Does the catfish amendment have racist roots?
Longtime readers will recall Dome's obsession with tracking down the origins of that peculiar North Carolina phrase.
Forgive us, but we were discussing the posts at a seminar on blogging in Richmond last week, and we had a long ride back.
One of the things we recalled was that the earliest references we could find to the catfish joke — "Don't worry, little catfish, I ain't gonna hurt you, I'm just gonna gut you!" — all centered on a young black child.
It struck us that there are two ways to interpret the joke: 1) The fisherman doesn't realize what he's saying, as in a "Cecil and Leonard" sketch, or 2) the fisherman is trying to trick the fish, as in a Tom Sawyer episode.
Not to get all third-rate W.J. Cash on you, but our theory is that the joke originally was racist, with the punchline depending on a stereotype that blacks are intellectually inferior.
By the time lawyers and politicians began using the joke as a rhetorical argument, the meaning had shifted, with the punchline now being that the fisherman was devious.
And since casting one's opponent in the courtroom or the legislature as the black child in the joke would not be, shall we say, genteel, the racial element dropped away and was eventually forgotten.




Re: Was the catfish joke racist?
of course its racist, everything has a secret racist meaning if you twist it around enough. This is a joke!!!