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Quiet Em

(3,250 posts)
Mon Jun 22, 2026, 02:50 PM Monday

The Claim That Michelle Obama Is A Man Isn't A Conspiracy Theory -- It's A Racialized Attack On Black Womanhood [View all]

But comments like these are not merely absurd. They are not harmless jokes, and they are far from being isolated incidents.

They reflect something much older, much deeper, and much more troubling: a centuries-old pattern in which Black women’s femininity, humanity, and identity are routinely questioned, denied, and weaponized. Michelle Obama is simply the latest target and has been for some time.


Long before social media, before cable news, and before political polarization reached its current fever pitch, Black women were already fighting stereotypes that portrayed them as less feminine, less desirable, less vulnerable, and less worthy of protection than white women. The claim that Michelle Obama is a man is not new. It’s simply a modern version of an old story.


While the language has changed over time, the underlying message has remained remarkably consistent. Black women are frequently denied the right to simply be seen as women.


Social Media Didn’t Create These Ideas. It Amplified Them.

Today, these stereotypes rarely appear in the overt forms many people associate with the past. Instead, they often emerge through memes, GIFs, viral videos, comments sections, and online jokes.

A Black woman expressing frustration may be labeled as angry immediately.

A Black woman demonstrating confidence may be characterized as intimidating.

A successful and/or powerful Black woman, such as Michelle Obama, may be mocked as masculine and have her appearance scrutinized in ways that have little to do with reality and everything to do with maintaining harmful stereotypes.


https://zora.medium.com/the-claim-that-michelle-obama-is-a-man-isnt-a-conspiracy-theory-it-s-a-racialized-attack-on-669ac6b6fef2
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