Actually I might know the problem. Refer here and here. Let me know what you think, — StreetlightX
Would blacks be deprived of access to education? I don’t know. If they were I would regard that as racism. — Brett
But there seem to be real factors besides racism that have contributed to black poverty. — Brett
If I am not mistaken, school funding in the US is based on the tax income of the school district. The obvious result of that is that poor districts have little money while having higher needs (poor families can supply less homeschooling). — Echarmion
But you would need to persuade me that the government consciously created that system to deprive blacks of an education. — Brett
The OP is why is systemic racism happening? That means now. If the restrictions governments have towards education is poor policy that impacts on blacks that have found themselves in circumstances created by past actions that does not equate to systemic racism now. — Brett
The policy of education budgets based on taxable income is obviously absurd, but as I said, I don’t imagine it was implemented as a racist act. — Brett
This is your position then, that Capitalism created racism. — Brett
This is your position then, that Capitalism created racism — Brett
Perhaps the inability to engage in the racial problems of the present and having a discourse that goes in circles?Aside from the vicious cycle of poverty, driven by capitalism, what real factors are there? The most obvious seem to be: slavery, Jim Crow, segregation, housing policy. Policies that kept wealth out of the hands of black people, imposed on the basis of race. — Echarmion
I hope that this is a 'figure of speech' and not an idea taken literally that the police is a separate race. That would sound as sinister racism to me.The idea that the police are institutionally a separate race, with a particular history of trauma is particularly interesting and relevant to current affairs. — unenlightened
Will reply more in depth later but the first substantial step in abolishing racism is to abolish capitalism yes. — StreetlightX
Well I would call that neglect. One might call it racism if they were inclined. However, whatever it is the result is the same, which is poverty. — Brett
Perhaps the inability to engage in the racial problems of the present and having a discourse that goes in circles? — ssu
People ought to understand that nothing will change if people are successfully divided. — ssu
I hope — ssu
It seems to me that the past dropped a very big problem on our doorstep. We, being the present Capitalist system, already had policies of neglect and abuse in place that affected people in a negative way and both failed to help those of the white population in poverty or drove others into it. When the black population was integrated into this population they represented a far greater proportion of people in poverty than the poverty stricken white population. Those policies applied to poor whites had the same affect on blacks but in greater numbers. The numbers were possibly so big that they created a worse situation for those same people, a situation they would find hard, if not impossible, to get out of. — Brett
As for the fact that these structures have the same affect on blacks but in greater numbers - or rather in disproportionate numbers - that's just what systemic racism is. — StreetlightX
for the fact that these structures have the same affect on blacks but in greater numbers - or rather in disproportionate numbers - that's just what systemic racism is.
— StreetlightX
Bingo. — Baden
How can your narrow definition “manifest systemic discrimination” be a clarification of what racism is? A lonely white man sitting isolated in his home just hating all black people and having a secret desire to see them killed, wouldn’t be called a racist according to your definition. It wouldn’t be manifest – it’s happening in secret, it wouldn’t be systemic – the man is alone, and it’s not a matter of discrimination – he isn’t doing anything.I'm interested in clarifying concepts and not in normalizing confused usages of terms. — 180 Proof
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.