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View Full Version : Glenn Beck refuses to define 'white culture'


Sigaba
09-25-2009, 18:43
James Hibberd, of The Hollywood Reporter has offered the following analysis of Mr. Beck's interview with CBS News's Katie Couric. Source is here (http://www.thrfeed.com/2009/09/glenn-beck-refuses-to-define-white-culture-video.html#more). Video is here (http://video.hollywoodreporter.com/services/player/bcpid6555681001?bctid=42098879001).A hilariously awkward moment in CBS News' Katie Couric's interview with Fox News' Glenn Beck where she gently, insistently kept asking Beck to explain exactly what he meant by "white culture" (from when he said Barack Obama has a "deep-seated hatred for white culture"). The scene plays a bit like Steve Carell's Michael Scott in "The Office" when he's put on the spot about some over-the-top statement. That the question is from a Twitter user makes it even better.IMO, Mr. Beck's inability to define a term that he uses gives an insight into his views on a great many things--not the least his contempt for his core audience.

stickey
09-25-2009, 18:52
Not a huge Beck fan, but glad he didn't answer it. Why give her the upper-hand? I have never liked Couric or that snotty looking smirk thing she does when she thinks shes got some one pegged by a question.

Richard
09-25-2009, 19:07
I have to wonder why somebody would use a term for which he either cannot or will not provide a reasonable definition or explanation for its use. :confused:

Richard's $.02 :munchin

ZonieDiver
09-25-2009, 19:47
You cant, because like Europe there are many diverse and diffrent cultures in Africa. Sounds like two idiots taking shots at each other.

Methinks you hit the nail squarely on the head there, Brush Okie!

Richard
09-25-2009, 19:59
Define black culture or African culture.

Don't ever remember anyone saying any POTUS had a "deep-seated hatred for black culture" - IMO the question asking Glenn Beck to define what he meant when he said publicly that the POTUS has a "deep-seated hatred for white culture" and the many insinuations of such a statement - as hyperbolic as it may have been - remains a valid one. I, for one, would like to know what he meant.

Richard's $.02 :munchin

ZonieDiver
09-25-2009, 20:01
I, for one, would like to know what he meant.

Wonder Bread and Velveeta? :D

The Reaper
09-25-2009, 20:03
Don't ever remember anyone saying any POTUS had a "deep-seated hatred for black culture" - IMO the question asking Glenn Beck to define what he meant when he said publicly that the POTUS has a "deep-seated hatred for white culture" and the many insinuations of such a statement - as hyperbolic as it may have been - remains a valid one. I, for one, would like to know what he meant.

Richard's $.02 :munchin

Seems like I heard quite a few blacks say that about President Bush. Actually, several said that he hated black people and created numerous disasters, from crack to Katrina, just to target blacks.

TR

wet dog
09-25-2009, 20:05
Define black culture or African culture.

You cant, because like Europe there are many diverse and diffrent cultures in Africa. Sounds like two idiots taking shots at each other. :munchin

This would have been the perfect response, "Define black culture, or Latin culture, etc".

Lesson's learned, and my gray hair has taught me to answer tough question with another question.

abc_123
09-25-2009, 20:05
Don't ever remember anyone saying any POTUS had a "deep-seated hatred for black culture" - IMO the question asking Glenn Beck to define what he meant when he said publicly that the POTUS has a "deep-seated hatred for white culture" and the many insinuations of such a statement - as hyperbolic as it may have been - remains a valid one. I, for one, would like to know what he meant.

Richard's $.02 :munchin

I like Glenn Beck and believe he is doing more than any on TV to actuallly dig into some of most shady aspects of our current political landscape. The ties that he highlighted between legislators and ACORN alone were eye opening. However, if he said it, he needs to define it. Legitimate question.

Abu-Shakra
09-25-2009, 23:09
Wonder Bread and Velveeta? :D

And we cant dance.

akv
09-26-2009, 00:27
I have to wonder why somebody would use a term for which he either cannot or will not provide a reasonable definition or explanation for its use.


Yes exactly, I am still waiting for a definition of "Moderate Taliban" :confused:

anyone, anyone, Buelher, anyone.....

incarcerated
09-26-2009, 02:26
I agree with Wet Dog. Katie Couric suggests to Beck that his use of the term "white culture" might be racist "to some people." Beck seems to be taken aback by the question, which was probably not covered beforehand in show prep. It was obviously a question for which he was unprepared. His lack of direct response is simply an unwillingness to step into Katie's trap, and he says so. His loss of composure is embarrassing and pathetic.
His mistake was not attacking the notion that it could conceivably be racist to talk about white culture, any more than it is racist to talk about Black culture. He needed to stop being an interviewee and turn into an interviewer, as Wet Dog suggested.

For the record, I do not like the idea of white culture, one bit. I hope that there is never a Congressional White Caucus.
The Left has chosen to use race as a tool with which to divide America. Beck should keep that in mind: it's their tool, don't make it yours.

7624U
09-26-2009, 05:44
Yes exactly, I am still waiting for a definition of "Moderate Taliban" :confused:

anyone, anyone, Buelher, anyone.....

A Taliban that only beats his wife, Never kills her even when justified in killing her.

Pete
09-26-2009, 05:56
Is there a White Culture?

I'd say no.

What some might claim as "White Culture" is really "American Culture".

Go to the Mall and you'll see it in all it's glory. People from all corners of the world generally dressed somewhat the same and doing the same thing. That I would guess is where the majority of all Americans fall.

Do we have "Sub-cultures"? Of course. And from those sub-cultures come many stereotypes that others apply to everybody that kinda' sorta' looks like they belong in that category.

Penn
09-26-2009, 06:41
Whether expressed in terms of humanity or otherwise, cultural identity is universal, because all people in th℮ world are conscious of some sort of specificity that sets them apart from others. By contrast, ethnic identity or ethnicity only seems to occur within complex societies (ie. societies with a state apparatus, social classes, etc.), when it appears functional to divide people into categories based upon something other than gender, age or occupation. (Stairs 1992)

Richard
09-26-2009, 08:46
Pots and kettles...:p

Richard's $.02 :munchin

Sigaba
09-26-2009, 15:07
Not a huge Beck fan, but glad he didn't answer it. Why give her the upper-hand?MOO, there are many reasons, not the least is the rivalry between Sumner Redstone and Rupert Murdoch.

dac
09-26-2009, 16:00
I think he should have checked to make sure his sack was still there and answered the question. If he can't answer hard questions on the fly then maybe he should start looking for another line of work. I don't personally think it really is that hard to define white culture, or any other for that matter. Like it or not, there are activities that are generally associated with a certain race, religion, etc..., and this isn't a bad thing.

If I walk into my favorite Pub, Madra Rua, what is the ratio going to be on an average night? What about the random kid in urban Detroit that "acts black"? I went to the Highland Games last weekend, guess what the ratio was there.

IMHO, this country would be much worse off if there was only one amalgamated American culture because we lose our roots. I for one would be pissed if there were no more Mexican chili festivals in Pueblo.

I know I'm preaching to the choir here, but I am SO F'N TIRED of race talk. I know someone who really is racist, and he has absolutely no idea what any of BO's policies are.

nmap
09-26-2009, 16:56
I suspect that ethnic culture has two elements. One of those is a type of sorting algorithm, and the other is an ideal - a sort of mythological vision.

In the first case, culture permits individuals to determine if others are "one of us" or "not one of us". I think every group - not just ethnic - has such behaviors. Those in the "not one of us" category may have a desperate desire to become part of some group or other, but it is largely a hopeless and futile endeavor. The subtle little nuances of language, behavior, and opinion will reveal the interloper. Thus a Boston Brahmin who loves opera will never fit in with a group of NASCAR fans who delight in country-western music - even though both are white, and each represents an element of what might be regarded as white culture. This effect might be superseded if the two individuals were each members of some group that was more important to them than their other affiliations - for example, if both became QPs. ;)

The other type - and this may be what people mean when they refer to culture - is some sort of arrangement that people within the group may agree approaches the ideal.

I'm going to toss out an idea - and I recognize it may be badly flawed - but I offer it as a first attempt that others may be able to improve upon.

I suspect that "white culture" idealizes the late 1950's suburban American family lifestyle. This may connect rather nicely with Pete's view of the shopping mall, since those malls exist within a specific type of environment - the same kind necessary for suburbia. Further, the malls tend to serve suburbia.

Perhaps such television offerings as "Leave it to Beaver" are suitable examples. There was a stable, nuclear family - a relatively small family. The husband made, apparently, a good living and the wife was a full-time homemaker. They gathered at the table for shared meals. They lived in a pleasant house in suburbia. This vision was, of course, never reality for most - but it was a shared aspiration, and as such was a defining vision.

It occurs to me that the ideal will become steadily more popular, and may achieve a certain near-sacred status as the reality becomes more rare, and more out of reach for most. The environment that fostered the growth of suburbia, with all that implies, seems to have changed - and, for that matter, to be changing. The realities of both finance and society have forced both parents into the workplace - and the increased divorce rate makes the stable two-parent home environment less common by the year. All of this will make the myth seem more desirable - and people will fight harder to keep their dream alive.

Of course, Mr. Beck could not say such things. Telling people that their ideals are impossible does not win friends.

What does this imply? I suspect that anyone who offers the chance to hold onto the nostalgic image of yesterday will profit. Thus microwave meals that permit the illusion of a shared home-cooked meal will be popular. And politicians who promise the return of such arrangements will win votes - and, maybe, elections.

Sigaba
09-26-2009, 17:37
Before defining this culture or that culture, I'm still grappling with the question of questions: what is meant when people say "culture"?*:confused:


________________________________________________
* FWIW, I like Akira Iriye's definition of culture as “the creation and communication of memory, ideology, emotions, life styles, scholarly and artistic works, and other symbols.” Akira Iriye, “Culture and International History,” in Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations, ed. Michael J. Hogan and Thomas G. Patterson (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991), 215.

Or do I? Iriye's definition does not give much weight to the power of the human unconscious.:( Back to the drawing board. (I really liked this thread a lot better when it was mostly about Glenn Beck not answering a question. I had in mind some sternly worded (but not bitter) comments about Les Moonves, David Letterman, and Tina Fey.:p)

nmap
09-26-2009, 17:58
Before defining this culture or that culture, I'm still grappling with the question of questions: what is meant when people say "culture"?*:confused:

Sure. Here's a culture. LINK (http://www.anagnostec.eu/uploads/pics/agarplate.jpg) :D

On a more serious note, I like the definition from Hofstede, G. (1997). Cultures and Organizations: Software of the mind.

Culture refers to the cumulative deposit of knowledge, experience, beliefs, values, attitudes, meanings, hierarchies, religion, notions of time, roles, spatial relations, concepts of the universe, and material objects and possessions acquired by a group of people in the course of generations through individual and group striving.

LINK (http://www.tamu.edu/classes/cosc/choudhury/culture.html)

Sigaba
09-26-2009, 18:43
Software of the mind.
nmap,

As always, you provide food for thought.:D

Some quick questions.

If culture is software, what are the middleware and the firmware?
How does one 'program' cultural change?
Can people or groups be 'reprogrammed'?
Does the authors' definition of 'knowledge' include both declarative and automated knowledge?
Does gender differences included differences in gendered identity?
As culture is defined by what is transmitted from generation to generation, how does one define the emergence of culture practices during a generation? (Should one conclude that what appears as a 'new' culture is actually the appearance of sensibilities from previous generations?)

Penn
09-27-2009, 09:03
As culture is defined by what is transmitted from generation to generation, how does one define the emergence of culture practices during a generation? (Should one conclude that what appears as a 'new' culture is actually the appearance of sensibilities from previous generations?

Leslie Alvin White, American anthropologist and author of The Science of Culture (1949) states that “Culture may be defined as behavior peculiar to Homo Sapiens, together with material objects used as an integral part of their behavior; specifically, culture consists of language, ideas, beliefs, customs, codes, instruments, tools, techniques, works of art, rituals, ceremonies, and so on”; seems most accurate, and I tend to agree with this incomplete assessment.

Incomplete as in process, when process is present as Jerome Bruner outlines in “Acts of Meaning”, it then encompasses the full discussion of culture; whereas culture as define by White is progressive over time in nature; the development of a “Folk Psychology” referenced by Bruner evolves continually.
Bruner stating that the anthropology of mans metamorphic evolution: brain size, bipedal ability and free hands “would not have mattered save for the concurrent emergence of shared symbolic systems” with ways of “living and working together”. Concluding, that the divide in human evolution changed when “culture became the major force in forming the human mind” not nature. Culture then, resulted from the Bruner’s shared “Folk” knowledge being transferred linguistically, with White’s understanding as “product of mans history”. Thus, making culture the force we must “adapt” along with the “tool kit”, or “folk knowledge” for doing so. Bruner states that the tool kit “of any culture is a set of prosthetic devices by which human beings can exceed or redefine the natural limits of human” experience.

Leslie Alvin White 1900-1975, American anthropologist The Science of Culture (1949)
The Culture of Education, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996. Jerome Bruner, Acts of Meaning


Leslie Alvin White 1900-1975, American anthropologist The Science of Culture (1949)
The Culture of Education, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996. Jerome Bruner, Acts of Meaning, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1991

echoes
09-27-2009, 18:17
Not a huge Beck fan, but glad he didn't answer it. Why give her the upper-hand? I have never liked Couric or that snotty looking smirk thing she does when she thinks shes got some one pegged by a question.

Simply put, I like this answer sir!

And, IMHO, White Culture is as different as "Indian Culture," or "Asian Culture," or "Black Culture!" It is...what It is.:munchin

Katie Couric can kiss the ass of IRAN & LYBIA, but please let it be heard...Real Americans can think for themselves.

Holly

Richard
09-27-2009, 19:41
Personally - I think the question was valid, Katie Couric handled herself very well, and Glen Beck came off looking like another hyperbole spewing talk radio buffoon.

Richard

Chris Cram
09-27-2009, 23:24
Gentlemen

IMHO, it seems that we are over complicating the question.
I believe that Beck was speaking of the Presidents view of 'White Culture', as is reflected in the Presidents two books, his words, his actions and his associations.

Would anyone like to give a guess at what the Reverend Jeremiah Wright's views of 'White Culture' are?

Sigaba
09-28-2009, 00:33
Gentlemen

IMHO, it seems that we are over complicating the question.
I believe that Beck was speaking of the Presidents view of 'White Culture', as is reflected in the Presidents two books, his words, his actions and his associations.

Would anyone like to give a guess at what the Reverend Jeremiah Wright's views of 'White Culture' are?
Chris--

Were that the case, then why would he not give that as his answer to Ms. Couric's question? He then might have seized the opportunity to skewer the entire CBS news division by pointing out that they were getting questions from someone via Twitter. "Nice research department u have there, U+003B U+0029."

Instead, Mr. Beck made the decision to employ an interesting marketing technique. Nothing says "Buy my book" quite like boldly declaring "I have no idea what I'm talking about."

P36
09-28-2009, 04:13
If Beck has a message, it gets lost in his wackiness.

Chris Cram
09-28-2009, 10:39
If Beck has a message, it gets lost in his wackiness.

The message is there. Do your research.
Part 2 : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2qMMPk1_vJE
(If you have the time, watch Parts 1-5)

If we look to CN or MSNBC or CBS or SNL to echo Becks message...
or present it clearly w/o distortion. Well, then I think we get what we deserve.