Creek Indians finally gave up their black slaves a year after Texas. The natives of Alaska fought in court to keep slavery as one of their traditional ways of life long after the Creek gave up: https://casetext.com/case/in-re-sah-quah

31 F. 327 (D.Alaska 1886) In re SAH QUAH. United States District Court, District of Alaska. May 8, 1886

Money Quote: "...we cannot escape the conclusion that slavery in its most shocking form has been thoroughly interwoven with the social polity of the Indians of Alaska, and still exists in many localities under circumstances of extreme cruelty. The life of the slave is entirely at the disposal of his master or his mistress, and it has been customary among them to kill one or more slaves on the death of a master, or on the happening of some other event, such as the completion of a new house. Boring the ears, or putting out an eye, of a slave, or some other mode of marking the flesh, has been and is now a custom with some of the families of these people. The evidence shows that the object of such mutilation is to impress upon the slaves their inferiority, and render their humiliation complete..."

JAORE said...

'[E]ncouraged consumers to “share and celebrate African American culture, emancipation and enduring hope.”'

Sounds reasonably positive. But, based on the reaction I suggest WalMart avoids that in the future..... how awful of them.

*reads more*

The desire is "a meaningful gesture that companies the size of Walmart could have made to the Black community across the United States"

Meaningful gesture and size of the company?

Oh, I see. Cash and a lot of it. Message sent.

Marc in Eugene said...

ADDED: I see at MarketWatch — "‘Shameless performative act’: Walmart’s Juneteenth-themed ice cream leads to backlash online" — that the flavor is red velvet and cheesecake.

I knew 'Juneteenth' but had no idea it was a federal holiday-- am happy to learn from someone's comment earlier that it is a new one, not one that I've overlooked for some number of years.

Have never been able to understand, however, why some people find red velvet cake to be such a treat. Take good chocolate, adulterate it with whatever the red velvet recipe says to adulterate it with-- have never understood. And then putting it into ice cream? Pft.

minnesota farm guy said...

Perhaps Blacks should devise some method of recognizing those - both Black and White - who "died to make men free"! The effect of the Emancipation Declaration only arrived in all the Confederate states after a lot of sacrifice by the Union Army and Navy. We should probably remember that on Juneteenth.
It may interest some of you history buffs to know that my great, great grandfather, Acting Ensign Frank Millett of Salem, MA was serving on the USS Cornubia which transported Confederate Generals Magruder and Kirby Smith ashore after they signed the final surrender of the Civil War aboard the USS Fort Jackson on 2 June 1865. The previous day a party led by Ensign Millett boarded and sank the blockade runner LeCompte capturing arms and the last Confederate flag to be captured by the US Navy - subsequently sent to Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles. At the same time Ensign Millett captured what appears to be the LeCompte commander's personal flag which he kept and I still possess.

Yancey Ward said...

I didn't give a shit about Juneteenth before it became a white people thing, and I don't give shit now.

Scott Patton said...

In a (ice capable) blender, mix:
6 large or 8 medium ice cubes, or there about.
2 to 4 teaspoons of sugar
approx 6-8oz Gatorade Fruit Punch

Blend until smooth
Portion into small cups (approx 2 servings)

Place in freezer for at least 30 minutes.
If frozen solid, remove from freezer 10-15 minutes before serving.

It's red, and it's delicious.

n.n said...

On Juneteenth they pridefully celebrate Diversity [dogma], Inequity, and Exclusion (DIE) doctrine of their ethical religion. That said, throw another baby on the barbie for good measure, and social, redistributive, clinical, and fair weather causes.

Mea Sententia said...

Progressives hate the 4th of July, but they sure are jazzed about Juneteenth now. A lot of these Juneteenth observances seem 'performative and exploitive' to me. Still, cynicism aside, it might not be out of place to read a speech or two from Frederick Douglass that day.

Michael said...

Oh, for Heaven's sake. Is the primary purpose of a holiday to scold people who don't observe it "properly"? Apparently for Progressives, that's the primary purpose of everything.

Narayanan said...

Q: why could not Walmart stick it out and not withdraw product

Q: was Target behind all the bad publicity?

Q: sue them ?yugely?

realestateacct said...

I first became aware of Juneteenth in the late 80's, early 90's when I was affiliated with real estate projects in Atlanta. It was informally imported from Texas as a good holiday between Memorial Day and July 4. Its celebration involved picnics featuring the usual summer picnic foods like fried chicken, watermelon and potato salad. I don't recall red velvet cake, but I'll take their word for it.

It also involved a lot of American flags, because a lot of black people were proud of their country and it's elimination of slavery by military force. Or maybe that was the commercial decoration available between Memorial Day and July 4 and within a few days of Flag Day.

Of course at that time, everyone over 30 still knew that South was run by Democrats since Reconstruction to the early 70s.

Clyde said...

I looked at next week's work schedule, and of the people in my section and shift who are off on Sunday for the Juneteenth holiday, all are White. We do have a couple of Black people who signed up to work the holiday. I did, too, because I didn't want to lose my Sunday premium pay.

Lurker21 said...

The dogs bark, but the carnival goes on.

Nobody gave any thought last month to the Civil War dead that Memorial Day commemorates.

The big question is whether retailers will have big sales on Juneteenth, or whether they figure that they don't need another sale day between Memorial Day and Independence Day.

Clyde said...

Not true, Lurker21. I reposted on Facebook the story of my first cousin, five times removed, George Washington Shriver, a Union soldier from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. His house in Gettysburg is now a museum, the Shriver House. His wife Hettie and their two daughters left town before the battle for her family's farm, thinking it might be safer, but since it was between Big Round Top and Little Round Top, they were right in the thick of the battle for three days. They returned home to find that the Confederates had commandeered it, building a barricade outside with most of their possessions, and sniped from the inside. At least two Confederate snipers were killed in the house. The fleeing Confederates looted the house of everything of value, even taking the unripened crops from the garden. George received a short furlough for Christmas 1863, but was a changed man after what he had seen in battle. He was captured on New Year's Day, 1864, and sent to Andersonville Prison, where he died. If you should ever visit Gettysburg, you can visit the Shriver House and see his story in full.

William said...

Performative as a word to describe something that is phony or pretentious is itself a phony and pretentious word. Performative? Not moi. I jerk off to the hot Halle Berry scenes in Monster's Ball and eat red velvet cake afterwards. If we all pursued such wholesome activities, I'm sure all this racial bitterness would soon fade.

GrapeApe said...

Now do Ben & Jerry’s. Nothin different.

Zev said...

oh no, someone tried to make money out of the holiday being foisted on us, horrors

Bunkypotatohead said...

It's a day off for gov't employees, nothing more. It doesn't need its own ice cream.
The lesson Walmart should learn is don't waste your time.
The one I shop at has no black employees and no black customers. The manager knows better than to carry this crap in his store.

Jerry said...

Damned if you do, damned if you don't. Basically, there's no right way that someone won't gripe about.

The only way not to lose is not to play.

Christopher B said...

AND: This makes me wonder why LGBTQ people are accepting rainbows.

Look around a bit. Pride (and the TQ part of LBGTQ) is all about kid-friendly messaging. Any need to wonder why?


The purpose of Juneteenth National Independence Day is right there in the official name. Replacing the real Independence Day (July 4) with a BLM/1619/Woke-approved fake holiday that focuses on slavery.

Gojuplyr831@gmail.com said...

Sooooooo, someone incapable of running so much as a successful lemonade stand offers criticism and advice to a billion dollar corporation. And the self deluded will nod wisely, stroke their chins and harrumph at the claimed deep insights offered.

Jack Klompus said...

Temple is the university that admits any idiot who can breathe coming out of the Philadelphia public school system. They were one known for employing Mark Lamont Hill and Molefi Asante.

mikee said...

Here in Texas, neither Blue Bell nor HEB Grocery makes a Juneteenth ice cream flavor. That's pretty much definitive of the lack of need/demand for such a product. Also here in Texas, a lot of people support Juneteenth for the simple reason that it commemorates a day as important to a large segment of our population as San Jacinto Day is for Hispanics and Whites. And there is no San Jacinto Day ice cream flavor, either. Celebrating the day anybody's freedom was won from oppression is always worthwhile, and I'm having a picnic this Sunday despite my personal pallor.