I don't know how I feel about this.
There's shyt that crosses the line - upthread a breh gave examples of black coworkers in IT saying all sorts of disrespectful shyt about themselves and black people as a whole. Fukk that noise.
I think we're all generally in agreement on that shyt being unacceptable.

Where I get uncomfortable is criticizing our own people for behaving how they were raised to behave - whether blasting music in the parking lot, cracking jokes in class, dancing when they get a B+ on a test (thank you for the imagery tho Buckeye

), etc.
There's a social class element to all of this - I think that's really the elephant in the room here.
If you were raised by college-educated professionals, or had white-collar mentors growing up, or a family with a record of achievement and stability and self-respect, you'd know this sort of behavior was a no-no if you wanted to truly succeed. Sure, you probably had a youthful phase where you participated in the fukkery...but you snapped out of it quick when it came time to grow up. If you didn't, there were people in your corner actively shaming you for not doing so, and you got your shyt together quick.
But there are a lot of our people who didn't have these influences growing up. Nobody taught them just how much damage they were doing to themselves by acting in this way.
Like I said, I'm conflicted here. If all a breh knows is cuttin up and clownin...then that's what he's going to keep doing. For him to change, somebody will have to show him why what he's doing is so damaging to himself and to all black folks - and also teach him how to act in a way that demands the respect of those he comes into contact with.
I don't know who is doing that work today - or if its even considered of any value by our community as a whole. But it has to be done if we want this embarassing, soft-shoe bullshyt to stop.