12.9.08
Posted by Michele
MeShorn Daniels and Peter Hayes want kids in Louisville — and the rest of the country — to pull up their pants.
Arguing that the sagging-pants fashion trend promotes an unhealthful lifestyle of gangs, crime and violence, they’ve launched the Pull Up Your Pants education campaign, designed to persuade young people to abandon the look — especially pants often worn so low that their underwear, or more, is exposed.
They already have the support of one Louisville Metro Council member, who plans to introduce a resolution in support of their campaign next month.
While the sagging-pants look has been popularized in the rap culture, Councilwoman Judy Green, D-1st District, said the trend has a history in slavery, when masters wouldn’t allow males to wear belts as a way to degrade them.
She said it’s also common in prison populations because prisoners are not allowed to wear belts, which can be used as weapons.
“It’s degrading. In some ways it’s indecent,” Green said. “It dates all the way back to slavery, but our children don’t know the history.”
And today “that type of dress is associated with gangsters and criminal activity,” said Daniels, an assistant block-watch captain for his 40th Street neighborhood in western Louisville. Continue reading the article at Courier-Journal.com…
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12.9.08
Posted by Michele
William Tweedle, a residence hall director at Morehouse College, wants students at the historically black men’s school to get “In the Zone.”
That’s the zone where there’s no cursing, no saggin’ pants, and no use of the word whose plural spelled backward is “saggin.’ All are beneath the image of the Morehouse man, Tweedle said.
Morehouse President Robert Franklin is making the same points to students on a somewhat different plane. He talks about the new “Renaissance man” who is “well-read, well-traveled, well-spoken, well-dressed and well-balanced.”
Franklin, who was named president last year, instituted the practice of giving every freshman a tie and a blazer in the college’s primary color, maroon, as a tangible symbol of the image of a gentleman.
Morehouse is one of several historically black colleges taking action recently to improve dress on campus. Overt dissent on the Morehouse campus has been minimal, but a smattering of bloggers nationally have suggested that schools might be trying to take away students’ freedom of expression.
“Call me crazy, but I didn’t realize that there was a correlation between morality and Brooks Brothers,” Morehouse alumnus Jonathan Walton, an assistant professor of religious studies at the University of California, Riverside, wrote in an article on the subject. Continue reading the article from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution…
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12.4.08
Posted by Michele
AUGUSTA, Ga.—The local sagging pants debate began more than a year ago on News 12. It may be coming to a dramatic halt. A bid to send saggers to etiquette school failed.
A bid to send saggers to etiquette school failed, and that’s before the real test even begins. The commission says it’s can’t be enforced.
Commissioner Corey Johnson, the guy making the recommendation, took his bid off the table. This comes after his original call to send violators to school got downgraded to a small mention in the current indecent exposure law. The whole idea was to keep people out of jail. That’s where things got sticky.
“That’s reality,” said Commissioner Johnson. “We have to be realistic about it. We will be infringing upon the rights of expression if we do that. So I had to look at the bigger picture.”
“One thing we cannot do is legislate morality,” said commissioner Calvin Holland. “We cannot legislate self respect, but we want our community, especially our young people, to know we are very much concerned.”
The folks in Hyde Park are also concerned after years of battling alleged contamination. The community is now taking matters in their own hands. They are starting by calling for the Hyde Park sub-committee chair Don Grantham to step down.
Continue reading the article at WRDW
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12.1.08
Posted by Michele
We know that this mainly belt-less, sagging pants phenomenon, popularized by black teenage boys, comes from the penal culture. Its antecedent is the popular “do-rag” that’s been a standard in black, inner-city culture for at least two generations.
So many black boys and young men are on the streets, in shopping centers, clubs and elsewhere looking like targets for arrest to law-enforcement personnel, suburbanites and tourists. Generally, people fear black youth – especially black adults who ride the buses with them and live among them.
Sagging-pants-wearing black males who blatantly exhibit their underwear as style are also sending a cryptic message to society to kiss their behinds for leaving them behind. Their uniform tells all that they are soldiers in the army of those who are mis-educated and forgotten: a new nihilistic foreign legion of a sort.
Countless black girls become young adults and mothers of two or more children with different fathers and no husband. Most of these teenage girls enter adulthood living in an extended family situation with their children, usually with a female head of household that is generational – with mother and/or mother and grandmother.
Young girls are taught to exude their sexuality to be popular, to be wanted, often when barely out of adolescence and sometimes before adolescence. Listening to rap and soul-singers, learning the latest sex-driving gyrations called dancing, and seeking the boys tend to dominate the lives of many girls who are not lucky enough to be involved in organized activities. If that’s not the bull’s eye for black teenage pregnancies and HIV/AIDS, it’s pretty darn close.
Continue Reading the South Florida Times article…
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