Well, I think "descriptive talk" like yours tends to confuse bigots with racists. — 180 Proof
Reread my posts, I can't make my meaning any plainer. There ain't no "interpreting" on my part happening here.180 Proof
Well, I think "descriptive talk" like yours tends to confuse bigots with racists.
— 180 Proof
How so? I'm just asking for your framework for interpreting something as contributing or perpetuating to racism, in a descriptive manner. — Judaka
As I wrote previously - white people don't like, trust, or respect black people.
— T Clark
This is kind of the same level as a business saying "The problem is we're not making enough money". — Judaka
Also, I reject racial and ethnic histories, cultures and groups. I don't think white people are responsible for anything, and as I told you before, I would prefer to see black Americans taking responsibility for slavery as Americans. That would represent the kind of progress I think would be helpful. — Judaka
A business saying "we're not making enough money" is a perfectly reasonable statement (assuming they are going broke) and so is "white people don't like, trust, or respect black people". If they did those three things, we wouldn't have a race problem, — BC
What?! — BC
:100: :up:↪T Clark ↪Judaka What we have here is a failure to communicate, or worse, a failure to think clearly — BC
:mask:Also, I reject racial and ethnic histories, cultures and groups. I don't think white people are responsible for anything, and as I told you before, I would prefer to see black Americans taking responsibility for slavery as Americans. That would represent the kind of progress I think would be helpful. — Judaka
For example, if we give a context like police brutality, there are distinct differences in outcomes when documenting by race. This is part of systemic racism and the comprehensive definition of racism. That's because that definition is a literal documentation of disparities in outcomes. — Judaka
You can often see a deliberate structuring of society - use of law, rules and etiquette to set limits upon identity and autonomy of people who do not belong to the dominant race and class structure. But to some extent this is an interpreted process. — Tom Storm
It's not "hard"? How do you know whether you got it right or not? If you can't tell when you're right or wrong, how do you know how accurate you are? If you can't tell how accurate you are, how are you in a position to say whether it's easy or hard to do? — Judaka
If you see one person being rude to another, with no pattern, and take the racial difference as proof of racism, that's asinine, is it not? — Judaka
explaining the problem in this most basic, inaccurate way, as a massive generalisation, that's pointless. — Judaka
Clark's outlining doesn't make any sense, and I don't think I can be bothered to have a serious debate on it. — Judaka
What we have here is a failure to communicate, or worse, a failure to think clearly. — BC
All I'm saying is that I reject the notion that a person's race entitles them to a specific history. The history of a nation should belong to the citizens of that nation. — Judaka
I would not say this is ipso facto asinine - it could be that racism is the reason. — Tom Storm
No one says it is always 100% correct. — Tom Storm
Perhaps it would be best if I don't respond to your posts in the future. — T Clark
Saying I have failed to think clearly — T Clark
You are talking about the simplistic definition of racism, as interpersonal prejudice. A definition that 180 has rejected the validity of. The comprehensive definition of racism goes ignores intent and ideology, so there is no need to guess. Within this definition, there is no concept of inaccuracy, we're talking about oppression and social realities, not guessing at the why. My comments to 180 weren't about racism as an ideology, but as a societal reality, keep that in mind. This confusion is the exact reason I made this thread, the term "racism" so easily and consistently causes misunderstandings, quite a mess. — Judaka
Yes. I would suggest that achieving social (or racial) justice will mean black's access to better education ----> better jobs ----> better housing ----> in better neighborhoods. Skip the "anti-racist training programs", skip black English, forget about micro aggressions, etc. etc. etc. DELIVER first rate education and training programs. Make sure there are no artificial barriers to equal access to good jobs; enforce equal access to housing in any neighborhood. In other words, make it possible for blacks to work and live as well as whites.
Will that automatically result in the disappearance of prejudice? No, not immediately, but prejudice will matter less. — BC
IF the material means can be significantly improved, and if working class financial security cam be achieved (a revolutionary goal, not something that is going to happen under the current regime) race hatred can be reduced--maybe eventually expunged (but don't hold your breath waiting), — BC
The reported language that the NAACP, business owners, labor leaders, black workers, white workers, social workers, bureaucrats, etc. all reflected a very clear understanding of how racism worked, what its costs were, how detrimental it was to blacks, and what kind of solutions were needed. — BC
You are talking about the simplistic definition of racism, as interpersonal prejudice. — Judaka
Yes. I would suggest that achieving social (or racial) justice will mean black's access to better education ----> better jobs ----> better housing ----> in better neighborhoods. Skip the "anti-racist training programs", skip black English, forget about micro aggressions, etc. etc. etc. DELIVER first rate education and training programs. Make sure there are no artificial barriers to equal access to good jobs; enforce equal access to housing in any neighborhood. In other words, make it possible for blacks to work and live as well as whites. — BC
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