@variancetechnologies: Near the top of speculative cycles: Investors tend to flock to a handful of outperforming stocks, like Nvidia and Tesla. Everyone wants a piece of the action, which leads to more and more money being concentrated in these big winners. This can make the market riskier, as any drop in those stocks could have a bigger impact on overall performance. #stocks #nvidia #investing

Variance Technologies
Variance Technologies
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Thursday 24 October 2024 22:29:47 GMT
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Resignifying and reclaiming language is a common practice across the diaspora. At different times community in the U.S. have self-described as ‘Negro’, Afro-American, African American, Black American, Black, Colored, and more. There was a point in time when in the U.S. the term ‘Black’ was viewed as derogatory. But the Black Power Movement totally changed our relationship to the term—think of phrases like “Black is beautiful,” “Black power,” and “Black consciousness.” Language is fluid across time, space, and location. To be super clear: the concept of Black American exceptionalism is NOT an erasure of Black American folks being exceptional and talented. Our impact as changemakers, trendsetters, and cultural curators is UNDENIABLE. What I’m naming is the impulse to transpose Black American conceptualizations of race and subjugation on to diaspora experiences where it doesn’t neatly map on. I am not South African and won’t deign to speak for folks who identify as ‘coloured.’ These are my humble observations. If Tyla was actively distancing herself from Blackness and seeking to be in closer proximity to whiteness, my commentary would be VERY different. But that’s not the sense I get at all given that her music is a celebration of the diaspora. In an interview she talks about how inspired her sound is by the R&B music she listened to growing up. And my good sis stays out here rocking braids and celebrating the community through dance! As someone who receives comments every day telling me how I ‘should’ self-describe, I can tell you it’s not a good feeling. This defensive posturing is understandable. We simply have different relationships to the term across diaspora. That being said, I invite us to reflect on diasporic specificity around identitarian language and learn the histories that lead people to that language. While anti-Black racism and coloniality are shared experiences across the diaspora, the details vary wildly. Let’s honor that. This is what came up for me, but I’d love to hear what you think! 💗

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