So not a hate crime?
#41
(01-13-2017, 09:02 PM)kandrathe Wrote: My guess is that you just want to troll FIT.

Partially true, but sadly, I'm pretty sure at this point he really believes the crap he says....so in that sense he isn't trolling.

He is trolling in another way though, as he almost certainly used the Chicago incident as an opportunity to make this thread so he can get on his racist/pro-slavery soap box, and run off at the mouth about how great he thinks white people are and how thankful POC should be towards them. Him making this thread is extremely distasteful and shows he has absolutely no tact, but I guess I can't expect anything more from a Fascie. He knew it would be only a matter of time before I responded, and I made the mistake of feeding him. But I am done with him for good now.

And yea, time to close this thread. It should never have been made in the first place - I almost want to go back and just delete all my posts pertaining to this sick, vile pro-slavery laced thread and pretend it never existed, but most of my posts are already quoted now so there's no point I guess.
https://www.youtube.com/user/FireIceTalon


"Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class, made into law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economic conditions of the existence of your class." - Marx (addressing the bourgeois)
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#42
(01-13-2017, 09:53 PM)Ashock Wrote: I do not troll. However, I reserve the right to discontinue conversations when I feel I am wasting my time. I thought I was pretty clear when I drew a parallel with my comment about ceasing to watch mainstream media.
I may be "main stream", but I'm not media. I too do not watch TV news, but I attempt to form opinions based upon truth. The article you cited on crime statistics seemed about right, I didn't dispute it. Mostly since it was not the point I was making. The question is why are black youth in such a societal hole? It is possible, with diligence and luck to escape the hood, but why is it so much harder?

P.S. I wonder too Taem, if it's maybe a bit of racial paranoia mixed in as well. Reference --> http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/14462...l_Paranoia

It is hard to read the nonverbal cues of people you know. I imagine that in every black/white encounter of non-friends that the suspicion detector is on high alert. The perceived racial tension eases when you can communicate "I truly like you for who you are. " It's not so easy with all the baggage shoved between us, and those centuries of bad behavior is regurgitated for political purposes.
”There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." - Hamlet (1.5.167-8), Hamlet to Horatio.

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#43
It's systemic to their culture. As I said before, reverse racism, the "everyone is out the get me BECAUSE I'm black," card. This is partially the fault of politicians trying to right the system with affirmative action and changing the term 'blacks' to 'African American' causing the victim mentality, however at this point, the blacks in America today are perpetuating their own demise with this toxic logic. I've heard it been said before, and not just on TV shows, that blacks should only he raised by blacks so they can understand the culture; I ovetheard this being said several times in my life from black people looking at someone who was white who had a black baby with them (adoption maybe?). It's clearly a choice to resist the system... that the majority of blacks in America feel they aren't even part of this society. If they could overcome the victim mentality, they could improve their lives. I literally cannot tell you how many times I've had to deal with angry or upset black customers whose only gripe is with their perception of inequality which was purely fabricated from their own mal perceived fantasies. I've had issues like this before of course with several different people from all walks of life, but never on a scale where I'd say roughly 75% of the given group (black people in this case) would complain due to their perceived prejudices (which wasn't true, but they honestly believed it). This is the real issue not being addressed, the major elephant in the room, and the political system that perpetuates the mentality by trying to fix it constantly.
"The true value of a human being is determined primarily by the measure and the sense in which he has attained liberation from the self." -Albert Einsetin
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#44
The majority of "blacks"?

I've certainly met tons of those kinds that are terrible people, but they come in all colors. I don't think you can really generalize based on anecdotes.

I agree that the black-white dichotomy is pretty damned racist (or whatever the hell it's called these days) in and of itself, and leaves out quite a few people, but there are also many that have tried to better their lives and the narrative that they don't, also seems to be covered up pretty damned well by mainstream media as well, say Asians fighting against discrimination doesn't get the same coverage. Though I guess it's getting better in the sense that racial slurs against minorities are getting less acceptable-- you just don't get that many people just blurting out racial shit against people as you did 20 years ago as much.

It goes in all different directions.
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#45
(01-14-2017, 09:35 PM)Taem Wrote: It's systemic to their culture.

Stopped reading after that. Another closet racist exposed, though you are guilty of racism in the past. FOAD (I'll let you guess that stands for).

https://www.youtube.com/user/FireIceTalon


"Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class, made into law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economic conditions of the existence of your class." - Marx (addressing the bourgeois)
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#46
It could be the LBJ welfare state and government supported entitlement culture perpetuating class warfare. It could be the bipartisan rush to sign onto crime bills incarcerating mostly poor people. It might be racism. It could be the plethora of race merchants like Jesse Jackson, who install themselves as arbitrators in the business of race equality, so long as they get power or a cut of the profits. There is an industry and political purpose for keeping us at war with each other. But, it is likely all of the above.
”There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." - Hamlet (1.5.167-8), Hamlet to Horatio.

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#47
Quote:I don't think you can really generalize based on anecdotes.

But now there's the rub, right? It's difficult to quantify this type of reverse racism, yet most everyone has experienced it in one way shape or form. Seeing the whole BLM group evolve into what they represent today, all the news coverage of young black men resisting officers due to their perceived prejudices against them (which aren't true) and the actions taken against them to subdue them and the resultant riots afterward... where is the hero that stands up and calls them out for what this is? It's so fucking obvious, it's ridiculous! When an officer of the law can't even do his/her job for fear of being labeled a racist and losing their job or worse simply for arresting a non cooperative black individual, I'd say the fucking system is broken, and there is a serious underlying issue not being addressed. I've seen on the news officers relieved of duty and charged with murder *due to public pressure* when the force already knew the officer was innocent, and the poor officer goes to court and of course wins because they were innocent all along, but they have to play this game for who? For the protesters who will riot... and who are these protesters? What are they protesting? It's not unfair treatment, because these cases have evidence to the contrary. It is black peoples perception of inequality that is at issue here. Get a clue! Like I said, it's so obvious what's happening, so why won't anyone call it out for what it is?

And no, I'm not like Trump who said, "I love Chinese people. I have them working for me all over the world". I actually have friends of every color in the rainbow, and they can see this same issue as I. I don't have to give out the names and addresses of my black friends, but you can trust neither myself nor my friends have a racist bone in our bodies. The reason problem here is thus issue is political taboo/suicide to address for any politician, and the methods our politicians have used wothin the past few decades to "correct" it have only made it far worse. In the early 80's, my wife grew up in orange County/Los Angeles, and they (politicians) started trying "fix" the perception of minority only communities and forced school kids from one district to travel to the inner city and vice versa. Needles to say it was a fucking disaster for everyone and just another failed attempt that only cause more feelings of being a victim for minorities.
"The true value of a human being is determined primarily by the measure and the sense in which he has attained liberation from the self." -Albert Einsetin
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#48
(01-18-2017, 07:45 PM)Taem Wrote:
Quote:I don't think you can really generalize based on anecdotes.

But now there's the rub, right? It's difficult to quantify this type of reverse racism, yet most everyone has experienced it in one way shape or form.
But, also there is real racism. With media access today, it is easy to document every case of excessive use of force to achieve a political (power) goal. But, like with Mỹ Lai in Vietnam, perception and public opinion really do matter. Every soldier is not a butcher, but every one got labeled as a suspect.

Quote:Seeing the whole BLM group evolve into what they represent today, all the news coverage of young black men resisting officers due to their perceived prejudices against them (which aren't true) and the actions taken against them to subdue them and the resultant riots afterward... where is the hero that stands up and calls them out for what this is? It's so fucking obvious, it's ridiculous! When an officer of the law can't even do his/her job for fear of being labeled a racist and losing their job or worse simply for arresting a non cooperative black individual, I'd say the fucking system is broken, and there is a serious underlying issue not being addressed.
I think it is a semi-revolutionary political agenda actually, a naked power grab by a few who diverted the BLM brand into something it never was. Eventually, I think, like "The Tea Party" the movement will act out negatively enough with the outcome of shedding its original meaning and supporters,

Quote:I've seen on the news officers relieved of duty and charged with murder *due to public pressure* when the force already knew the officer was innocent, and the poor officer goes to court and of course wins because they were innocent all along, but they have to play this game for who? For the protesters who will riot... and who are these protesters? What are they protesting? It's not unfair treatment, because these cases have evidence to the contrary. It is black peoples perception of inequality that is at issue here. Get a clue! Like I said, it's so obvious what's happening, so why won't anyone call it out for what it is?
Which is why we should kiss every Brit we know for giving us the English common law system, where people are presumed to be innocent until proven guilty beyond a shadow of a doubt. I was explaining the Napoleonic code to my son yesterday...

Quote:And no, I'm not like Trump who said, "I love Chinese people. I have them working for me all over the world". I actually have friends of every color in the rainbow, and they can see this same issue as I. I don't have to give out the names and addresses of my black friends, but you can trust neither myself nor my friends have a racist bone in our bodies. The reason problem here is thus issue is political taboo/suicide to address for any politician, and the methods our politicians have used within the past few decades to "correct" it have only made it far worse. In the early 80's, my wife grew up in orange County/Los Angeles, and they (politicians) started trying "fix" the perception of minority only communities and forced school kids from one district to travel to the inner city and vice versa. Needles to say it was a fucking disaster for everyone and just another failed attempt that only cause more feelings of being a victim for minorities.
While I believe there is this phenomena of inherent bias, I don't think things were this bad a decade ago...

Quote:"There's a tremendous gap of achievement between rich and poor, white and minority. This, too, leaves a divided society. And whatever the causes, the effect is discrimination. My friend Phyllis Hunter (ph), of Houston, Texas, calls 'reading' the new civil right. Equality in our country will remain a distant dream until every child, of every background, learns so that he or she may strive and rise in this world. No child in America should be segregated by low expectations, imprisoned by illiteracy, abandoned to frustration and the darkness of self-doubt."
- GWB to the NAACP
”There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." - Hamlet (1.5.167-8), Hamlet to Horatio.

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#49
(01-18-2017, 07:45 PM)Taem Wrote: I don't have to give out the names and addresses of my black friends, but you can trust neither myself nor my friends have a racist bone in our bodies.

[Image: giphy.gif]

Of course, as usual, everything in your post was a load of baseless assertions, fallacies, false narratives, and just horseshit in general, but this comment here, wow. It truly had me LOL'ing. I can't speak for your friends, but if YOU don't have a racist bone in your body, then pigs can fly, the earth is flat, and water ain't wet.
https://www.youtube.com/user/FireIceTalon


"Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class, made into law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economic conditions of the existence of your class." - Marx (addressing the bourgeois)
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#50
(01-18-2017, 07:45 PM)Taem Wrote:
Quote:I don't think you can really generalize based on anecdotes.

But now there's the rub, right? It's difficult to quantify this type of reverse racism, yet most everyone has experienced it in one way shape or form. Seeing the whole BLM group evolve into what they represent today, all the news coverage of young black men resisting officers due to their perceived prejudices against them (which aren't true) and the actions taken against them to subdue them and the resultant riots afterward... where is the hero that stands up and calls them out for what this is? It's so fucking obvious, it's ridiculous! When an officer of the law can't even do his/her job for fear of being labeled a racist and losing their job or worse simply for arresting a non cooperative black individual, I'd say the fucking system is broken, and there is a serious underlying issue not being addressed. I've seen on the news officers relieved of duty and charged with murder *due to public pressure* when the force already knew the officer was innocent, and the poor officer goes to court and of course wins because they were innocent all along, but they have to play this game for who? For the protesters who will riot... and who are these protesters? What are they protesting? It's not unfair treatment, because these cases have evidence to the contrary. It is black peoples perception of inequality that is at issue here. Get a clue! Like I said, it's so obvious what's happening, so why won't anyone call it out for what it is?

I'm honestly not sure what this has to do with anything I said.

All that sentence says is that I don't think any voice can speak for the majority of any race, and bringing up extremists groups is like trying to place white people as the KKK. I know I would not let any random asshole speak for a group I am associated with. As for BLM, I have read quite a few media reports that they are not a peaceful kind, at least some supporters, so there are those that are critical.

And I certainly never claimed that that any of these things were mutually exclusive, that is a white person can still suffer from the effects of of the establishment too; it's not a zero sum game. And practically everyone here has a thing against the pitifulness of the so-called "Identity Politics"

Quote:And no, I'm not like Trump who said, "I love Chinese people. I have them working for me all over the world". I actually have friends of every color in the rainbow, and they can see this same issue as I.

Unlike other people that you may talk with, please don't feel the need to be defensive. I am not claiming you are racist, so there's no need to defend against that accusation. You might even be more tolerant of people than I am and I don't apologize for who I am. I don't think anyone should, unless they start imposing their will on others.
With great power comes the great need to blame other people.
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#51
(01-18-2017, 11:48 PM)Archon_Wing Wrote: reports that they are not a peaceful kind

Which isn't a bad thing, necessarily. Since the police officers who harass, assault, profile, and murder unarmed and innocent poc EVERY day are far from being peaceful. When you oppress people, they are going to rise up against you at some point, often violently so, and in such a case, its justifiable. BLM is hardly revolutionary at this time, and from my perspective, I think they need to radicalize further than they are currently. But I digress.

Quote:that is a white person can still suffer from the effects of of the establishment too; it's not a zero sum game.


They do, but not to nearly the same extent or context that blacks and other poc do. Statistics across the board reflect this - from unemployment, income, to education, access to healthcare, life expectancy, poverty and homelessness, percentage of people incarcerated, everything really.

Simply being white means you start with a considerable social advantage from the day you are born, and it makes your every day life much easier than being a black person in the same class does, regardless of how poor little privileged white people like Ashock and Taem choose to see it.

Quote:And practically everyone here has a thing against the pitifulness of the so-called "Identity Politics"

This is one (of several) reasons why I ultimately chose Marxism as my political framework, is because of what IP has become. Let me explain.

You see, I think its the opposite, really. Many people here, and in general, focus way too much on "identity politics" and pay little or no attention to class politics - and when they do look at class, its usually only by income and not by ownership of the instruments of production due to its radical implications. Identity politics isn't ENTIRELY worthless - poc suffer more in the present system than whites do, men have unjust privilege and power over women, straights over LGBTQ persons, ableds over disabeleds, etc. Alot of IP stems from various feminist movements, the civil rights movements and BLM, the LGBTQ liberation movement, and so on.

The problem of starting with identity politics, is that it is a dead end, because it inevitably turns too far inward and focuses too much on the self. In the worst case scenario, it just becames another from of discrimination dressed up as 'Left wing' politics. Further, it has the natural consequence of downplaying or even ignoring entirely the larger issues of class, capitalism & imperialism, and revolution. This is one of the primary issues with liberal conceptions of IP.

On the otherhand, Marxists and other revolutionary leftist movements must becareful to avoid class reductionism, and undoubtedly certain sects of these groups have been guilty of this. Class does need to be our starting point - but it shouldn't be our only point; it has to allow for intersectionality. Feminists, minorities, LGBTQ, disabled persons, and other oppressed/marginalized groups should absolutely have an involvement, an important one at that, in any socialist/communist movement to emancipate society from the shackles of capitalism. Identity politics without socialism is useless and a slippery slope to being reactionary, or at best it doesn't lead to meaningful social change; and socialism without intersectionality is deterministic, vulgar economics.

Finally, identity politics has become something of a pejorative not only because of its over emphasis by liberals as I explained earlier in my post, but right-wingers are even worse when it comes to IP. For people like Ashock, Taem and similar reactionary minded persons, identity politics is of utmost importance - in particular, the identity of white, rich, straight, heterosexual males and the preservation of their dominant position in society. Everyone else that doesn't fit that bill be damned, and anyone else that wants the same rights and equality are guilty of 'reverse racism', 'reverse sexism', heterophobia, etc. Right wing identity politics is the most vulgar, obnoxious form of IP and a good reason why IP has become such a dirty word, or should I say term. For all the accusations they make towards leftists for playing the 'race' or 'gender' card, nobody plays those cards more than reactionaries when the privileged status of white males is questioned or challenged. Taem and Ashock have done it throughout this entire thread, that is what the right does, and they do it well. So, their shit-filled false narratives of 'reverse racism' or 'reverse sexism of how white males are supposedly oppressed in society are presented as legitimate public opinion (even when all the statistics and overwhelming evidence reflect the exact opposite).

Here's an idea: the achievement or striving for the achievement of equality and thus the abolition of white, male privilege does NOT equate to racism or sexism. White males can cry about it all they want. It still isn't racist or sexist to challenge the privileged status of white males. Not even close. Them crying about it, as they have done this entire thread, is in fact evidence of THEIR racist and sexist views.
https://www.youtube.com/user/FireIceTalon


"Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class, made into law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economic conditions of the existence of your class." - Marx (addressing the bourgeois)
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#52
(01-20-2017, 01:45 AM)FireIceTalon Wrote:
(01-18-2017, 11:48 PM)Archon_Wing Wrote: reports that they are not a peaceful kind

Which isn't a bad thing, necessarily. Since the police officers who harass, assault, profile, and murder unarmed and innocent poc EVERY day are far from being peaceful. When you oppress people, they are going to rise up against you at some point, often violently so, and in such a case, its justifiable. BLM is hardly revolutionary at this time, and from my perspective, I think they need to radicalize further than they are currently. But I digress.

Ah, well that can be up for discussion. But my main point was that the media isn't necessarily biased for them. Some outlets might be and I tend to get worried when they put their own value judgements in, telling you how to think. But in the end, I'm a pleb that got much of my info from "mainstream" outlets and they still haven't deceived me into thinking they were pure and white (whoops).

Quote:
Quote:that is a white person can still suffer from the effects of of the establishment too; it's not a zero sum game.


They do, but not to nearly the same extent or context that blacks and other poc do. Statistics across the board reflect this - from unemployment, income, to education, access to healthcare, life expectancy, poverty and homelessness, percentage of people incarcerated, everything really.

I like to think about as apples and oranges. (Kinda like pick your oppression?).

But the sentiment I've been reading is that there might be some white people that feel like they're being constantly held accountable for things or maybe their opinion doesn't matter as much as a result. So sometimes the left might go a bit far. For example, it's a no-brainer for me to suggest that as a dude, that when I walk home at night alone that I don't have to worry as much about sexual harassment as a female. But then you have all those "Men are rapists" crowd.

Umm, and yea class is buried underneath all this, almost intentionally. And I do see the opposite of extremeness identity politics on both ends-- I guess nobody's shit stinks. And I will have to wrap things up before MCcarthy rises from his grave and comes after me. I'd watch out if I were you, though.
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#53
Well, true enough that there are extremists on the left that go too far into saying that "all men are bad", or from a racial context that "all white people are bad". But, you'd have to search far and wide to find these kinds of people. The folks in the Chicago incident are a tiny minority, yet people like Ashock will use such things as political opportunity.

For instance, someone such as Valerie Solanas is one such over-the-top individual. Basically, her intense hatred of patriarchy made her desire not just equality for women as part of the goal for leftists, but for the actual supreme domination of women over men. It's hard to call her leftist, since she is basically advocating for the extermination and enslavement of all males and a femme-fascist society or something like it. I am all for the abolishment of capitalism and the patriarchy that comes along with it. But for the abolishment of males as persons, as a whole? Yea, this is inconceivably over the top. It was like it was almost personal for her, a manifesto for revenge, rather than the genuine liberation and realization of self-determination for her collective sex. Even my fiance, who is a radical feminist, thinks her politics are nutty.

The same ofc is true for race. Not all white people are racist, far from it. All are privileged though, and its a matter of us recognizing our privilege and taking steps to achieve equality, rather than trying to hold on to our privilege as many of them do.
https://www.youtube.com/user/FireIceTalon


"Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class, made into law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economic conditions of the existence of your class." - Marx (addressing the bourgeois)
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#54
(01-05-2017, 10:31 PM)FireIceTalon Wrote: In before the troll is fed.
Irony, thy name is FireIcetalon.
Cry 'Havoc' and let slip the Men 'O War!
In War, the outcome is never final. --Carl von Clausewitz--
Igitur qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum
John 11:35 - consider why.
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#55
(01-20-2017, 04:00 AM)FireIceTalon Wrote: Well, true enough that there are extremists on the left that go too far into saying that "all men are bad", or from a racial context that "all white people are bad". But, you'd have to search far and wide to find these kinds of people. The folks in the Chicago incident are a tiny minority, yet people like Ashock will use such things as political opportunity.
When far and wide means a 3 sec google search for "feminist all men are bad" yields --> “Dear misogynist trolls I'm going to make things easier for you - save u some time. All men are rapists and should be put in prison then shot,” she wrote on Twitter, Monday afternoon.

or, 3 Reasons We Cannot Cater to White Friends Who Say ‘I’m Not Racist’

Quote:The same ofc is true for race. Not all white people are racist, far from it. All are privileged though, and its a matter of us recognizing our privilege and taking steps to achieve equality, rather than trying to hold on to our privilege as many of them do.
The issue here is not that "some X are bad" it's that "I hold all X accountable for the bad X's". That's {X}ism.
”There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." - Hamlet (1.5.167-8), Hamlet to Horatio.

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#56
(01-24-2017, 12:01 AM)kandrathe Wrote: When far and wide means a 3 sec google search for "feminist all men are bad" yields --> “Dear misogynist trolls I'm going to make things easier for you - save u some time. All men are rapists and should be put in prison then shot,” she wrote on Twitter, Monday afternoon.

I mean in real life. You can find just about anything on the internet in under a minute. Obviously, not all men are rapists, nor should all men be in prison. But if you want to get rid of this type of thinking, then we need to get rid of the patriarchal system and sexism that generates it to begin with.

Feminism is, as a general concept, based on the idea that women should have equal rights and be treated as equals to men; not that all men are bad and should be imprisoned or dead. Now, there are different conceptions of feminism - from bourgeois concepts of feminism that simply ask for concessions within male dominated societies like "equal pay for equal work" or fighting for women's political rights (such as voting) without challenging patriarchy as a system, to more radical feminism which attacks patriarchy and its institutions, intersectional feminism (analysis of women as racial minorities, working class, single moms, transgender, etc), and Marxist feminism which views the abolishment of capitalism and wage labor as the only way for women to achieve full equality and liberation.

I'm pretty certain Julie Bindel views represent a very fringe and tiny minority of feminists of most stripes, and hardly the voice of the feminist movement as a whole.

Quote:or, 3 Reasons We Cannot Cater to White Friends Who Say ‘I’m Not Racist’

But almost everything the author pointed out and explained in this article is generally true. Even many 'non-racist' white people with good intentions tend to get defensive and make the issue about them and end up diverting the discussion away from racism itself.

Quote:The issue here is not that "some X are bad" it's that "I hold all X accountable for the bad X's". That's {X}ism.

Racism is again, overall structural. You cannot eliminate individual prejudice without first abolishing the system of racism then enables and perpetuates individual prejudice to begin with. The issue is neither that "some of X are bad" NOR "I hold all of X accountable for the bad X's", the issue is that a system that "favors X over Y that perpeuates inequality and oppression of Y" is in place.
https://www.youtube.com/user/FireIceTalon


"Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of your class, made into law for all, a will whose essential character and direction are determined by the economic conditions of the existence of your class." - Marx (addressing the bourgeois)
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#57
(01-24-2017, 08:30 AM)FireIceTalon Wrote: Racism is again, overall structural. You cannot eliminate individual prejudice without first abolishing the system of racism then enables and perpetuates individual prejudice to begin with. The issue is neither that "some of X are bad" NOR "I hold all of X accountable for the bad X's", the issue is that a system that "favors X over Y that perpeuates inequality and oppression of Y" is in place.
In an interesting coincidence, I happened to be listening on my lengthy commute to a "black radio program" analyzing why black people are suffering in the US. They touched on all the usual subjects (we've covered).

I know you are on this whole SJW tear the sucka (meaning society) down kick, but most of us are content to melt into the pot of common American culture, earn a living wage, and hope to preserve some of our families identity traditions and culture, (at least especially at home around the holidays with our family.) For my great grandfather Lars (my fathers fathers father), who arrived in 1910, it wasn't "white privilege" he was after (consciously). He had relatives already here who told him of all the great things about America. He wanted mostly to escape the perpetual struggle of the common crofter of making just enough to get by, but never making enough to buy their own farm in an era of ever increasing demand. He came here for all the promises of a better life, totally unaware of the price paid to acquire it. But, mostly, the US inherited the British systems, so why is racism so much more an issue here and not so much a thing there? Maybe because the de-facto plantation culture was never dismantled after the civil war, perhaps? I often reflect that most ancestries of emigrant Americans, go back 200 or even 500 years (for Hispanic culture), regardless of ethnicity.

Here we are in 2017. I believe it would be more productive if we would shift dialog from one of blame, to one of making positive progress. Which to me is embedded in stuff like laws, and other social systems which subjugate us all but are least suffered by those who are established. The establishment was made hundreds of years ago by whites, for whites. Even though it is now leveled by Civil Rights Laws to include everyone, it structurally still benefits those who are already established. Perhaps rather than fling around the whole "white privilege" and "bourgeoisie" castigations, we might focus on the structures keeping us all in chains. We might actually agree on some of them, but maybe not the remedy.

But, then a black teacher talked about their self imposed constraints, (e.g. being accused of acting white ).

So, I think we all, including blacks, perpetuate the status quo, where we really need to address *real* known structural barriers (e.g. home ownership, access to loans, wealth inheritance, educational systems, wage discrimination, criminal justice, incarceration, etc.)

Harvard Lecture: Acting White? Rethinking Race in Post-Racial America (UnEdited) by Devon Carbado
”There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." - Hamlet (1.5.167-8), Hamlet to Horatio.

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#58
(01-24-2017, 08:39 PM)kandrathe Wrote: So, I think we all, including blacks, perpetuate the status quo, where we really need to address *real* known structural barriers (e.g. home ownership, access to loans, wealth inheritance, educational systems, wage discrimination, criminal justice, incarceration, etc.)

You are correct...but the problem is that when times are tough, people focus inwards to their own group and differences are enlarged.
So in a society with such an incredible difference in wealth you will keep having this problem.
Everyone on their own scale is trying to get the best for himself, and often being in groups of likeminded people feels the best way to go.
Without expressing an opinion in american politics: it seems clear that the personality of Donald Trump will not help.


Anyway, all these immigration and racism problem are of course nothing compared to the biggest problem we face which is the one of climate change.....also there we can only hope that Trump has to leave office before 4 years have passed.
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#59
(01-25-2017, 07:57 AM)eppie Wrote: Anyway, all these immigration and racism problem are of course nothing compared to the biggest problem we face which is the one of climate change.....

There's a good troll, nice troll, goooood boy.
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#60
That was a bit unnecessary, don't you think? Eppie has an extremely valid point about climate change. Swindle or not, I doubt he was attempting to derail this thread, but instead focus on the real issues affecting the world. Rather or not our contribution to co2 has caused the majority of these climate issues, or only part of them is irrelevant to the fact that our man-made problems have had a direct impact on the climate, one we can obviously help corral and control by not only curbing our co2 emissions, but by planting more trees world wide. If we can have a man-made effect on global warming (rather that is a large part or a small one), then we can also have a man made effect on reversing the changes, even if the majority of the change is proven to in fact be unrelated to man made pollutants. What is the real issue here? The earth is warming, the habitat areas for wildlife is being eroded and destroyed by logging, hunters, and poachers, etc. I saw your article on climate change and as I said, rather we caused all or just part of the effects, we can impact the climate positively as well if we work together as a unified society... however with people like fit spouting off their supposed and clearly maligned anti-racist (but actual racism causing because it doesn't even address the real probkems and serves to only further exasperate the real issues and stir up more hatred by name calling and finger pointing like a child ) agendas, we are at a point where idiots/fanatics like this ruin any chance to pull together and make a real difference to the environment. So no, I feel eppie comments are important to this conversation on many levels, if not completely pertinent to the exact context.
"The true value of a human being is determined primarily by the measure and the sense in which he has attained liberation from the self." -Albert Einsetin
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