With slicked back hair and a dapper sport coat, Courtland Milloy could be confused for a preacher. Which, in some ways, he is: Blatantly reproachful from his pulpit—which just happens to be a Metro section column in The Washington Post—he’s demure and polite in person.
Milloy’s surprisingly tender flock-tending style is on display as he chats people up one November afternoon at the Children of Mine Youth Center in Anacostia. Kids from the center, a visiting lawyer, some Maryland Episcopalians picking up trash—they all get taken in by the man with the good-natured baritone that cracks and squeaks whenever he laughs.
Milloy listens raptly, wrinkles deepening. A handsome, straight-featured black man, he shows no hint of writerly condescension as he works a room full of all those ordinary citizens that media strategists are so perpetually keen on reaching. At moments like this, you’d never guess how ruthless Milloy’s dark side can be. While some kids shoot a sleepy game of basketball on the center’s colorful asphalt court, the 59-year-old gets the lowdown from Hannah Hawkins. Back in the 1990s, in order to feed the children of Southeast, Hawkins chased raccoons and homeless men from a house at 2263 Mount View Place SE, allowing her to move her nascent program there. Now, to feed more children, Hawkins says she needs to expand. She needs to renovate an adjacent and dilapidated house on the property grounds.
Milloy has declared he’s working on a column about the center. He isn’t taking notes, though.
“I’m just here to get a feel for the place,” he says. It doesn’t matter anyway; the most significant exchange to happen that day will be easy to remember. It’s when Milloy asks Hawkins how much she needs for the renovations. “I could do it with $7 million,” she replies. The writer doesn’t flinch. After thinking about it for a while, Hawkins decides she could do with more: Ten million.
A Milloy column could help some of that money materialize. For the last 27 years, his work has highlighted black life in the District. Milloy can bring attention to a problem, which can lead to dollars in the form of donations and city money. The potential chain reaction leads local social worker and activist Ella McCall to call Milloy whenever she sees a dire need emerging. “You’re my mouthpiece,” she’s told him.
Milloy insists he’s no such thing. But if he’s not quite a mouthpiece for a black agenda in the District, he’s the closest thing to it at the Post—or anywhere else in the local mainstream media, for that matter. Milloy’s column cuts against the usual conventional wisdom in journalism these days, giving readers a mirror of an urban, poor D.C. instead of the wealthy suburbs advertisers would probably prefer. And while the newspaper lavishes attention on its new iPad incarnation, and courts Facebook and Twitter like a desperate teenaged boy chasing after a crush, Milloy almost gleefully stays away from the trend.
Like the late Herb Caen in San Francisco, he’s an old-school journalist doing an old-school job: the Metro columnist writing about, and for, the city’s downtrodden. For decades, that was a generally quiet, low-impact job. But following a mayoral campaign that pitted rich against poor in dramatic new ways this fall, Milloy’s knack for reducing post-modern problems to their race-and-class roots has suddenly made him a controversial, buzz-generating columnist—the man that the supposedly liberal class of newcomers to D.C.’s gentrifying neighborhoods love to hate.
In the steadfastly non-gentrified neighborhoods that Milloy covers, though, he’s rarely seen as incendiary. Community broadcast journalist Jerry Phillips, who’s known the columnist since the 1970s, says Milloy is basically a black Norman Rockwell. “Norman Rockwell always had a subject that was American in some way,” he says. Milloy writes the story of America, “but for the black community.”
“The District of Columbia doesn’t care about me,” Hawkins half shouts while taking a walk around the building so she can show off the center’s small vegetable garden to Milloy. She senses that if she has any hope of airing that accusation, Milloy is her guy.
The city has been growing less interested in what people like Hawkins—people fighting for “quality of life” in places where that means more than bike racks—are up to. But Milloy is. Even though there’s nothing coming up in it, Milloy gazes at the garden’s dirt mounds a long time and manages some reverential awe.
Here’s the official national narrative about Washington, D.C., in 2010: Mayor Adrian Fenty was ousted in large part thanks to the bold reforms exemplified by his public schools chancellor, Michelle Rhee. It’s not hard to find examples of the narrative, which holds sway in magazines like The Atlantic and The New Republic, not to mention the editorial page of the Post.
The Post, as it happens, is also home to the official counter-narrative, though you’ll have to look harder to find it: Its most prominent platform is on page B1, where Milloy has a contract for a single weekly column. He writes more when he’s moved, which, this fall, was often. In Milloy’s telling, Fenty and Rhee were villains who closed down black-majority schools and heedlessly sacked black teachers and bureaucrats.
Milloy’s column was about the only place where many white Washingtonians even encountered that narrative, which reached its apotheosis in a scathing post-election column headlined “Ding-dong, Fenty’s gone. The wicked mayor is gone.” Reveling in his schadenfreude, Milloy expounded on his theory as to why Fenty bit it. “In a stunning repudiation of divisive, autocratic leadership, District residents Tuesday toppled the city’s ruling troika: Mayor Adrian Fenty, Attorney General Peter Nickles and Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee. All busted up,” he wrote in a column that quickly went viral. “The trio’s contempt for everyday people was handed back to them in spades at the polls.”
Of course, Milloy wasn’t eligible to vote against Fenty himself: He lives in Fort Washington, in Prince George’s County. All the same, he was the first major writer to play up racial voting dynamics that most of Washington could sense—but didn’t dare articulate—well ahead of election day. Milloy accused Fenty of catering to the privileged. He also took aim at Fenty supporters, coining a phrase readers are unlikely to forget anytime soon. After recounting Fenty’s refusal to meet with Dorothy Height and Maya Angelou, Milloy tore into Fenty-ites who might not recognize the importance of such a gesture.
“Watch them at the chic new eateries,” Milloy wrote. “Fenty’s hip newly arrived ‘creative class’ firing up their ‘social media’ networks whenever he’s under attack: Why should the mayor have to stop his work just to meet with some old biddies, they tweet. Who cares if the mayor is arrogant as long as he gets the job done? Myopic little twits.”
“Myopic little twits” seemed like code (barely coded code, at that) for young, white gentrifiers, and Milloy got gigabytes of angry e-mails that assumed as much. “On behalf of all young white new residents to the District—thanks for making us feel so welcome!” one furious note read. “Let me clue you in to something. We’re not leaving. We are her[e] to stay because we like this city and we’re only going to become more involved.”
But where the hundreds of irate comments clogged the Post’s website following the publication of Milloy’s “Ding, Dong” column were testimony to his having struck a nerve, the local blogosphere’s reaction was a bit different: Milloy, the myopic twits argued, was yesterday’s man.
“The column goes so much further than legitimate political criticism allows, depicting an author with an apparent desire to re-inject a culture of divisiveness back into the city,” wrote DCist.com editor Aaron Morrissey. And why would he do that? “I don’t know if ‘offensive’ is the right word for it. He’s a columnist, and his job is to churn up reactions. It just struck me as being a little out of touch.”
Adam Serwer, a D.C.-bred American Prospect writer and frequent Twitter presence, argued that Milloy’s “divisiveness” was a red herring: “It’s important to note that Gray never talked like this, even if some of his supporters did,” Serwer wrote. On the phone, Serwer, who’s biracial, explains that Milloy had dragged race into something that was primarily about economics. Serwer figures high unemployment rates led to Fenty’s undoing, not the snubbing of venerated black women. Why overstate racial resentment? “He sort of represents a certain kind of establishment perspective.”
Once upon a time, Milloy was the young writer using terms like “out of touch” and “establishment perspective” to describe his targets. That those words are now being used to describe him is perhaps a clue as to how much things have changed since the days of community uprisings and disco. Talking to Milloy, and reading his column, the rhetoric feels a bit dated—right down to the undercurrent of college Marxism. “Troika?”
Talk to Milloy about the state of the media and his cranky-old-uncle schtick becomes even more apparent. “Sounds perverted,” he gripes when asked about Twitter, his voice suddenly mockingly high: “Follow me on Twitter, and watch me tweet...”
“There was some anger,” Milloy says of his September columns. “There was [also] some, ‘Thank you for putting into words what I’ve been thinking.’” Those who gave Milloy a thumbs-up on his screed were likely frustrated with Fenty’s administration.
But as a national narrative coalesced about how the forces of race and gentrification had undone the District’s reformist mayor, Milloy came off like Chocolate City’s version of Glenn Beck. In Milloy’s view, the story bouncing around was that D.C. had no idea what was good for it. Fenty had tried to change things for the better, only to be thwarted by blacks too resentful of the District’s influx of white residents to realize how essential the mayor was to a better future. In this version, Milloy and those who thought like him were a mirror image of the Tea Party. Issues had been ginned up, but at their base was racial anxiety. In other words, Milloy and his supporters were nothing but bigots.
And, like the other Tea Partiers, they faced a backlash: Six weeks later, write-ins captured nearly a quarter of the city’s general election votes. It’s a good bet that wouldn’t have happened without the post-primary racial agita that began with Milloy’s column.
Milloy arrived in the District in 1974 after two years at The Miami Herald. He was 23 years old, without a job but sure he’d find one. He camped out in The Washington Post’s lobby for a day. He was hoping to meet the editor in charge of recruiting, Elsie Carper. Milloy had neither an appointment nor any idea what she looked like.
Growing up in Shreveport, La., in the 1960s, Milloy felt his destiny was to become a journalist. Though he has bitter memories of enduring discrimination and racism, his upbringing was auspicious. His parents were both teachers: His father taught journalism and his mother typing. “These two things made for a calling, don’t you think?” Milloy asks. When he was old enough to attend Booker T. Washington, the revered black high school where his parents worked, he joined the school newspaper and began writing a column. When he gave one of his columns the headline, “The Cure for Boredom in the Classroom,” he learned what it was like to be at the center of controversy. “It created a buzz,” he remembers. “I’d never created a buzz before.”
From there, Milloy headed to Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Ill. After college, he scored the job at the Herald, but he knew he wasn’t staying. He was anxious to leave the South behind, to live in a place that had an energy and potential that matched his own. Big newspapers were starting to hire more black reporters, prompted in part by the civil rights struggle they’d been chronicling in their own pages. Milloy figured he’d try the Post.
During the hours he lurked in the paper’s stolid lobby, Milloy befriended a security guard. At the end of the day, Carper came through the lobby and made a beeline for the exit. The security guard pointed her out. Milloy talked fast. A few months later, he was working for the newspaper that was toppling a president. Milloy’s beat was somewhat less glamorous: He’d be covering “cops and courts” in Prince George’s County.
Milloy found himself a part of a small group of rising black Washington journalists. “Courtland came along at a time when media opened its doors to black employment,” says Phillips. His peers were people like Maureen Bunyan, Kojo Nnamdi and Juan Williams. According to Phillips, it wasn’t uncommon for black reporters to run into each other at a private club called the Fox Trap, at the corner of 16th and R streets NW.
It could be a pretty wild scene, but Courtland was reserved: “A typical newspaper guy,” recalls Phillips. Milloy’s friend and onetime Post colleague Richard Prince remembers him as “balanced.” Prince was known for opening his Dupont Circle house up for late-night get-togethers that catered to the black media elite. Milloy was often in attendance, and always friendly, but definitely not a party animal.
Milloy’s temperament kept it hidden, but he did have a wild side, and slowly, it began getting the best of him. By 1988, he’d been sucked into a spiral of drugs and alcohol. “You wind down after one of those days on deadline,” he remembers. But as quietly as Milloy slipped downhill, he surged back. “The time came when my party was over,” he says. “When you’re like that, it’s hard to be creative.”
Milloy never talked much about his addiction, and it might have stayed a secret if not for Marion Barry. At a Post luncheon in 1994, Barry, campaigning for mayor, was speaking about his own drug and alcohol use as Milloy sat by, listening. When asked to name the major mistakes he’d made Barry digressed. “Before we get to that, let me just talk about myself a little bit, personally. Again, I think I’ve had a remarkable recovery…I often use the example of [WRC-TV’s] Jim Vance and, I hope he doesn’t get offended by this, Courtland Milloy, who’ve gone through difficult situations but come back to work.”
In a July 3, 1994, column (“Barry’s Healing Example”), Milloy tried to come to peace with suddenly being lumped in with the politician whose own drug use led to the immortal line, “Bitch set me up.”
“Whether any of his political fixes or financial remedies would work, I couldn’t say.” wrote Milloy of Barry’s lunch interview. “But it did sound like he had found a solution to the problem of alcoholism and drug addiction. And what he had to say about a spiritual path to freedom from the bondage of self was a lifesaver.”
That may have been the closest Milloy would ever come to seeing Barry and himself in the same light. Barry had started his career as a pugnacious activist. Some of those Milloy associated with, like Nnamdi, were involved with the black power movement back in the day. But Milloy never quite took on black nationalist politics.
By the late 1970s, Milloy’s beat had shifted from Prince George’s County into the District, and he gained a reputation for knowing its streets better than anyone else. In 1981, when the veracity of a Pulitzer Prize-winning story by Janet Cooke came into question, editors turned to Milloy for help. Cooke, another young, black reporter, had embarrassed the Barry administration with “Jimmy’s World,” a tale of an 8-year-old heroin addict, adrift in the District with no intervention from the authorities. (Barry, hoping to save some face, claimed the boy was known to the city and was receiving treatment.) Inside the Post, some staffers were skeptical of the whole thing. After Cooke won the Pulitzer, former colleagues of hers in Toledo, Ohio, noticed details of her own official biography didn’t match up with what they remembered. Milloy knew all the dark and dangerous places Cooke’s story referred to. “I was asked to go with her to find Jimmy,” he says. When Milloy escorted Cooke to the spots she’d identfied, there was no sign of the drug-addled kid. She’d made him up. Milloy wasn’t surprised: “I just thought it was far-fetched.”
If the Cooke fiasco created any tense racial dynamics, Milloy was insulated. “Most of my immediate editors over the early days were black,” he remembers. “They answered to white people. When I was angry at them I called them middlemen”—he laughs—“operating for the man. But that wasn’t true. That was just my emotional stuff. The fact is I have worked for some of the best editors in the business, and for the most part they were black editors.”
No matter how good they were, Milloy’s black editors found it hard to move up, though. “It’s weird to think that all the time that I’ve been there, there’s never been a black managing editor or a black executive editor,” Milloy says. “And there are complicated reasons for it, but it just hadn’t been the case.”
Being a black columnist at the paper has its own strangeness, especially nowadays, when anger has become a commodity. “In this day and age when page views and comments are, you know, very appealing to advertisers, is that a good thing or a bad thing for people to be [angry]?” Milloy says. “I get disturbed because the reality is a person who makes a comment and calls me a nigger, that’s still an ad man’s click.”
As a reporter, Milloy had often channeled his own observations on race and class into his work. He would, as he puts it, “fight for the cause” in print, even if he never explicitly got into more political forms of engagement. As his career took off at the Post, that was a problem. The features he wrote were saturated with opinion. After wrestling with Milloy’s penchant for spouting off, editor Larry Kramer came up with a solution in 1983.
“So he’d wrangle over each feature I wrote trying to figure out what it was,” Milloy says. “One day, he decided to make life easier on everybody by dropping the disclaimer, making the byline bigger and just calling me a columnist.”
The Metro section columnist mantle Milloy snatched up brought him into contact with the District in a whole new way. Whereas the reporter is the city’s messenger, the columnist is its oracle, expected to convey truths in fits of revelatory ranting. For Milloy, this has meant writing in a jazzy voice that harkens back to a time when such agreeable stylistics might be accompanied by two congas and some incense.
Other columns showcased Milloy’s inner shock jock. In July 1993, he proposed that while attempting to combat AIDS, the city was lending more support to gays and whites than to (presumably straight) blacks. In 1996, he framed D.C.’s steep black homicide rate as white-run genocide. In September 2002, when Anthony Williams was mayor, Milloy accused the black politician of not being able to relate to other black people. And in 2007, Milloy shellacked Fenty for hiring whites as the city’s legal counsel and attorney general.
But like all columnists, he’s struggled with a world changing around him. He hasn’t lived in the District since moving from 8th Street NE to Prince George’s County in 2005, and at times, it shows. Standing outside Children of Mine in Anacostia, Milloy marvels at seeing two white people walk by. “Do you know how many homicides I covered just down the street?” Sometimes, even an oracle is confounded.
Writing about race in racist America was hard enough. Writing about race in “post-racial” America is even tougher. As racism has weakened as an institution, it’s gained strength as a psychological tick. As pernicious and adaptive as any antibiotic resistant germ, this particular social ill is a constant. What keeps changing is the way we talk about it.
The civil rights movement of the 1960s gave way to the black nationalist movement of the 1970s. That led to the affirmative action culture of the 1980s, and then political correctness in the 1990s. But it became apparent that what all of those different strategies were trying to fight was still capable of surviving in various forms. Maybe W.E.B. Du Bois, who allotted an entire century to solving the predicament (“The problem of the 20th century is the problem of the color line”), was low-balling it.
Yes, the country has seen the election of its first black president. But far from proving that the problem of the 21st century is some other demarcation of power, it’s merely turned the page to another chapter in our tortured history of race and language. And if there’s plenty of not-so-covert racial hostility—witness all the rhetoric about Barack Obama’s citizenship and religion—it’s also meant that urban columnists like Milloy find themselves in an unusual position: His major foils, these days, aren’t race-baiting brutes but privileged, usually liberal, whites, members of the new creative class who are distinctly unaccustomed to being cast as anything other than the revitalizers of their adopted neighborhoods.
It’s easy to cast Milloy as a guy stuck in the past. (With a 42-year-old son, from his first marriage, and a 32-year-old stepdaughter and 21-year-old son with his second wife, Milloy certainly starts any conversation with his myopic little twits across a generation gap.) His columns describe D.C. using a racial binary that the District began to shake off long ago as other people of color poured into the city. His monolithic view of the city’s white population ignores the different understandings of space—and the different economic realities—of the younger, just as professional, but not as rich, newcomers who’ve gentrified neighborhoods like Petworth. His rants against Twitter add some comic relief and show that being a technophobic crank knows no race.
But maybe it’s worth holding off on the ironic teasing for a second. In Milloy’s telling, his barbs at D.C.’s creative-class newbies aren’t about lashing out at them because they’re new. He’s lashing out at them because they’re not. As gentrification takes hold of Washington and issues of inequality emerge, it’s not enough to take solace in Obama’s post-racial ideal while neighborhoods acquire a new mono-cultured cast. People who move into changing neighborhoods have a responsibility for what’s going on. Or so Milloy, in his role as the crotchety grandfather they never wanted, wants to tell them.
Milloy sees new Washingtonians as the flip-side of a process that, in his view, involves older ones being pushed out. And if the actual truth behind African-American departures is more complicated—plenty of folks, starting with Milloy, decamped voluntarily—he argues that it’s pretty damned egocentric to imagine that everything is sweetness and light.
“Well, I don’t know why people think I have a problem with the influx itself,” he says. “Not to be deliberately provocative, but that is the white view, it’s white-centered. ‘Why are you opposed to us moving in?’ But nothing about, ‘Why are you concerned about the way black people are being kicked out?’ People are being displaced, and sometimes run over roughshod. To me, that’s the issue. But depending on who gets to frame the issue—who gets to pose the question, set the framework—it becomes, you know, what’s wrong with white people moving in?” (Milloy, of course, is also the one setting the framework, at least once a week in the daily paper.) “Bridging those sorts of perceptual divides becomes very challenging,” he continues. “People become pretty, pretty self-centered when it comes to things like that.”
“I don’t make a racial distinction between people of privilege,” Milloy will later hedge in an e-mail. “All of the haves need to take a look at America’s widening economic divide, and start doing more to help those who have not.”
On a Saturday morning, Milloy and I are sitting in his Acura, parked on a garden-lined street in Capitol Hill. At his suggestion, we’ve fled the clamor of a Pennsylvania Avenue SE Starbucks. As he sips at a to-go cup, Milloy is open and garrulous, so much so that he doesn’t mind bashing the Post a little. (After all, he’s a contract employee now, having taken a buyout a couple of years ago) “The Post used to be a writer’s paper,” he says, arguing that the daily no longer takes risks. He’s dressed in a Hawaiian shirt and jeans, and wearing a pair of Terminator sunglasses.
Maybe what’s got him so talkative is the rounds of tennis he just played at the Southeast Tennis and Learning Center on Mississippi Avenue SE, the same place where Marion Barry likes to whip his racket. Milloy has played against the councilmember, but it’s hard to get through a game, he says, since people are constantly “coming up to Marion.”
As he’s feeling so loose, this seems the opportunity to spring my blunt question on him, the one many of those who took the “myopic twits” column to heart might be aching to ask. “Do you like white people?” I venture.
Milloy’s answer isn’t likely to calm any of the people who sent him those furious e-mails back in September.
“White people... That’s a funny question,” he starts out. “I’m trying to see a creative way to answer that... I could say yes. I could say, ‘Absolutely, man.’ But, you know, like, let’s start with this—I like people. I love people, man. And the fact of the matter is... I have all my life.”
But a tick later, bringing up the recent elections, Milloy gets a little angry. “It makes me go back to the beginning—the country was founded on the premise of white supremacy, blacks were slaves, they couldn’t, they were three-fifths, you know, this was encoded in the law,” he says. “People have a way of feeling that they’re on top, that’s the way these things are set up. The layout of the District of Columbia, the fact that there exists a white wealthy ward at the opposite end of a poor predominantly black ward, did not come up by accident. The city was built by slaves and German, Italian, Irish immigrants for the most part. Only one of those groups didn’t get paid, or get the credit. So does it rankle me sometimes that people don’t want to give black folk credit? Yeah, it does.”
Milloy goes silent for a moment. Just then, a police car pulls up alongside us, and we both tense, seeming to simultaneously realize what we are: Two black men dressed down in an SUV. In a word, suspects. Though the cops move on without incident, the fact that Milloy and I, separated as we are by a generation, had the same, instant reaction, might be a clue as to why Milloy is still relevant: Racism is still a big part of our lives.
Sure, I might wind up tweeting about the stare-down with the cops, and Milloy sure as hell won’t. But until Mayor-elect Vince Gray’s “one city” makes the jump from good concept to daily reality, Milloy may be the best way for black D.C. to vent its frustrations. Milloy provides a kind of tough love Washington shouldn’t want to do without.
“Racial conversations are very hard to have. And I wouldn’t consider [the column] a traditional racial conversation,” says Milloy. “But for me, rough and ragged as it may be, I find that people’s thoughts and expressions on race to be pretty revealing.”





Our Readers Say
Maybe you should wait until Gray steps into office before you start hating on him?
It seems that he has his points to make, but in my opinion he goes about it in a very unproductive way. The new reality of Washington, DC is that there are dramatic mixtures of age, ethnicities and incomes. Simply because some of these choose to use new technologies to communicate and report on things which are important to them doesn't by necessity put them at odds with the existing residents. It also doesn't mean that they voted for Fenty.
I don't tweet things or blog about stuff, but I do think some of the content generated is intelligent and thought-provoking.
Truth is as much as we say the city celebrates racial diversity, what it really does is accepting of racial tolerance.
As a Black person with many White friends, both in this city, where I have lived for the last 20 years, and from the previous 30 years where I grew up in Northern Virginia, I am to the point of no longer being shocked with how out of touch my White friends are about everyday life in DC. Its like since they have gentrified DC within striking distance of a majority they have no clue about DC's Black population other than what they read in the newspaper or see on TV most of which is negative. And because in these newly gentrified neighborhoods, most of the people look like them. Thats been further advanced as the nature driven boundary of the Anacsotia River is the economic redline of the city where the 95% Black population East of the River is enough to still have DC as a majority Black city of 55%. It might be useful and prudent for future racial harmony if the new ward boundaries that are coming, the result of the census, once again crosses the river instead of isolating the Black populace in Wards 7 & 8.
Then again, maybe for political and social purposes, the gentrifying crowd would prefer it stay that way?
It was somewhat amusing to me to read how Ward 3 residents, many of whom have actually been here for a long time, were shocked about the dislike there was of Mayor Fenty in most majority Black communities in town. Its Courtland Milloy, and also Postie editorial writer Colbert King, that gave a glance into our community. The difference being, Mr. King writes like a Martin Luther King, Jr in his approach, while Mr Milloy writes like Malcolm X.
Dr. King is admired, Malcolm X was revered.
I'd say to those White folks who dislike Mr. Milloy that you better appreciate him. His columns letting you know what some Black folks are saying, thinking, and feeling, may save you in a heated situation one of these days.
Usually those who criticize that someone does not write well are seldom familiar with writing on a grand scale. They learned how to write for a class, work or a single position purpose and don’t realize writing has many forms. And not only is more than one style is correct. More than one style is preferred.
He writes for the Post ‘s editorial page. That is not something they give out in cereal boxes. This is paper of record—that let go one former Loose Lipper because she did not write to their international standard. I damn well believe that qualifies him as an exceptionally good writer. What qualifies you above this prestigious (albeit yet annoying) institution to say Courtland does not write well. Please, oh please enlighten me.
Save me from what, vitriolic unfetterd stupidity and violence? I live in the city, raise my children, volunteer and donate large amounts of my excess funds to our public school to benefit all children; in other words I am your average unoticed citizen. We all need to calm down grow up and all work together; lets start with the children because they have not formed the hate and pathos expressed here. Courtlands hitherto unknown addiction issues make sense to me now; thus the patented denial based irrational comments about the PG County Exec. conduct. Hey, come to think of it Courtland doesn't speak for us he lives in MD!.....
I'm just a a white kid who got there because of my whiteness.
With all due respect...shove the victim rap.
Please continue along in your organic underwear! Your doggie needs a new coat!
But lets keep pretending white people are oppressing black people cuz that's an easier way to get through the day feel better about ourselves. And perhaps sell a few papers while we're at it.
What a joke, a sad sad joke. And what a price!
THIS WRITE UP IS FOR ALL YOU "MYOPIC LITTLE TWITS" BLACK AND WHITE WHO GOT INCENSED WHEN MILLOY’S ARROW PIERCED YOUR LIL’ GENTRIFIED HEART. HOMOSEXUALS, SLEEPWALKERS, EUROTRASH DRESSERS AND FAR LEFT LIBERALS WHO VOTED FOR OBAMA AND CLAIMED AMERICA IS “POST-RACIAL” FELT THE TRUTH FROM SOMEONE WHO WAS NOT ONLY WILLING TO TELL IT LIKE IT IS BUT KNEW OF WHICH HE SPOKE. SOMEONE OF HIS ILK THAT YOU CANT IDENTIFY WITH JUST BY YOU TUBE-ING OR GOOGLING, COLD-COCKED YALL ASSES WHEN HIS COLUMN DROPPED BECAUSE ALL OF YOU WAS SO CAUGHT UP IN YOUR MYOPIC LITTLE WORLD THAT THE SOON TO BE WORST MAYOR WDC EVER HAD CREATED FOR YOU.
ALL YOU CLONED ASSWIPES DRIVING YOUR CHROME COLORED AUDI’S OR BMW’S OUT TO THE BURBS WHILE THE REST OF YOU DODGED MINI-SUV’S AND METRO ON YOUR TWO-WHEELED (MOTOR AND MANUAL) FREEDOM RIDES CLAIMING YOU “LIVE” IN THE CITY WHEN ALL YOU DO IS RESIDE HERE IN YOUR DRASTICALLY OVERPRICED CONDO CAUSE YOU TO DAMN LAZY TO MAINTAIN A LAWN. MAYBE IF YALL MUTHA FUCKERS UNPLUGGED FROM YOUR DEVICES YOU WOULD SEE AND UNDERSTAND THAT THERE IS A REAL WORLD OUT HERE WHERE REAL SHIT EXIST ON A DAILY AND NOT IN SOME COMMENT, QUOTE OR VIRTUAL THAT YOU LIVE THRU.
SO EITHER SHIT OR GET OFF THE POT ALL YOU LITTLE TWITS BECAUSE YOUR FOUR YEARS IS UP!
I read C Milloy all the time and have for years. I dig his column and his opinion. Last time I checked,the constitution gave every american free speech.
Whites moving into the city is a good thing. They are replacing people who either couldn't live here anymore or didn't want to live here anymore. No biggie!! I'm benefitting from the newcomers. They are educated;employed and engaged. The more taxpayers we have the greater the tax base.The greater the tax base the more services we can receive. Not to mention better services.Can't improve a city with 30% of its residents on welfare!!
C Milloy wrote about Fenty because Fenty was the mayor. Fenty and his flunkies got what they deserved.Those who love Fenty so much should elect him to lead them NOT US.Clearly the electorate rejected his numbskullery. That's it and that's all. C Milloy pointing this out is not hatred. It's called opinion. If you don't like it, don''t read it. Dig me???
In another 5 years- 10 on the outside- his wisdom will exist primarily as a paragraph in a chapter on late 20th century race relations in some series 300 college history book. And won't even be in print- it will only be downloadable from Apple or Amazon. Probably for $4.99.
My kids live in a better world. And will grow to know an even better world still. Thanks to Milloy, and those who came before and after him.
And I pray my children will have no need to view the world as Milloy does today.
<i>CONTINUE TO DREAM AND LIVE IN A WORLD OF FANTASY....YOU...ARE MIDDLE AGED WHITE MALES WEARING WHITE SHEETS OVER YOUR HEAD. </i>
Now you just sound like a bitter old man. I hope you are better than that.
Open up your eyes to the future. There is a lot of beauty in this world. And I'll die- I'll give my life- working to make more each day.
Don't be a self-pitying ass and fault my family for wanting the best- better- for our children.
We have similar battles and challenges I like the idea that a CM is still in play he brings perspective and history to a venue which is absence in the twitter word of 140 bits...
In the Detroit decades ago it's legadary Black mayor once noted that when 'white folks are not in the center of the body politic this reality becomes a problem for everyone....
Mind you, if someone said, "the U.S. is a majority white country, so how can you have an African-American representing it as Secretary of State, let alone President?" their views should be rightly considered outside the bounds of acceptable political discourse and shunned. Yet this kind of talk barely raises an eyebrow here in ol' DeeCee. Not only is this view offensive, yes racist, but it totally represents the kind of old school thinking that city jobs are really just spoils and symbols. The kind of thinking that the primary purpose of the D.C. government is to provide jobs and that providing effective services is just some aspirational goal. Sorry, but I thought that kind of thinking went out when the Control Board and Tony Williams cam in. People want quality services for their tax dollars. And they realize that all urban wisdom doesn't exist within the boundaries of D.C. I think we should we trying to attract the best talent in our top political appointees, people who've proven new ideas and can bring best practices from around the country, whether they've come from Oakland, Portland or New York. Otherwise, DC will just get stuck in a rut as we did in the Barry-Pratt Dixon-Barry era.
Nice work they did while they held all the power.
Now we hold the power.
Tough. I do not care and neither should you.
And when you say that the poor and underclass had control of D.C. starting in 1969, I'm trying to follow your logic.
Poor and underclass have never had control of a city. If you mean that Marion Barry and the people he brought in to DC government were the poor and underclass, in a sense you are right --
-- only if you're acknowledging that in 1969 almost all black people in this country had been made a underclass to white people in Jim Crow.
1969 was just a few years past "whites only" drinking fountains in DC.
Barry had a chemistry degree and brilliant mind and big heart. He transformed this city. If he made mistakes, did the privileged whites controlling Wall Street make any mistakes too?
Had any of these been the case I'd have been right there with you. Blowing off someone of that stature wo0uld have been an insult.
But what was she (and Maya) there for? Demanding her good buddy Cora get an extension on her sweet heart deal with the city so she could avoid having to go out and get a job. "Meet with me and give my buddy a deal, or I'll tear you apart in the press" (which is exactly what happened, BTW).
There's a term for that..."influence peddling", and it's crap regardless of who does it.
I know, other people do it, yadda yadda. "Ron Moten!", yadda yadda. But at that point we are just quibbling over who is more deserving to pimp out their status for insider sweet heart deals...and I stipulate Dr. Height is a better person and is more deserving to do so than Moten, but that's a pretty low bar to make a crusade out of.
And white women.
She organized conversations between white and black women that changed lives and understandings.
I'd say to those Black folks who dislike George Will that you better appreciate him. His columns letting you know what some White folks are saying, thinking, and feeling, may save you in a heated situation one of these days.
Wow. That's some ignorant racist stuff right there. Gotta read Milloy, because Black folk are so violent. Don't want to get shot or stabbed by the scary Black folks because we're not down with the latest Milloy column, don't you know!
Again, I stipulate she had more right to pimp her status for insider deals than others, but also again that's a pretty low bar to make a grand crusade out of.
THE DC GOVT FAILED IN ALL AREAS WHILE TRYING TO ILLEGALLY EVICT CORA AND HER ORGANIZATION FROM THE CENTER. THE MEETING DR. HEIGHT AND MS ANGELOU REQUESTED TO BASICALLY ASK THE MAYOR TO GIVE CORA MORE TIME TO GET HER DUCKS IN A ROW WHEN IN FACT IT WAS THE DC GOVERNMENT AND BITCH ASS NICKLES WHO WAS AT FAULT IN THE FIRST PLACE.
FROM READING YOUR COMMENTS IT SEEMS LIKE YOU ARE JEALOUS NO ONE IS PIMPING YOUR STANK ASS OUT.
You miss the point. I stipulate she was a great figure in history. I don't believe that gives one the right to get buddies a deal. It also cheapens the person's moral authority.
Let me give you a metaphor:
The skies open up...a light shines down, surrounding a man with angels flying around him, and a blast of trumpets echoing across the world. Christ returns for the second coming! A world awaits his speech, which starts...
"I demand a meeting with DC's Mayor!"
"Why?" asks an anxious world?
"For verily, Shecky Moskowitz, a direct descendant of my brother Joseph must be given the "Suds and Dogs" concession at all city events!! For Shecky really doesn't do well in actual job settings, and needs a special deal!"
Whereupon the mayor asks "Can't you just submit a letter", and Christ screams "I have been dissed! Dissed!" to the press. Christians everywhere start crying how the mayor hates Christianity.
You get the insanity of this I hope? There is a difference between cutting deals and respecting a person's status.
Pardon me sir, just wanted to let you know your CAPS LOCK key seems to be broken. My guess is Milloy is so stridently anti-gentrification is that he already fled DC for greener pastures in the suburbs, and he's seen all the dysfunction and violence he fled following him out there.
Gotta protect those property values from the poor folks.
I used to work with this woman, she HATED gays, most white people, most young people, hated gays, spewed venom at just about everyone who was different than her, like gays, she was a real A-1 bigot, BUT when she was 17 in 1963 she got on a bus from Philadelphia and marched with Martin Luther King so she thought she was righteous.
Being a victim of Jim Crow in the 1960s doesn't give someone a free pass to be a bigoted ***hole in 2010.
That above quote should be the tag line in the "Courtland Milloy Story."
@Ward34Evah-WOW! YOU ARE ATYPICAL WHITE MALE HOMOSEXUAL. ALWAYS QUICK TO CLAIM SOMEONE HATES YOUR KIND WHEN THEY DISAGREE WITH YOUR LIFESTYLE.
"Being a victim of Jim Crow in the 1960s doesn't give someone a free pass to be a bigoted ***hole in 2010." NOW YOU WANT TO FRAME HOW SOMEONE WHO WAS PREJUDGED BY THE COLOR OF THEIR SKIN(WHICH SHE HAS NO CONTROL OVER) DOESNT NOT HAVE A RIGHT TO FEEL THE WAY THEY FEEL BECAUSE OF WHAT THEY WENT THRU. PUNK PUHLEEZE!
IM SURE THIS BLACK WOMAN OF WHICH YOU DESCRIBE PROBABLY WITNESSED OR SOMEHOW WAS ACTUALLY DISCRIMINATED AGAINST ON MULTIPLE OCCASIONS DURING THAT TIME ALONG WITH A LOT OF FOLK OF COLOR BUT YOU WOULDNT UNDERSTAND THAT BEING A WHITE MALE AND MAKING THE CHOICE OF BEING A HOMSEXUAL ALONG WITH THE PERSON MR MILLOY DESCRIBES SO ELOQUENTLY IN HIS PIECE.
YOU CAN ALWAYS GO BACK HOME OR ARE YOU AFRAID THAT YOUR OWN KIND WILL SOMEHOW PREJUDGE YOU BASED ON THE CHOICES YOU MADE?
on paper, on the radio, in the street, in the flesh!
our witness who gives word and breath to OUR "core principles."
WE are grateful that mr. milloy remains steadfast, committed to speak truth to power. we grow tiresome of the mealy-mouthed leaning on the empty promises of establishment benefactors.
black is beautiful!
i fondly recall my most recent thanksgiving feast of which mr. milloy was a topic of discussion among a group of elite jazz musicians and artists in northwest washington. elite in the sense that they played with the masters who wrote the original protest music - like black, beige and brown and other ethnically undiverse rhythms-
black music - or by its more popular name - america's classical music - get my drift?
we, the tribe of the un-politically correct, read published prayers by dubois, listened to sarah sing and stood real close to original masterpieces by jacob lawrence and romare bearden and sam gilliam without some docent tell us to "step back, u standing too close" to a masterpiece created by own people. black people.
i digress... this is the context in which mr. milloy's praises were held in high esteem and chorused in unison that "its about time our witness wake the hell up,
tell the truth" and shame the
devil.
who cares if the city paper, or its reverent readers don't get it. WE get u mr. milloy and we get IT.
u keep writing what u like. and we will continue to raise u up.
black is beautiful. all the day long!
peace and blessings and peace and love to u mr. milloy!
"The Great Urban Communication Divide" -- or, "Taking Back the Narrative In Gentrified Cities.
"Whites don't need a cranky columnist to tell them what their black neighbors think. They just have to ask."
View it here: http://www.theroot.com/views/anti-gentrification-doesnt-mean-anti-white
@ahappyblackwoman you wrote a wonderful comment.
Mr Milloy's views of DC are representative of a large segment of the city. It is important that they be included. I do have some questions, though.
Fenty is a jerk in a long line of jerks who have run DC. Where was Mr Milloy's fire-breathing anger when Marion Barry was partying, dating, and tolerating hard-core corruption as the city fell into neglect? When Ms Pratt Dixon Kelly was ineffectually doing nothing? The lack of development -- indeed, the hollowing out -- in those years left a terrible vacuum. Why is Mr Milloy surprised that some people, mostly white, are filling it?
Well, it's all in the past. Power and populations have shifted. Blacks and whites faced with the challenge of living together in the city today need to approach each other with sensitivity and openness on both sides. Let's hope they find venues to reach out to each other and achieve some accord. The misplaced anger and divisiveness found in Mr Milloy's columns will only impede the task, so I encourage DC residents to get on with it sans Mr Milloy.
Milloy is misquoted and mischaracterized. I wish we could have a live community townhall with Milloy and Rend Smith and Gray and others to clear up misunderstandings in real time dialogue.
Milloy is right on point I hope he continues to ignore the usual suspects both from the white and the Black apologists who always need white folks to validate ad affirm them....
That is stone cold racism based on IGNORANCE. Anacostia was majority white thru the 1950's and into the 1960's. The white people got "kicked out" to use Courtland "Racist" Milloy's words. He's just bitter because he saved up enough to move out of 8th St. NE just in time to miss the rise in property values and increase in swingingness and yes, SAFETY, that gentrification brings.
What color were the cops who slow-rolled by the SUV with C."R."M. and the reporter? Since the race wasn't mentioned, I'm going to take a page out of the Washington Post's stylebook and assume they were black. If they were white it would have been mentioned.
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