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View Full Version : Race Baiters Pull Another Innocent Cartoon from the Shelves




libertythor
09-07-2008, 03:25 PM
http://digg.com/world_news/US_Blacks_Extremely_Pissed_Off_Over_Mexican_Cartoo n

HOUSTON, Texas (CNN) -- A comic-book character popular in Mexico for generations has run into a cultural barrier at the border, where Americans see him as a racist caricature.

Comic book character Memin Pinguin is "a disgrace," an African-American activist says.
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For more than 60 years Mexicans have followed the adventures of "Memin Pinguin." But the dark-skinned Memin's exaggerated features in "Memin for President" came as a shock to Houston, Texas, Wal-Mart shopper Shawnedria McGinty.

"I was like, OK, is that a monkey or a boy?" McGinty said. "To me it was an insult."

She'd never heard of "Memin Pinguin." She bought a Spanish-English dictionary and tried translating but still didn't like what she saw.

"So I asked my boyfriend, does that look like a monkey to you?" she said. "And we went back and forth and he was like, no, that's a black woman," referring to the character's Aunt Jemima-like mother.

McGinty and Houston community activist Quannel X want the comic books removed from the stores.

"This is absolutely insensitive toward race, in particular the African-American culture, and also people of color," Quannel X said. "This is poking fun at the physical features of an entire people."

But Mexican readers who grew up following the shenanigans of Memin say critics need to look beyond the cover and understand the stories.

"They will bring a smile to their face because we're so fond of that character," said Javier Salas, a Spanish-language talk show host on Chicago radio station WRTO. "We respect him, we love him. And that's why it's so absurd for us to hear complaints from people who don't know, don't understand Memin."

Memin is a poor Cuban-Mexican kid with bug eyes, thick lips and protruding ears. The mischievous and caring boy helps his mother by selling newspapers and shining shoes.

"We grew up reading, learning and educating ourselves with a lot of the topics they always touched on, which was honesty, justice, tolerance. He was a very unique character," Salas said.

Wal-Mart spokesman Lorenzo Lopez said the retailer has instructed stores to remove the books from shelves and discontinue sales.

"We received the customer complaint regarding the book, which we knew was based on a popular cartoon character in Mexico. We looked into it further, and we decided to no longer distribute the book and are in the process of removing the books from the stores."

The store has received no other complaints about Memin, Lopez said.

"We have a wide array of products that we provide to Hispanic customers, but when we looked at this more carefully and given the sensitivity of the topic, we thought it was best to no longer carry the book in our stores," he said.

He did not know how many copies of Memin books the chain had or how long it would take to remove them from displays.

Memin is no stranger to controversy. Three years ago, a series of Mexican stamps honoring Memin ignited an international uproar. The stamps were discontinued because of protests from African-American leaders.

"This is saying we respect and regard the African-American community by making them look like Sambos on a stamp?" the Rev. Al Sharpton said at the time. "This goes over the line."

Quannel X called the comic book "a disgrace."

"Look how they portray his mother, with huge ethnic lips, dark skin, making her look like the big gorilla and him like the little monkey."
But fans of Memin say the valuable lessons of a beloved comic book character tackling real-life problems have been lost in translation.

AutoDas
09-07-2008, 03:43 PM
Why do black people name themselves like medicine?

"Sir, you need to take Quannel X for that lymphoma."

"Take some Shawnedria for your headaches."

fedup100
09-07-2008, 03:46 PM
Why do black people name themselves like medicine?

"Sir, you need to take Quannel X for that lymphoma."

"Take some Shawnedria for your headaches."

Or body parts like Clitoris, Taintneesha or Coloniqeul

libertythor
09-07-2008, 04:02 PM
Or body parts like Clitoris, Taintneesha or Coloniqeul

Laquasha....

constituent
09-07-2008, 04:28 PM
just goes to show...

mexicans hate black people.

libertythor
09-07-2008, 04:29 PM
just goes to show...

mexicans hate black people.


LOL Yes some do, but this cartoon actually speaks against racial discrimination.

specsaregood
09-07-2008, 04:36 PM
"We grew up reading, learning and educating ourselves with a lot of the topics they always touched on, which was honesty, justice, tolerance. He was a very unique character," Salas said.


Well no wonder they wanted it removed. We can't have kids learning about "honesty, justice and tolerance", now can we. They might grow up with the misunderstanding that those things are normal.

The mexican americans better get used to this though, after all they are set to be the majority in America soon enough.

libertythor
09-07-2008, 06:29 PM
The mexican americans better get used to this though, after all they are set to be the majority in America soon enough.

The race war lords not only go after things in the US! Al Sharpton demanded to see Vicente Fox after the Memin Pinguin stamp issue.

pacelli
09-07-2008, 06:37 PM
yet another reason why adults shouldn't be reading cartoons :) :) :)

libertythor
09-07-2008, 07:54 PM
yet another reason why adults shouldn't be reading cartoons :) :) :)

Especially if they don't have a sense of humor.

Dr.3D
09-07-2008, 08:01 PM
For those who don't want to enable cookies to see what is on CNN, here is a youtube link.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h50qMhEuLMw

James Madison
09-07-2008, 08:36 PM
This is bullshit. How many times are white people depicted as being geeks, losers, and bad dancers? Stop being so fucking stupid. They're a private company and have a right to print whatever they want.

libertythor
09-07-2008, 09:32 PM
This is bullshit. How many times are white people depicted as being geeks, losers, and bad dancers? Stop being so fucking stupid. They're a private company and have a right to print whatever they want.

But Al Sharpton wants to keep scaring his followers and keep the checks rolling in.

revolutionman
09-08-2008, 05:37 AM
next week they are gonna complain about mayonaise, because its white and white people love it! And walmart will stop selling it. lol

Dr.3D
09-08-2008, 05:49 AM
It was pretty strange because as I watched that video, the woman kept saying the cartoon characters looked like monkeys. I didn't think they looked like monkeys so I have to believe she has a problem thinking black people look like monkeys. I sure don't.

Uncle Emanuel Watkins
09-08-2008, 03:04 PM
http://digg.com/world_news/US_Blacks_Extremely_Pissed_Off_Over_Mexican_Cartoo n

HOUSTON, Texas (CNN) -- A comic-book character popular in Mexico for generations has run into a cultural barrier at the border, where Americans see him as a racist caricature.

Comic book character Memin Pinguin is "a disgrace," an African-American activist says.
1 of 3

For more than 60 years Mexicans have followed the adventures of "Memin Pinguin." But the dark-skinned Memin's exaggerated features in "Memin for President" came as a shock to Houston, Texas, Wal-Mart shopper Shawnedria McGinty.

"I was like, OK, is that a monkey or a boy?" McGinty said. "To me it was an insult."

She'd never heard of "Memin Pinguin." She bought a Spanish-English dictionary and tried translating but still didn't like what she saw.

"So I asked my boyfriend, does that look like a monkey to you?" she said. "And we went back and forth and he was like, no, that's a black woman," referring to the character's Aunt Jemima-like mother.

McGinty and Houston community activist Quannel X want the comic books removed from the stores.

"This is absolutely insensitive toward race, in particular the African-American culture, and also people of color," Quannel X said. "This is poking fun at the physical features of an entire people."

But Mexican readers who grew up following the shenanigans of Memin say critics need to look beyond the cover and understand the stories.

"They will bring a smile to their face because we're so fond of that character," said Javier Salas, a Spanish-language talk show host on Chicago radio station WRTO. "We respect him, we love him. And that's why it's so absurd for us to hear complaints from people who don't know, don't understand Memin."

Memin is a poor Cuban-Mexican kid with bug eyes, thick lips and protruding ears. The mischievous and caring boy helps his mother by selling newspapers and shining shoes.

"We grew up reading, learning and educating ourselves with a lot of the topics they always touched on, which was honesty, justice, tolerance. He was a very unique character," Salas said.

Wal-Mart spokesman Lorenzo Lopez said the retailer has instructed stores to remove the books from shelves and discontinue sales.

"We received the customer complaint regarding the book, which we knew was based on a popular cartoon character in Mexico. We looked into it further, and we decided to no longer distribute the book and are in the process of removing the books from the stores."

The store has received no other complaints about Memin, Lopez said.

"We have a wide array of products that we provide to Hispanic customers, but when we looked at this more carefully and given the sensitivity of the topic, we thought it was best to no longer carry the book in our stores," he said.

He did not know how many copies of Memin books the chain had or how long it would take to remove them from displays.

Memin is no stranger to controversy. Three years ago, a series of Mexican stamps honoring Memin ignited an international uproar. The stamps were discontinued because of protests from African-American leaders.

"This is saying we respect and regard the African-American community by making them look like Sambos on a stamp?" the Rev. Al Sharpton said at the time. "This goes over the line."

Quannel X called the comic book "a disgrace."

"Look how they portray his mother, with huge ethnic lips, dark skin, making her look like the big gorilla and him like the little monkey."
But fans of Memin say the valuable lessons of a beloved comic book character tackling real-life problems have been lost in translation.

By law, we should require all fiction to be equal with no protagonists or antagonists. No major or minor players or else it gets burned. No heterosexual male should be depicted penetrating a female without there also being a lesbian female or a gay male likewise written into the romantic plot. This will help to positively reinforce all of American society, for we would all be protagonists, while such evenly dispersed sexual content would work to ease the concern of any confused three year old homosexuals out there.